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© Williams 2008


When I go back the houses are smaller,
The streets are wider, the trees by the river are taller.
On Sunday the shops are closed, but the pubs are both open,
There’s three or four motels and the signs out the front are still broken.
The kids are suspicious and the talk is still mean,
Someone burnt down the old factory; the walls are still on a lean.
The girls hate the same as they did fifteen years ago,
The sons and the daughters of teenagers I used to know,
And I’ve got a whole football field of air to breathe
But I’m still suffocating. I’m still suffocating. I’m still suffocating.

When I go back the weeknights are quieter,
The wind is cleaner and new paint looks that much whiter.
The paddocks are dry, but I’ve seen them drier.
It’s not shooting season so the ducks are still swimming and flying.
The boys are all farmers with broken fingers,
They fight like their fathers and the threat of violence still lingers.
You go to a party and drink yourself blind –
Who knows how long til you leave this shithole behind?
And I’ve got a whole football field of air to breathe
But I’m still suffocating. Still suffocating. I’m still suffocating.

This is the school where I first fell in love with a girl.
This is the bridge where I first fell in love with a boy.
This is the place where I worked one December
Where, when I was ten, I remember the parents of some of my friends
Yelled at this man.
He was a poofter, a greenie, a faggot,
Get out of our town.

When I go back, I am not safe here,
Still not safe here, still not safe here.
And I’m still suffocating, still suffocating, still suffocating.
I am still suffocating.

Download: Home (mp3)

Last.fm link: Home

Background


A while ago, I went to a marvellous gig with some friends – it was Patty Griffin, and she was amazing! Her support act was Paul Greene, who sang a song he wrote while overseas – a song about being homesick, a small ode to his Australian hometown, a celebration of place. “That’s nice,” I thought to myself. “I wonder if I could write a nice song about the country town where I grew up?” And the thought stuck with me, and I sat down and wrote . . . this. Not exactly a celebration, but I did manage to write some of the things I did and do like about the place – the river, the bridge, the open spaces, the bush, the clean air, the creatures, the farms on the river flats. But I guess I need to write the reality of it, and the way the place makes me feel, how sad and frustrated I was for a lot of my time there, how even thinking about it makes me anxious and angry.

It’s interesting writing with perspective, and also remembering how I felt last time I was back (the streets are really very wide, and the teenagers really do still look at everyone/strangers/me in the same way). There are things I can articulate now that I couldn’t when I lived there, simply because I didn’t have anything to compare it to, and I didn’t have the distance to be able to look at how I was, what I felt, how I grew from it, how eighteen and a half years there affected me. It’s been over eight years (only eight years? eight whole years?) since I left, but I guess its always going to be with me.

When I played this to my friend, the Magnificent M, she commented on the way ‘greenie’ was up there with ‘poofter’ and ‘faggot’ as an insult. I wonder if this would be the case in many Victorian country towns? (Notice I’m deliberately not naming names here? I don’t want someone randomly googling my hometown and stumbling across this!) I can still recall the charming car-sticker slogans: “The only true wilderness is between a greenie’s ears” and “Fertilise the bush, doze in a greenie” as well as the ridiculously untruthful “Greens cost jobs” (no, it’s efficient technology that’s costing you your fucking jobs, dickheads). There were businesses that refused service to people with dreadlocks or feral/hippie clothing. Anyway, I’m willing to bet that there aren’t too many towns in Victoria that hate/d people-who-give-a-shit-about-the-environment with such a passion. There are probably several more in Tasmania, though. Growing up surrounded by this attitude is one of the reasons that people saying snide things about greenies, ferals, hippies, tree-huggers, etc pisses me off. A lot.

Anyway, I’d be interested to hear what you have to say on the matter, dear listeners! Have you ever lived in a place like that? What attitudes did you grow up around that you knew were stupid? What about beliefs you only realised later were kind of off? Is your childhood home or hometown a safe place for you to return to? What was it like being queer when you were a kid or a teenager? What were the things you learnt from your parents and teachers about queerness? From friends, fellow students, other adults?

Recording

I wanted to play around with not bothering to make the vocals true to life with this. I wanted to make it feel like sitting in a run down old house and hearing things whistling like wind through the gaps in the wall. I wanted it to be kind of eerie, kind of comforting, and kind of painful. I recorded on two separate occasions, at least a month and a half apart, so I hope it fits together. Because I recorded a lot of it so long ago, I can’t remember if there’s anything in particular I wanted to say about it. Oh yeah, the start sounds a bit like the start of After the War. Heh. I have layered both the guitar and the lead vocals with one track FXless and the other with strange echoey filters on. I like that the FX come and go – Midshipman Louise tells me it’s disconcerting but it works. What do you think?

Conclusions

OK, it’s late. I have to finish up now and so I’ll leave it here without further ado. I hope you enjoy!

I would be honoured if you’d like to share this song with people – please link them to this page rather than directly to the download. Thanks!

Diamantina Drover

Diamantina Drover
© Hugh McDonald
Arranged Williams 2008


(I won’t be back)

The faces in the photographs are faded
And I can't believe he looks so much like me
For it's been ten years today
Since I left for Old Cork Station
Saying, I won't be back til the droving's done

And the rain never falls on the dusty Diamantina
And the drover finds it hard to change his mind
For the years have surely gone, like the drays from Old Cork Station
And I won't be back til the droving's done

(I won’t be back)

Well, it seems like the sun comes up each morning
And it sets me up then takes it all away
For the dreaming by the light of the campfire at night
Ends with the burning light of day

For the rain never falls on the dusty Diamantina
And the drover finds it hard to change his mind
And the years have surely gone, like the drays from Old Cork Station
And I won't be back til the droving's done

(I won’t be back)

I sometimes think that I'll go back to Sydney
But it's been so long and it's hard to change your mind
For the cattle trail goes on and on, and fences roll forever
And I won't be back when the droving's done

I won't be back when the droving's done

(I won’t be back)

Download: Diamantina Drover (mp3)

Background

Hi all, it’s been a while. I have a couple of songs in the works at the moment, but I’ve been concentrating on my PhD and travelling around the world. It’s a hard life, innit?! I was recently in the USA and Canada, having a very awesome time, and I even got to get a wee bit of local live music on the way. I was also given some lovely mix CDs from a couple of friends that featured a few Canadian bands. Yay!

And this kind of relates, because I did miss my Australian music when I was away, and I’m looking forward to going to see The Spoils with Yana Alana & the Paranas AND The Town Bikes at the Northcote Social Club this Sunday 25th May. However, I was also reading The Adventure of English by Melvyn Bragg, and discussions of dialects and accents got me also missing my recent obsession, Rachel Unthank & the Winterset – their gorgeous close harmonies and distinct Speyside songs. So I have been wanting to listen to folk music, and now I’m back in Australia, I want Australian folk music.

I woke up on my first morning back with a line in my head: “The faces in the photograph has faded, and I can’t believe he looks so much like me”. It took me a while to remember more of the song, and where I knew it from. It’s called Diamantina Drover, and I knew it from a cassette tape of John Williamson I used to listen to heaps as a kid. John Williamson sings some fantastic songs, and it annoys me that he also sings a whole bunch of utter tripe, too. When I tried to find a recording of him singing this online (so I could steal it and put it on a CD!) I could only come up with True Blue, Boogie With M’Baby and other annoyingly twee things. But I remember Diamantina Drover, Galleries of Pink Galahs, and the haunting lines of Drover’s Boy.

As I was hunting for it, I checked out YouTube, and found these two versions, both of which are interesting, but not quite what I wanted. . . one and two.

I also learnt that Christy Moore has done a version, which is delightful, because I love Christy Moore (not quite, however, in the same slightly obsessive way I love his brother Luka Bloom, but that’s another story!), that it was written by Hugh McDonald of Redgum, and can be found in the Second Bushwhackers Australian Songbook. I am not alone in liking the song, it would seem, as there are plenty of threads on various internet forums trying to find out more about it.

Recording

Anyway, I gave up trying to find a version online, so I decided to record my own. As my guitar is still missing a string, I tried using the 12 string, but it sounded far too busy. I think the song needs to have a bit of space to it. I decided on acapella – the first time I’ve done voice only since it broke. The recording ranges from one to four voices, and I am intrigued to hear some harmonics happening in some of the sections! It was so exciting when I played back one part where I’d recorded three parts and I could hear a fourth high up above them! I remember as a kid always harmonising with tapes, records, CDs, and I think this recording is what I always longed for on the John Williamson recording – I wanted full-on harmonies. Because . . . well, we all know about my love for harmonies!

The echoey bits I used because I wanted something to lead in and out of the song, something that remembered and foreshadowed some of the lyrics (“I won’t be back”, “Ends with the burning light of day”), just like a memory called up by a hint of something, fleshed out for a moment, then gone. Like looking at a faded photograph and suddenly realising some connection. I think they don't sound great, and I think I'll play with them to make them sound less tacky.

I didn’t make the decision to change “photograph” to “photographs” in the first line, and I’m not sure I care one way or another. I think the singular is probably more compelling, but oh well. I think I’ve also taken the Williamson lyrics “it’s been ten years today” rather than the original “for it’s been ten long years”, mainly because that’s the one I knew. I sang "go back to Sydney" without thinking instead of "settle back in Sydney". I have, however, gone with the original “I won’t be back when the droving’s done” at the end rather than Williamson’s repeat of “I won’t be back til the droving’s done”.

Conclusions

I think this is OK for something I just whipped up, and it serves the purpose for me – I have a version of it to listen to and to share with friends. I also really, really like having a full harmony version. I’m interested in what you all think about my new voice doing the different parts – it’s not particularly polished I know, but I wonder if it feels balanced enough? I kept wanting to sing higher, but I couldn’t. Boo! And I blame Rachel Unthank & the Winterset for the close-close harmonies.

Enjoy, and welcome to Australian folk if it’s your first encounter!

Please feel free to link, but please send people to this page rather than directly to the download. And remember I did not write this song! I just arranged and recorded this version.