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Pel Mel

Pel Mel (also styled as pel mel) were an Australian rock band, which formed in Newcastle in June 1979. They issued two studio albums, Out of Reason (1982) and Persuasion (1983). They toured until the end of 1984 and disbanded in the following year.[1] They reformed in 2012 as Pel Mel Organisation to play occasional shows; they have released a compilation and a live album in 2016.

Pel Mel
Also known asPel Mel Organisation
OriginNewcastle, New South Wales, Australia
Genres
Years active
  • 1979 (1979)–1985 (1985)
  • 2012 (2012)–present
Labels
Past memberssee Members

History edit

Pel Mel formed in Newcastle, New South Wales in June 1979 with the line-up of Graeme Dunne on guitar and lead vocals, Glenn Hill on bass guitar, Judy "Jude" McGee on saxophone and clarinet (later also on synthesiser and co-lead vocals), her sister, Jane McGee on guitar, Nigel Savage on saxophone and Dave Weston on drums.[2][1][3] Australian musicologist, Ian McFarlane, described how their, "Early influences included UK bands like the Cure, Wire, Joy Division, the Fall and Gang of Four, although [they] always mixed the avant-garde with a deceptively simple blend of bright dance beats and catchy new wave pop. With its idiosyncratic sound and style, [the group] made little headway on the hard rock-besotted Newcastle pub circuit."[1]

In early 1980 Savage left and late that year, Lindsay O'Meara (ex-Voigt/465, Crime and the City Solution) replaced Hill on bass guitar. The group relocated to Sydney in February of that year.[3] Pel Mel's first single, "No Word from China", was originally recorded at the Double Jay, radio station studio and was released on the band's own label, Primate Records, in January 1981.[3] McFarlane observed, "[it] won instant favour among discerning critics and new wave fans."[1] The Canberra Times' correspondent felt, "[it] has one of the catchiest melodies and one of the most haunting female voices I've heard for yonks. Just try to stop humming the chorus after you've heard it a few times; an amazing first release from a young band full of promise. The only short comings are in the production."[4]

Jane McGee left the group in February 1981 and Craig Robertson replaced O'Meara on bass guitar late that year.[2] The band performed their single on the national TV pop music show, Countdown. The track was subsequently re-mastered and re-released through GAP Records in June. Debbie Muir of The Canberra Times, described how, "The original pressing suffered from the inevitable effects of bringing out a disc on the cheap, but the song was a classic... a new pressing which has given heaps more oomph to the record, making it worth buying and listening to."[5] During 1981 Judy and Jane McGee, Dunne and Weston formed a side project, the Limp, which issued a single, "Marked Man", in that year.[1] That group's membership included another McGee sibling, Tim on synthesiser.[1]

Pel Mel issued two more singles, "Head Above Water" (December 1981) and "Blind Lead the Blind" (November 1982).[1] By July of that year they had supported the Australian leg of a tour by Elvis Costello, taking in Sydney, Melbourne and Adelaide.[3] McGee told Heather P of Tharunka, "The exposure was good because a lot of people (and industry people) got to see the band, even though they didn't choose to. A lot of people had heard of the band but had never seen us play, so it was good in that respect." They released their debut album, Out of Reason, in December 1982 via GAP/EMI.[1] It was produced by Tony Cohen and McFarlane felt, "[it] boasted an appealing sound as displayed on the singles."[1]

Robertson left early in 1983.[1] They toured extensively, playing alongside local bands, the Reels, Mental as Anything and the Birthday Party, as well as supporting international acts New Order and the Fall.[6] Pel Mel's second album, Persuasion, was recorded by Dunne on vocals, bass guitar and guitar, Jude McGee on vocals, keyboards and saxophone and Weston on drums with new member, Paul Davies, on guitar. It was also produced by Cohen and was released by GAP/CBS in October 1983, which "highlighted the band's increasing confidence and maturing songwriting skills. It featured a couple of the band's most captivating songs."[1]

Pel Mel moved from an early punk-influenced sound to a distinctive pop sound, and were a backbone of the thriving inner Sydney music scene in the early 1980s.[1] Other bands from that era were Wild West, Tactics, the Particles, Scapa Flow and the bands from the M Squared label and studio. Clinton Walker in his 1984 book, The Next Thing, stated, "that at the moment they have the best chance of breaking into the mainstream for the same reasons they have for the past two years: excellent musicianship, appealing pop styles, danceability, wit, charm, commercial digestibility and a well-earned live track record as a sometimes great, often good and seldom bad experience."[7] McFarlane found that Pel Mel, "toured until the end of 1984, but ran out of steam without breaking into the mainstream consciousness."[1]

"No Word from China" was included on Tales from the Australian Underground, a collection of key Australian independent singles from 1976 to 1989.[8] They were cited as an influence by Australia's later rock acts. In 2003, Glen Bennie of Underground Lovers, cited them as one of his favourite bands, with Persuasion one of his top three Australian records.[9] Australian social commentator, academic and writer, Philip Brophy, cited Pel Mel as a representative of the Australian musical avant garde rock in his essay, "Avant-Garde Rock – History in the Making",[10] which was published in the 1987 book, Missing in Action: Australian Popular Music in Perspective (edited Marcus Breen).[11] The group's track, "Pandemonium", was covered by Sobriquet Vs Other People's Children on a compilation album, Re-fashioned – Antipodean Classics via the Groovescooter label in 2001.[12]

In March 2012 the group reformed as Pel Mel Organisation, with an expanded line up of Dunne, Judy and Jane McGee, Paul and Mark Davies, Dermot Browne and Stuart Nichols.[13] They played shows in Sydney under that name and their original name. A compilation album, Rags to Tatters – the best of pel mel and a live album, I'm a TV: pel mel live 1979–1984, were released in September 2016. Bernard Zuel of The Sydney Morning Herald rated the compilation album at four-out-of-five stars and explained, "[it] mixes coolly distant funk underneath Judy McGee's surprisingly yearning vocals, this compilation of a long-lost Sydney underground band asks several questions... Mostly seen in the inner city, sadly folding after only two albums, they were a bridge from post-punk's flint-eyed but danceable paranoia to '80s pop-electro. They were also very good."[14]

Jude McGee and Dermot Browne released an album of new material in 2016 on the Blue Jube label under the name 'Jude McGee and the Soft Touch'. The album – "The Household Guide to Heartbreak" – also gathered some positive critical reviews

In November 2018, Jude McGee, Graeme Dunne and Dermot Browne recorded and released three tracks – "I'm a TV", "Continuing Imprisonment" and "Clever Move" – under the 'pel mel organisation' name. The songs were originally written and performed by pel mel in 1979, but had never been recorded in a studio. They are available via iTunes and Bandcamp.

Members edit

  • Graeme Dunne – rhythm guitar, lead vocals, bass guitar (1979–85, 2012–present)
  • Glenn Hill – bass guitar (1979–80)
  • Jane McGee – guitar (1979–81)
  • Judy McGee – saxophone, clarinet, synthesiser, co-lead vocals (1979–85, 2012–present)
  • Nigel Savage – saxophone (1979–80)
  • Dave Weston – drums (1979–85, 2012–present)
  • Lindsay O'Meara – bass guitar (1980–81)
  • Craig Robertson – bass guitar (1981–83)
  • Paul Davies – guitar, bass guitar (1983–84)
  • Dermot Browne – guitar, bass guitar (2012–present)
  • Mark Davies – bass guitar (2012–2015)
  • Stuart Nichols – drums (2012–2015)

Discography edit

Studio albums edit

List of albums, with Australian chart positions
Title Album details Peak chart
positions
AUS
[15]
Out of Reason
  • Released: December 1982
  • Format: LP, Cassette
  • Label: GAP (GAPLP2001)
Persuasion
  • Released: October 1983
  • Format: LP, Cassette
  • Label: GAP (GAPA2002)
83

Compilation albums edit

Title Album details
Rags to Tatters – The Best of Pel Mel

Live albums edit

Title Album details
Live 1980
  • Released:[17]
  • Format:
  • Label: Inner City Sound (1808CD)
I'm a TV: Pel Mel Live 1979–1984
  • Released: September 2016[18]
  • Format: CD, download
  • Label: BlueJube

Singles edit

Year Title Album
1981 "No Word from China" non album single
"Head Above Water" non album single
1982 "Blind Lead the Blind" / "Water" Out of Reason
1983 "Shoes Should Fit"
"Pandemonium" Persuasion

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m McFarlane, Ian (1999). . Encyclopedia of Australian Rock and Pop. St Leonards, NSW: Allen & Unwin. p. 478. ISBN 1-86448-768-2. Archived from the original on 10 June 2003. Retrieved 22 June 2013.
  2. ^ a b "N o N i g h t S w e a t s : OTHER POST-PUNK BANDS IN SYDNEY". Nonightsweats.com. Retrieved 2 October 2020.
  3. ^ a b c d P, Heather (19 July 1982). "Heather talks to some females on the major rock circuit to get a 'Birds Eye View'". Tharunka. Vol. 28, no. 8. pp. 17–19. Retrieved 9 July 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  4. ^ "Timespan: Singles". The Canberra Times. Vol. 55, no. 16, 574. 11 February 1981. p. 18. Retrieved 9 July 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  5. ^ Muir, Debbie (1 July 1981). "Timespan". The Canberra Times. Vol. 55, no. 16, 714. p. 22. Retrieved 9 July 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  6. ^ "Pel Mel poised for the Big Breakthrough". The Sydney Morning Herald. 11 March 1983. p. 12 Metro Liftout. Retrieved 21 June 2013.
  7. ^ Walker, Clinton (1984). The Next Thing. Kanagroo Press. p. 105. ISBN 9780949924810.
  8. ^ "Tales from the Australian Underground". Citadel-records.com. Retrieved 2 October 2020.
  9. ^ "Australian Music Online :: Interviews :: Meet Melbourne project GB3 (3 Dec)". Amo.org.au. Retrieved 2 October 2020.
  10. ^ Brophy, Philip. . Philip Brophy. Archived from the original on 21 October 2007.
  11. ^ Marcus Breen, ed. (1987). Missing in Action: Australian Popular Music in Perspective. Vol. 1. Kensington, Vic: Verbal Graphics. pp. 126–145. ISBN 0731604725.
  12. ^ "GrooveScooter – Catalogue". Groovescooter.com. Retrieved 2 October 2020.
  13. ^ "Pel Mel". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 27 November 2012. Retrieved 2 October 2020.
  14. ^ Zuel, Bernard (27 October 2016). "Album Reviews: Jen Mize, Burning Ghosts, Boxed In, Caravana Sun and Pel Mel". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 9 July 2018.
  15. ^ Kent, David (1993). Australian Chart Book 1970–1992 (illustrated ed.). St Ives, N.S.W.: Australian Chart Book. p. 231. ISBN 0-646-11917-6.
  16. ^ "Rags to tatters: the best of pel mel, by pel mel". Pelmelmusic.bandcamp.com. Retrieved 2 October 2020.
  17. ^ "Pel Mel". Innercitysound.com.au. Retrieved 2 October 2020.
  18. ^ "I'm a TV: pel mel live 1979 ─ 1984, by pel mel". Pelmelmusic.bandcamp.com. Retrieved 2 October 2020.

External links edit

this, article, about, australian, rock, post, punk, band, american, band, pell, mell, band, predecessor, croquet, pall, mall, also, styled, were, australian, rock, band, which, formed, newcastle, june, 1979, they, issued, studio, albums, reason, 1982, persuasi. This article is about the Australian rock post punk band For the American band see Pell Mell band For the predecessor to croquet see Pall mall Pel Mel also styled as pel mel were an Australian rock band which formed in Newcastle in June 1979 They issued two studio albums Out of Reason 1982 and Persuasion 1983 They toured until the end of 1984 and disbanded in the following year 1 They reformed in 2012 as Pel Mel Organisation to play occasional shows they have released a compilation and a live album in 2016 Pel MelAlso known asPel Mel OrganisationOriginNewcastle New South Wales AustraliaGenresPost punk new waveYears active1979 1979 1985 1985 2012 2012 presentLabelsPrimate GAP EMI GAP CBSPast memberssee Members Contents 1 History 2 Members 3 Discography 3 1 Studio albums 3 2 Compilation albums 3 3 Live albums 3 4 Singles 4 References 5 External linksHistory editPel Mel formed in Newcastle New South Wales in June 1979 with the line up of Graeme Dunne on guitar and lead vocals Glenn Hill on bass guitar Judy Jude McGee on saxophone and clarinet later also on synthesiser and co lead vocals her sister Jane McGee on guitar Nigel Savage on saxophone and Dave Weston on drums 2 1 3 Australian musicologist Ian McFarlane described how their Early influences included UK bands like the Cure Wire Joy Division the Fall and Gang of Four although they always mixed the avant garde with a deceptively simple blend of bright dance beats and catchy new wave pop With its idiosyncratic sound and style the group made little headway on the hard rock besotted Newcastle pub circuit 1 In early 1980 Savage left and late that year Lindsay O Meara ex Voigt 465 Crime and the City Solution replaced Hill on bass guitar The group relocated to Sydney in February of that year 3 Pel Mel s first single No Word from China was originally recorded at the Double Jay radio station studio and was released on the band s own label Primate Records in January 1981 3 McFarlane observed it won instant favour among discerning critics and new wave fans 1 The Canberra Times correspondent felt it has one of the catchiest melodies and one of the most haunting female voices I ve heard for yonks Just try to stop humming the chorus after you ve heard it a few times an amazing first release from a young band full of promise The only short comings are in the production 4 Jane McGee left the group in February 1981 and Craig Robertson replaced O Meara on bass guitar late that year 2 The band performed their single on the national TV pop music show Countdown The track was subsequently re mastered and re released through GAP Records in June Debbie Muir of The Canberra Times described how The original pressing suffered from the inevitable effects of bringing out a disc on the cheap but the song was a classic a new pressing which has given heaps more oomph to the record making it worth buying and listening to 5 During 1981 Judy and Jane McGee Dunne and Weston formed a side project the Limp which issued a single Marked Man in that year 1 That group s membership included another McGee sibling Tim on synthesiser 1 Pel Mel issued two more singles Head Above Water December 1981 and Blind Lead the Blind November 1982 1 By July of that year they had supported the Australian leg of a tour by Elvis Costello taking in Sydney Melbourne and Adelaide 3 McGee told Heather P of Tharunka The exposure was good because a lot of people and industry people got to see the band even though they didn t choose to A lot of people had heard of the band but had never seen us play so it was good in that respect They released their debut album Out of Reason in December 1982 via GAP EMI 1 It was produced by Tony Cohen and McFarlane felt it boasted an appealing sound as displayed on the singles 1 Robertson left early in 1983 1 They toured extensively playing alongside local bands the Reels Mental as Anything and the Birthday Party as well as supporting international acts New Order and the Fall 6 Pel Mel s second album Persuasion was recorded by Dunne on vocals bass guitar and guitar Jude McGee on vocals keyboards and saxophone and Weston on drums with new member Paul Davies on guitar It was also produced by Cohen and was released by GAP CBS in October 1983 which highlighted the band s increasing confidence and maturing songwriting skills It featured a couple of the band s most captivating songs 1 Pel Mel moved from an early punk influenced sound to a distinctive pop sound and were a backbone of the thriving inner Sydney music scene in the early 1980s 1 Other bands from that era were Wild West Tactics the Particles Scapa Flow and the bands from the M Squared label and studio Clinton Walker in his 1984 book The Next Thing stated that at the moment they have the best chance of breaking into the mainstream for the same reasons they have for the past two years excellent musicianship appealing pop styles danceability wit charm commercial digestibility and a well earned live track record as a sometimes great often good and seldom bad experience 7 McFarlane found that Pel Mel toured until the end of 1984 but ran out of steam without breaking into the mainstream consciousness 1 No Word from China was included on Tales from the Australian Underground a collection of key Australian independent singles from 1976 to 1989 8 They were cited as an influence by Australia s later rock acts In 2003 Glen Bennie of Underground Lovers cited them as one of his favourite bands with Persuasion one of his top three Australian records 9 Australian social commentator academic and writer Philip Brophy cited Pel Mel as a representative of the Australian musical avant garde rock in his essay Avant Garde Rock History in the Making 10 which was published in the 1987 book Missing in Action Australian Popular Music in Perspective edited Marcus Breen 11 The group s track Pandemonium was covered by Sobriquet Vs Other People s Children on a compilation album Re fashioned Antipodean Classics via the Groovescooter label in 2001 12 In March 2012 the group reformed as Pel Mel Organisation with an expanded line up of Dunne Judy and Jane McGee Paul and Mark Davies Dermot Browne and Stuart Nichols 13 They played shows in Sydney under that name and their original name A compilation album Rags to Tatters the best of pel mel and a live album I m a TV pel mel live 1979 1984 were released in September 2016 Bernard Zuel of The Sydney Morning Herald rated the compilation album at four out of five stars and explained it mixes coolly distant funk underneath Judy McGee s surprisingly yearning vocals this compilation of a long lost Sydney underground band asks several questions Mostly seen in the inner city sadly folding after only two albums they were a bridge from post punk s flint eyed but danceable paranoia to 80s pop electro They were also very good 14 Jude McGee and Dermot Browne released an album of new material in 2016 on the Blue Jube label under the name Jude McGee and the Soft Touch The album The Household Guide to Heartbreak also gathered some positive critical reviewsIn November 2018 Jude McGee Graeme Dunne and Dermot Browne recorded and released three tracks I m a TV Continuing Imprisonment and Clever Move under the pel mel organisation name The songs were originally written and performed by pel mel in 1979 but had never been recorded in a studio They are available via iTunes and Bandcamp Members editGraeme Dunne rhythm guitar lead vocals bass guitar 1979 85 2012 present Glenn Hill bass guitar 1979 80 Jane McGee guitar 1979 81 Judy McGee saxophone clarinet synthesiser co lead vocals 1979 85 2012 present Nigel Savage saxophone 1979 80 Dave Weston drums 1979 85 2012 present Lindsay O Meara bass guitar 1980 81 Craig Robertson bass guitar 1981 83 Paul Davies guitar bass guitar 1983 84 Dermot Browne guitar bass guitar 2012 present Mark Davies bass guitar 2012 2015 Stuart Nichols drums 2012 2015 Discography editStudio albums edit List of albums with Australian chart positions Title Album details Peak chartpositionsAUS 15 Out of Reason Released December 1982 Format LP Cassette Label GAP GAPLP2001 Persuasion Released October 1983 Format LP Cassette Label GAP GAPA2002 83Compilation albums edit Title Album detailsRags to Tatters The Best of Pel Mel Released September 2016 16 Format CD Download Label Blue JubeLive albums edit Title Album detailsLive 1980 Released 17 Format Label Inner City Sound 1808CD I m a TV Pel Mel Live 1979 1984 Released September 2016 18 Format CD download Label BlueJubeSingles edit Year Title Album1981 No Word from China non album single Head Above Water non album single1982 Blind Lead the Blind Water Out of Reason1983 Shoes Should Fit Pandemonium PersuasionReferences edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m McFarlane Ian 1999 Pel Mel Encyclopedia of Australian Rock and Pop St Leonards NSW Allen amp Unwin p 478 ISBN 1 86448 768 2 Archived from the original on 10 June 2003 Retrieved 22 June 2013 a b N o N i g h t S w e a t s OTHER POST PUNK BANDS IN SYDNEY Nonightsweats com Retrieved 2 October 2020 a b c d P Heather 19 July 1982 Heather talks to some females on the major rock circuit to get a Birds Eye View Tharunka Vol 28 no 8 pp 17 19 Retrieved 9 July 2018 via National Library of Australia Timespan Singles The Canberra Times Vol 55 no 16 574 11 February 1981 p 18 Retrieved 9 July 2018 via National Library of Australia Muir Debbie 1 July 1981 Timespan The Canberra Times Vol 55 no 16 714 p 22 Retrieved 9 July 2018 via National Library of Australia Pel Mel poised for the Big Breakthrough The Sydney Morning Herald 11 March 1983 p 12 Metro Liftout Retrieved 21 June 2013 Walker Clinton 1984 The Next Thing Kanagroo Press p 105 ISBN 9780949924810 Tales from the Australian Underground Citadel records com Retrieved 2 October 2020 Australian Music Online Interviews Meet Melbourne project GB3 3 Dec Amo org au Retrieved 2 October 2020 Brophy Philip Avant Garde Rock Philip Brophy Archived from the original on 21 October 2007 Marcus Breen ed 1987 Missing in Action Australian Popular Music in Perspective Vol 1 Kensington Vic Verbal Graphics pp 126 145 ISBN 0731604725 GrooveScooter Catalogue Groovescooter com Retrieved 2 October 2020 Pel Mel Australian Broadcasting Corporation 27 November 2012 Retrieved 2 October 2020 Zuel Bernard 27 October 2016 Album Reviews Jen Mize Burning Ghosts Boxed In Caravana Sun and Pel Mel The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 9 July 2018 Kent David 1993 Australian Chart Book 1970 1992 illustrated ed St Ives N S W Australian Chart Book p 231 ISBN 0 646 11917 6 Rags to tatters the best of pel mel by pel mel Pelmelmusic bandcamp com Retrieved 2 October 2020 Pel Mel Innercitysound com au Retrieved 2 October 2020 I m a TV pel mel live 1979 1984 by pel mel Pelmelmusic bandcamp com Retrieved 2 October 2020 External links editOfficial page on Facebook Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pel Mel amp oldid 1165313209, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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