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AlSymerz

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Everything posted by AlSymerz

  1. Can Oranges Wed Strawberries? SALT
  2. Flotsam & Jetsam - End Of Chaos
  3. Another Geriatric Old Geezer AGED
  4. Tassie had a couple of Noo Zeelund thrash bands booked for October or thereabout which got cancelled due to NSW's covid outbreak that they shared with the rest of the country didn't they? I seem to remember three bands being cancelled just before the bubble exploded.
  5. We'd have loved to have gotten rich from metal but the reality is while the Melbourne scene was thriving there was so many people it was never going to happen, that is why we branched out into all genres of music. Hard rock/pub rock bands were good bread and butter but most of them hired regular crews and toured with them. We did earn more from gigs with those bands but for one of our bands that might have got $1500 a night a band like The Angles or Rose Tattoo would easily pull 5 figures, but they had more people and more crew that wanted more money. The best part of those gigs though was that many of those 'charting' bands would lets local metal acts play on the same bill, there was of course some arguments, but to see a band like the Baby Animals, who despite having a cute lead singer were not metal, play on the same stage as a few kids playing punk and a local thrash band that hadn't even recorded an album was good.
  6. Our station relied on local subscribers and companies, we had to do subscriber drives every 6 months to keep the station running. The owners of the station were devout Christian and for the first 5 years of ownership refused to even have hard rock. The station had a subscriber base of about 2000 and if it wasn't for the ads we had to run once an hour it would never have survived.
  7. Damn, as an addition to the post above I read this morning that our production levels are once again screwed. Not only did the Victoria government get caught out not supporting the local paper industry by mandating the purchase of Chinese made paper for all its departments, today they are moving to Chinese made PPE. Last year while international shipping was almost shut down they forked out millions to give local companies the chance to modify their factories and produce all manner of PPE gear and now it's too expensive to purchase locally and the government want to save money.
  8. Friday night used to be gig night, it's wasn't good leaving the pub before closing. But it was also not good turning up drunk. Because of sponsors and guidelines etc we weren't allowed to play songs with swearing in them. Each DJ got three warnings if it was in a song and not really obvious, but there was more sever cases for obvious ones. The powers that be used to listen to tapes of our shows over and over to prove us wrong, but the only time we got caught was the time we drank too much and played Overkill's Blood Money instead of Thanx For Nothing.
  9. Friday night shows were good for those at home, but shitty for those that had to stay sober (technically), drive to the station, stay awake for two hours, and then drive home
  10. We don't produce that much on the mainland either. This time of covid with closed borders and limited travel would have been a perfect time for Australian manufacturing to stand up but it just seems like too many put that sort of thing in the too hard basket now days.
  11. I'm not embarrassed to say, we did it for the money, it was our jobs, we needed to pay bills, but we were far from rich. We did spend years, at the same time, working with youth groups, helping them put on gigs and record bands etc which was all free work but we were definitely out there working for a dollar. There is no way I could have continued doing all that stuff, by the mid 90's I was fucked. More injuries than I could imagine, more effort to get up each day and the pay didn't really change. So I went into driving trucks for someone else. Long haul rigs, across the country, sea to sea, on the road 6 out of 7 days. The time on the road was nearly the same but as a long haul driver I just got to be a steering wheel attendant, all I had to do was make sure the rig got home in one piece. But even that was a shit job for a family man so I moved into computers and really haven't looked back, but kids, and distance have kept me from a lot of gigs.
  12. My memory is shit, I can't remember when the first Metal for the Brain was, for some reason I was thinking it was the 80's. Three Hours of Power was a huge help. There was other community radio stations that helped too but many of them had such a small transmission range that they couldn't be heard outside the suburbs. I know at one stage I used to have a 100 foot antenna which we needed for VHF TV from the city before UHF was a thing and well before digital and I was able to stick an FM antenna on top just to pick up some Melbourne stations, but FM signal does not travel well. Even so for those in the city I remember there being about 20 metal shows a week on public broadcast, but some were lucky to get more than a few listeners. We did a a radio show ourselves, got the lovely time slot of 12-2 Friday nights and 12-1 on Sunday nights! The scene in Covid central is terrible because we shut down every few weeks , but pre covid it's a bit sad to say but it was mostly pop music. There is some hard rock bands and pub bands getting regular gigs and small tours but not that much. Venues know it's cheaper to pay a DJ who can play anything rather than a live band that might not score with the locals. There is still some hard working thrash/metal bands like Descerator, Harlott, In Malice's Wake etc working their butts off in the city but I'm not sure of the numbers they are getting these days.
  13. There is no doubt that metal had it harder. We did gigs for all sorts of bands from country bands to metal bands. I worked with a lot with younger bands and I worked with venues to gets bands on stages. Getting bums on seats, or standing, was harder and harder as time went on. Ticket prices got higher, even at gigs were we had complete control and set everything from ticket prices to the price of chips it was difficult. Kids just wanted some music and to have fun, but they couldn't get it because they couldn't afford $50 for a ticket that we had to charge to break even. Between arsehole bands with illusions of grandeur who requested $12000 riders for fundraiser gigs where every other band played for nothing with no riders. To power costs to keep to lights on. To massive insurance bills that had to be paid even before the gates opened. Putting on gigs got harder in the 90's for all bands. Sure the Gudinski's of this world with their coke....oops I mean money, could put on arena shows but putting on a gig in the suburbs so that everyone can turn up became so cost prohibitive that it just wasn't worth doing.
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