Dave Graney: A Man of Time and Place
I met Dave Graney in South Melbourne, between rehearsal and gig; he is as always immaculately, exquisitely and uniquely attired. We take a stroll down Clarendon Street looking for somewhere quiet to grab some calories and Do This Thing.
As we walk weâre chatting about the inner suburbs, architecture, the bar/pub/venue scene and all kinds of stuff. I ruin the mood of course, being shallow and stupid enough, when talking about a new bar, to make reference to âa Dave Graney styleâ. He cuts me off, seemingly offended by the implication that there is such a thing.
âI donât think about style ever, not at all.â Wait a second.
This does not compute. What are you doing, Dave?
Iâve watched you morph over the years from dead-cool op-shop sixties suits to lurid pink crushed velvet and a porno moustache. Your current pencil mo looks like it takes more maintenance than the MCG pitch, and your shoes, man, are to die for.
When you fronted The White Buffaloes you looked like a Deadwood extra with a great tailor and access to running water. At the Conty one night you sang Iâm Not Afraid To Be Heavy in a mesh singlet, leather pants and an Elvis wig.
And you donât think about style?
I have to at least try and get near the bottom of this.
I ask him: âThe White Buffaloes period, the long haired Buffalo Bill look and so on. Iâm curious about the reinventions youâve gone through over the years?â
âI havenât done any reinvention, that was how I lived, itâs not fakery or anything. I was quite madly obsessed with that whole tone and pitch and I was quite lost in it.â
He found a Place, moved into it, and became both its custodian and its prisoner. Then, when it was time to find the next Place, he moved out and started playing those two roles all over again in somewhere else.
We talk briefly about history and it turns out that itâs the worldâs more dramatic events that interest Dave. Looking at him, youâd think heâd be happiest drinking gin, racking up debts and inventing trousers with Beau Brummel, but no.
âI wouldnât want to hang out with that crowd⊠The French Revolution, the Russian Revolution, definitely. Brilliant times to be alive, more than any other. They told everyone to get fucked, they changed the calendar, killed the monarchyâŠ.â
âAlso probably the Elizabethan period, people like Walter Raleigh, just a fucking genius character.. It was a smaller world, a shockingly short life youâd live. People were poisoned by everyday things, a very rough period.â
Those times demanded that you lived life to the full, because you really could die at any time. Life then wasnât just about existing, it was about completely being, and itâs with this that I start to get what Dave is on about, and to understand what he means when he says he doesnât think about style.
Listen to any of his music and he picks you up and takes you somewhere. Itâs a place that heâs found somehow, in a book, or a movie, or a dream and heâs not just singing about it, he has become it.
It could be a hotel room, a truck stop, lying on the bonnet of his car in a sleepy country town or on stage with the Australian Doors Show, it doesnât matter. He got there before you and heâs already devoured it and heâs living it. Come in, look around, sit down if you like, but donât try to understand it on your own terms: this is Daveâs Place and whatever it was before he got there no longer exists.
For most of us, life is a series of journeys from one place to another, one existence to the next; the choices our parents made for us, and the choices we made for ourselves dictate where we are today. The Road is how we got from one identity to another; the trip is how we understand where and who we are, for now, and maybe even where weâre going after this.
Getting There is what we mortals do. Dave on the other hand, in all his music and his writing and his thinking, is about Being There.
Despite three decades on the road, his music doesnât seem, to me at least, to be about the journey so much as the place heâs at in any given moment; rather than progress in a series of meandering lines, his music and his style quantum jump from one to the next.
Right now? Heâs on a bit of a nostalgia kick. Not for the Good Olâ Days of music, just a reflection on himself, his music, his bands and, dare I say it, his style. His memoir, 1001 Australian Nights, couldâve been just another âman, The Road is such a cruel mistress, things are falling apart and another sunrise is burning through my eyelidsâ rockstar exercise in whine/self-congratulation.
Instead, heâs delivered a vaguely chaotic and nervously confident series of vignettes about places and things that he has seen and been. Itâs bewildering that a man whoâs been playing so long remembers so many little details from so many venues and songs from so long ago.
Thereâs a very nice touch that bounces off the page on a regular basis: he only ever refers to Clare Moore, not the drummer, not the partner, not âClareâ.
âKim Gordon is never ever referred to as Thurston Mooreâs wife, itâs just a respect thing for Clare as far as Iâm concerned.â
Itâs not a memoir with a linear narrative; read it from start to finish or jump from one page to another at random, it wonât matter. Every page, every word comes direct from Dave; itâs up to you to figure out if heâs being so serious heâs funny or so funny heâs serious. Either way itâs a great read and one of Australian rock musicâs funniest and best memoirs.
Heâs also released what lesser musicians would call a âBest Ofâ. Rock nâ Roll Is Where I Hide is more of a redux, a collection of some of his well-known and loved earlier songs, most of them from the nineties, given a kick or a twist that either wasnât possible or wasnât imagined when they were first laid down.
The title track comes from one of the coolest ideas he ever had, indeed one of the coolest ideas anyone ever had, for a song. A secret agent has to disappear, go deep undercover, and finds the best hiding place imaginable is out front of a rock band, in character, under the lights.
Once on stage, people donât know who you really are, canât recognise the man behind the microphone because they only know what theyâve heard about you. Theyâve heard you think youâre invisible so they stand there waiting for you to dematerialise right there in front of them, and before too long you start to believe it, too.
Is that what happened to Dave Graney at some stage? I donât think so. The clothes and the attitude and, yes, Dave, Iâm using that word again, the style may form some sort of shield, some sort of disguise, but none of it is just something he washes off at the end of the day. Appropriated or not, all that zhuzh is made of Dave, and Dave is made of it.
The temptation to lose his own self must have been there for a long time, but thereâs a truth to him that no amount of fame or otherwise can squash. In the Nineties, when he was winning awards and The Coral Snakes and others were smashing the big venues and the charts, he still kept it real.
When invited to present ARIAs he addressed the musos in the room, not the sycophants and the money men: âIâd always ignore the teleprompter; I enjoyed making those people sweat.â
âNo dead air thoughâ heâs quick to point out âI was always a pro.â
â
Dave has a new album out through Liberation Records. Rock ânâ Roll Is Where I Hide is available from http://www.thedavegraneyshow.com/ and good music retailers.
Dave Graneyâs new book â1001 Australian Nightsâ is out now on Affirm Press. You can purchase the book at: http://www.thedavegraneyshow.com/ or anywhere else that sells fine literature.
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