78 Saab
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
78 Saab | |
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Origin | Canberra, Australia |
Genre(s) | Rock Alternative rock Indie rock Dream pop |
Years active | 1995–present |
Label(s) | Troy Horse Records Ivy League Records |
Website | Official website |
Members | |
Benjamin Nash Nicholai Danko Jake Andrews Garth Tregillgas |
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Former members | |
Darren Smith Christovac Thompson |
78 Saab is an Australian rock band, comprising Ben Nash (guitar, vocals), Jake Andrews (lead guitar), Garth Tregillgas (bass) and Nicholai Danko (drums). The band compare themselves to Neil Young, REM and The Rolling Stones as well as Australian bands Died Pretty and The Church[1]. Forming in Canberra, they have been based in Sydney since early 1997.
Contents |
[edit] History
[edit] Early years
The band was formed at Australian National University – by Nash, Tregillgas and the since departed Darren Smith and Christovac Thompson - to perform in the Australian National Campus Band Competition, the name coming from the car that Nash drove at the time. "I used to own a 1978 Saab which I bought off my grandparents for around a-thousand bucks when I was at university", explained Nash, in a later interview, "Anyway, we entered a band competition [at Uni] and we had about 3 hours to come up with a name. '78 Saab' got thrown in the ring and for better or worse we've stuck with that name."[2]
At the time, the major sponsor of the competition was Sydney business, Troy Horse, a recording and rehearsal studio with a record label attached. The winning band was awarded an EP - recorded and released by Troy Horse - and a 40-date national tour of campuses.
Upon winning the competition, 78 Saab recorded their debut EP, Eastwards By Removal for Troy Horse Records[3]. Other winners from that era included Perth bands Eskimo Joe and Jebediah[4]. Eastwards By Removal was released in August 1997.
It was at this time that Jake Andrews became a member of the band, after original guitarist Smith made the decision not to tour due to a medical condition[5].
As referred to in the title of the EP, 78 Saab moved due East from Canberra to Sydney at this time. It was in Sydney that Nicholai Danko joined the fray, with drummer Thompson having left the band after the campus tour was completed. Danko had first encountered 78 Saab as a student at CSU Riverina during their campus tour.
[edit] Ivy League releases
78 Saab were among the first group of bands to work with the Winterman & Goldstein group of companies, a management company with an attached record label, Ivy League Records. "We released some fantastic Australian singles and albums by our favourite Australian bands and friends – Youth Group, 78 Saab, Hoolahan, The John Reed Club & The Monarchs to name ... well, all of them actually", reads the official Ivy League site, referring to the label's origins[6]. The label was created largely to release the bands of the company directors – namely Youth Group, John Reed Club and, later, The Monarchs. 78 Saab were the first band to give them notoriety in a purely management role, something they would later build on with bands such as Jet and The Vines.
The first releases on Ivy League were the two-track single, "Whatever Makes You Happy", the five-track EP Hello Believers and a later re-pressing of the EP, which features all seven songs.
This material was recorded and co-produced by Michael Carpenter, a musician with local power-pop band, The Pyramidiacs. Hello Believers featured the first involvement of Robert F. Cranny as an occasional keyboardist.[7]The EP was listed at #93 in the Oz Music Project Top 100 Australian Albums of the 90s[8].
In 1999, 78 Saab worked with producer Tim Whitten (Art of Fighting, Gaslight Radio, Gersey), at Megaphon Studios in Sydney, recording "Sunshine" as a summer single. The rest of the band's debut album was recorded with Greg Wales (Sandpit) in St Kilda[9]. The album, entitled Picture a Hum, Can't Hear a Sound, was released in 2000 on Ivy League Records, and received rotation on Triple J with "Sunshine", "Smile", "Jack Frost" and "Karma Package Deal". "When we got our first song on Triple J, it felt like we'd won the lottery," said Nash in a 2007 interview.[10] "But commercial radio has never had a bar of us. There's not a whole lot we can do. I can't lose any sleep over it any more." Tregillgas was credited as G. Surls on the album, an in-joke referring to his occasionally acerbic demeanour. The album went out of print in 2003.[11].
The band's second album, Crossed Lines, was released in October 2004, after a considerable hiatus from the studio. By this time the group had been playing without a keyboardist for some years. They had toured Australia numerous times in support of their debut album, but had also spent considerable time renegotiating a deal with Ivy League Records. Having split from Winterman & Goldstein – essentially the management arm of the same company – the group considered offers from other labels before eventually signing back on with their old label [12]
Recorded with Tim Whitten, the album sandwiched alternative rock songs between more epic dream pop-influenced numbers. [13]. Singles from the album included "Beat of Your Drum" – as a preliminary EP release – and "No Illusions", which would give the band its biggest taste of commercial radio play.
78 Saab's third album, The Bells Line, was released on Ivy league Records on September 29 2007. The three-year gap between albums was described in one newspaper story[10] as a source of consternation for the band: "Nash says it stems from a combination of laziness and the need to juggle day jobs to pay the rent." The album's chief inspiration was described as coming from Nash's four-hour commute between his childhood home, his parents' farm in Orange, New South Wales and his Sydney base. The Bells Line is the name of the road that runs up the middle of NSW.
[edit] Other projects
Ben Nash has collaborated with Adalita from Magic Dirt and performed live with her during the "Tough Love" tour, which featured 78 Saab supporting Magic Dirt[14].
Drummer Nicholai Danko has performed live with Tucker B's and The For Fuck's Sakes, and has recorded with Josh Pyke and Sarah Blasko, whom he played live with in 2003.
[edit] Discography
- Picture a Hum, Can't Hear a Sound (2000)
- Crossed Lines (October 2004)
- The Bells Line (September 2007)
[edit] References
- ^ 78 Saab
- ^ 78 SAAB. tsunamimag.com (2007-02-02).
- ^ Eastwards By Removal. Australian Music Online (2007-02-02).
- ^ PBS Presents: 2005 National Campus Band Competition. PBS 106.7FM (2007-02-02).
- ^ 78 Saab hit the road on tour (Aug '05). Australian Music Online (2007-02-02).
- ^ You'Re In The Ivy League
- ^ Australian Music Online :: Artists :: Hyperspace
- ^ Oz Music Project: Top 100 Australian Albums of the 90s
- ^ Australian Music Online :: Releases :: Picture A Hum, Can't Hear A Sound
- ^ a b "Saab Hit the Road to Fame", The Age, October 26, 2007
- ^ Oz Music Project - Australian Music Resource and Webzine
- ^ Oz Music Project - Australian Music Resource and Webzine
- ^ 78 Saab - Beat of Your Drum on FasterLouder.com.au
- ^ Oz Music Project - Australian Music Resource and Webzine
- Band profile at Australian Music Online