- Digital
Swazi Gold
Disco
Research Records
- Cat No: RESEARCHEP03
- Release: 2018-12-07
- updated:
Formed by the chief songwriters from Melbourne bands Crepes, Dreamin' Wild and Sagamore, Swazi Gold brings old friends together. Chris Jennings and Sam Cooper grew up in the Victorian coastal towns of Barwon Heads and Ocean Grove, while TimKarmouchewas an inland man, hailing from Ballarat in the state’s north-west.
It’s this togetherness that’s at the heart of Swazi Gold’s debut album,Jehovah’s Whispers.There are six songs, two created by each member; through true collaboration and participation. Nothin’ but a democracy here.
Jehovah’s Whisperswas recorded in a single weekend in 2017 at the Cooper’s family home in Ocean Grove, and captures the deep friendship between the three members.
The first single from the album is “Disco”, written by Jennings. He says the song is about, “moving to Melbourne and seeing how we’ve all changed. We’ve all come from these bands that were heavily influenced by the coast and were our hometowns. They’ve changed a lot. We’ve kind of stopped being from the coast,” he says.
Driven by a sassy disco beat, the song name-checks towns dotted along Victoria’s western coastline. These places, like Leopold, Portarlington, Bellbrae and Torquay, are the former homes of Swazi Gold. The final places, and indeed the final words uttered in the song, are better known international hubs—like Barcelona, London and Berlin—suggesting the mainstreaming of worlds in moving to the big smoke.
On “Disco” andJehovah’s Whispers,Swazi Gold draw on their collective love of African music, American funk, and quirky, melody-driven pop music to explore the spaces between conventional genres.
Lyrically, the remaining five songs address a range of themes, from the realisation of personal limitations to seeing a thriving country town fade to nothingness. There’s also a brooding one in there for anyone who’s ever been ripped off.
Jehovah’s Whispersproves the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. And in amidst the love and equality, Swazi Gold’s debut album still packs a punch.
It’s this togetherness that’s at the heart of Swazi Gold’s debut album,Jehovah’s Whispers.There are six songs, two created by each member; through true collaboration and participation. Nothin’ but a democracy here.
Jehovah’s Whisperswas recorded in a single weekend in 2017 at the Cooper’s family home in Ocean Grove, and captures the deep friendship between the three members.
The first single from the album is “Disco”, written by Jennings. He says the song is about, “moving to Melbourne and seeing how we’ve all changed. We’ve all come from these bands that were heavily influenced by the coast and were our hometowns. They’ve changed a lot. We’ve kind of stopped being from the coast,” he says.
Driven by a sassy disco beat, the song name-checks towns dotted along Victoria’s western coastline. These places, like Leopold, Portarlington, Bellbrae and Torquay, are the former homes of Swazi Gold. The final places, and indeed the final words uttered in the song, are better known international hubs—like Barcelona, London and Berlin—suggesting the mainstreaming of worlds in moving to the big smoke.
On “Disco” andJehovah’s Whispers,Swazi Gold draw on their collective love of African music, American funk, and quirky, melody-driven pop music to explore the spaces between conventional genres.
Lyrically, the remaining five songs address a range of themes, from the realisation of personal limitations to seeing a thriving country town fade to nothingness. There’s also a brooding one in there for anyone who’s ever been ripped off.
Jehovah’s Whispersproves the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. And in amidst the love and equality, Swazi Gold’s debut album still packs a punch.
