Coming Second No Bar To Success
Coming Second No Bar To Success
The aspiring musos in this
weekend’s Smokefreerockquest regional finals in Nelson and
Marlborough have an example in guest band Minuit of just how
far a musical career can take you.
For Paul Dodge,
who with bandmates Ruth Carr and Ryan Beehre makes up the
internationally successful breakbeat group, it will be
‘back to the future’ when he goes on stage in front of
the Smokefreerockquest banner this weekend.
Paul
was in a band called No Time for Talking that was in
Smokefreerockquest in 1990, winning the regional heats in
Wellington, but coming second in the finals to the band that
would go on to become OpShop.
Paul says it’s way
cooler coming second anyway...
“Back then Nelson
was part of the Wellington regionals and that was the first
time we discovered the shortcut down Rapaura Road to bypass
Blenheim as we raced in a yellow mini to catch the ferry,
having only decided last minute to take the chance and join
the heats,” he recalls. “And we won - sometimes you
gotta back yourself and take the chance, and we're still
doing it, when we headlined a 2000-strong festival last
month in Vietnam!”
Smokefreerockquest
director Pete Rainey says it’s really thrilling to have a
band that is playing internationally at the level Minuit is
doing, to come and perform at the top of the south
gigs.
“It’s a great tribute to the event and to
the affection it engenders in those who’ve gone through
it,” he says. “It is quite something to have them here
and especially to have Paul come back to Nelson, which is
the home of Smokefreerockquest.”
Minuit have been
based in Berlin for the last few years and have toured from
St Petersburg to the Czech Republic; storming The Crystal
Method's club night in Los Angeles; playing the hotel where
Tarantino wrote Pulp Fiction in Amsterdam; supporting The
Chemical Brothers; and headlining the recent Hanoi
International Music Festival in Vietnam. They are back in
New Zealand to play some shows and to record their new
album, due for release mid-July. Paul says
Smokefreerockquest is an opportunity to try out the new
stuff to a fresh audience.
The Nelson regional
final is at the Trafalgar Centre, at 8pm, on Saturday 13
June, tickets are $20 from The Everyman or at the door.
These are the 14 bands that will compete for the Nelson
regional title, plus prizes and the chance to be selected as
finalists:
Marquee Overload
Nelson College
Toysonfire
Waimea
College
Paradox
Garin
College, Waimea College & Nayland College
PickleMyLove
Nelson
College
Face Of
The Day Nelson
College For Girls
Tabasko
Waimea
College
The Gnats
Nelson
College
Spartans of Metal
Motueka High
School
The
Icecream Bandits
Nelson
College & Nelson College For Girls
Gita
Waimea
College
Ello
Garin
College
MusGravE
Nayland
College
Chill Factor
Garin
College & Nelson College
Johnnie Cameron
Nelson
College
Prizes at stake include $500 worth of
musical gear from NZ Rockshops and their suppliers for the
winning band. Two finalists and the Smokefree People’s
Choice winner from Marlborough will go into a selection
process, based on their DVD, which whittles down regional
finalists from around the country to the six that will go
ahead to the national final, which will be held this year
Auckland’s Power Station on Saturday September
19.
The winning band at the national final wins
musical equipment from NZ Rockshop to the value of $10,000,
and The Edge Airplay Award with NZ On Air where the winning
band’s music and video are recorded at York Street Studios
with guaranteed airplay and a promotional package from
myspace.com.
ENDS
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