Fr
24
Juni
2022
19:00
Einlass
20:00
Start
Bi Nuu
präsentiert
Fr
24.06.
19:00
Einlass
20:00
Start
Verlegt

JOHN MOODS

+ Support: HACHIKU

VERLEGT INS MARIE-ANTOINETTE. BEREITS GEKAUFTE TICKETS BEHALTEN IHRE GÜLTIGKEIT!
Konzert
18,00 €
Abendkasse
15,00 €
Vorverkauf
+ Geb
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Aus produktionstechnischen Gründen muss die Show leider vom Lido ins Marie-Antoinette verlegt werden. Bereits gekaufte Tickets behalten ihre Gültigkeit.


Gefördert von Neustart Kultur, der Initiative Musik und der Beauftragten der Bundesregierung für Kultur und Medien.


JOHN MOODS

Nach vielen Jahren in der Band Fenster (welche bisher vier LPs und den Film Emocean veröffentlichten) nahm Jonathan Jarzyna den Namen John Moods für sein Soloprojekt an und veröffentlichte 2018 sein Debütalbum The Essential John Moods bei Mansions and Millions. Jetzt, nachdem er seine ersten Solo- Touren abgeschlossen hat, kehrt er mit So Sweet So Nice zurück, welches aufgeteilt in zwei EPs veröffentlicht wird: So Sweet erscheint am 16. April und So Nice am 6. August. Dieses Diptychon wird schließlich in einer Vinyl-LP kulminieren, die am 6. August im physischen Format erscheinen wird.



HACHIKU

Hachiku's highly anticipated debut LP I'll Probably Be Asleep was released on Milk! Records & Marathon Artists in November 2020. When a close friend took an in-advance listen to Hachiku’s debut album, I’ll Probably Be Asleep, she had one question for bandleader Anika Ostendorf: “‘why are you so angry?’” It’s not the first reaction that most people would have to the Melbourne-based outfit, whose dream-pop jams —all dewy guitars, rickety drum-machines, and layered ambience, topped off with Ostendorf’s oft-breathy voice— would seem to contain no sharp edges.

But, following Hachiku’s self-titled 2017 debut EP, Ostendorf found herself dealing with darker themes; which reflected the 25-year-old growing up, changing, and feeling mounting frustrations. 'A Portrait Of The Artist As A Young Woman' was inspired by a 2AM Gertrude Street nightclub encounter with a climate change denier, and deals with greater ideas of being a young woman in the world, and in the world of music (“it’s about that feeling of trying to express your opinion and not being heard”). 'Shark Attack' is a study of loss and grieving, following the death of Ostendorf’s family dog. Songs like the title track, 'Dreams Of Galapagos', and 'You’ll Probably Think This Song Is About You' are about yearning: for other experiences and other feelings, to be either on foreign shores or back home, but never exactly where you are.

Being restless, unsure of yourself and your place in the world, are classic 20-something themes. And they’re brought into sharp clarity, made tangible and undeniable, on 'Bridging Visa B'. It’s a song about Ostendorf being left in limbo while her application for Australian residence to be with her partner is being processed. And, in turn, feeling as if the validity of your romantic relationship —not to mention your fate— is in the hands of bureaucratic authorities.

The song opens with the question that Ostendorf —whether interviewing with government authorities or tending bar at the Northcote Social Club— loathes the most: “Where are you from?” She was born in Livonia, Michigan, found her early-childhood years bouncing between America, England, and Germany, before her family settled in sleepy Dansweiler, outside Cologne in Western Germany. She formed her first band, Tutti Frutti, at seven, writing the songs herself. By 14 she was playing in both a pop-punk cover-band and in her mother’s combo of IT workers from the Ford factory, who’d rewrite famous pop songs to be about their workplace.

Ostendorf left for London to study biology, and then, fatefully, spent a year on exchange in Melbourne, with an eye on the city’s famed music scene. Whilst studying, she interned at Milk! Records —the local label made world-famous by Courtney Barnett— from which she took DIY ideals, a strong sense of musical community, and a record deal.

After returning to London to finish a degree she was no longer that interested in finishing —both out of her own stubbornness and at the behest of Milk! boss Jen Cloher— Ostendorf returned to Melbourne. Back in town, she assembled a crack local combo (Georgia Smith, Jessie L. Warren, Simon Reynolds), released the first Hachiku EP, and played countless shows around town; becoming a staple of the music scene she once looked at, longingly, from afar. Hachiku played with Barnett, Cloher, Stella Donnelly, Aldous Harding; supported The Breeders and José González on national tours; opened for Cloher and Snail Mail on European tours and Barnett on an American tour. She played festivals like Iceland Airwaves, Eurosonic, End Of The Road, The Great Escape and many more.

I’ll Probably Be Asleep betrays much of that background, that sense of travel and wandering. It was recorded, Ostendorf says, in countless locations, here and there: from houses in Australia and Germany to backyard sheds, rehearsal rooms, and the Milk! warehouse. “It’s like a big puzzle, piecing together these randomly-recorded sounds,” Ostendorf says; offering that she thinks of herself “more as a producer than a songwriter”.

Yet, Ostendorf’s songs are full of memorable melodies, are smartly written and sweetly sung. I’ll Probably Be Asleep is an album of dreamy atmospheres and relatable sentiments, a grand first-up LP for one of Melbourne’s most promising young bands. And, if you listen closely, it’s, in its own way, an angry record.


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