RobMCFC
Well-Known Member
I'll happily become an honourable Aussie. Do I get the passport?Most music devotees living in Australia would have heard these tracks many times over and I am no exception.
I think its reasonable to say they are a singles band clearly all extremely talented and I agree they are better live than in studio which is not the norm for me at least of artists I spend more time listening to than INXS.
MH is the quintessential frontman and the Farris Brothers wouldn't have got into Rob's playlist had MH not come along.
For me I actually prefer their earlier albums that have a rawer edge to them and simpler but effective production.
A bit more post punk less layered that you can listen and move to.
Single wise Just Keep Walking from there first album does it more for me than there many well known material from their more popular albums like Kick , LLT . The Swing and X.
Not a huge fan of INXS as I have said previously but a good choice from Rob nevertheless who we are slowly adopting an an honourable Aussie on the music front given his comparative ( meaning in a amiable way ) lack of ardency for all things UK.
Without seeming trite I only played the few songs I haven't heard repetitively in fairly recent times as you cannot listen to or watch many mediums here and not be inundating with INXS perhaps heightened by MH's sad early passing and decided on a 6/10.
Fair enough comments and it shows that we all like a different sound. Naturally I worked my way backwards from Kick. There are some good singles on The Swing and Shabooh Shoobah but the step up in sound to Listen Like Thieves, at least for me, was phenomenal.
One thing that I forgot to mention in my review, which I'm sure you'll already know about, was that INXS started off as a pub band and then went on to support Midnight OIl, even sharing their manager in the early years.
On the video I mentioned, Andrew Farriss tells the story that in those early pub gigs, the band would all start off sitting a different tables around the pub or bar and one by one, they'd walk up to the stage, pick up their instruments and start playing, which is such a cool way of starting a show.
I think you are right - they never would have become the biggest band in the world in the late 80s if it wasn't for Michael Hutchence. I think it's sad that the rest of the band couldn't forge a career after he died (although I'm sure they are all multi-millionaires). I bought the Switch album they did with JD Fortune and it has a couple of good tracks on it, and he's a decent singer, but it just wasn't the same.