Blackfire (Australian band)

Blackfire were an Australian Indigeous band. They were formed in late 1992 and disbanded in 1999. The members were Bradley Brown, Selwyn Burns, Kutcha Edwards, Grant Hansen and Kelli McGuiness. They released two albums, A Time to Dream (1994) and the Paul Hester produced Night Vision (1998).

Blackfire
GenresAustralian Indigeous
Years active1992 (1992)–1999 (1999)
LabelsCAAMA
Associated acts
  • Watbalimba
  • Interaction
Past members
  • Bradley Brown
  • Selwyn Burns
  • Kutcha Edwards
  • Grant Hansen
  • Kelli McGuiness
  • Leroy Cummins

History

Blackfire were formed in Melbourne in late 1992 by Bradley Brown (ex-Watbalimba, Interaction) on bass guitar, drums and vocals; Selwyn Burns (ex-Coloured Stone, Mixed Relations, No Fixed Address) on lead guitar and vocals; Glen "Kutcha" Edwards on lead vocals, Grant Hansen (ex-Interaction, Mercury Blue) on rhythm guitar and vocals, and Kelli McGuiness (ex-Dr Koori, Interaction, Watbalimba) on drums, bass guitar, guitar and vocals.[1] Their first album, A Time to Dream, was released in 1994 by Central Australian Aboriginal Media Association (CAAMA).[2]

Leroy Cummins (ex-Christine Anu Band) joined the group on guitar in 1997 to expand the line-up.[3] Blackfire toured parts of Asia: Japan, China and Taiwan, alongside Archie Roach and the Naroo Dancers.[3] They recorded their second album, Night Vision (1998), with Paul Hester producing at his studio, the Lodge, in Melbourne.[4][3] Hansen compared their two albums, "some different sounds and different range of music. I'd say that it's much more universal than the first album. The first one was about being Kooris living in the city. It was a full-on rock album. This one's much more about hope for the future. The style of songs is a bit different – they’'re not as quick paced and rocked up, it's more mellow."[3]

gollark: You can totally somewhat advance plan political stuff.
gollark: I mean, they centrally plan some stuff, but the majority of resource allocation is marketized.
gollark: Not really.
gollark: 𝐈 π€πŒ ππ„πˆππ† 𝐑𝐄𝐒𝐏𝐄𝐂𝐓𝐅𝐔𝐋, π‹π˜π‘πˆπ‚π‹π˜. π˜πŽπ” 𝐀𝐑𝐄 π–π‘πŽππ†.
gollark: Central planning is still just not very good.

References

  • Hayward, Philip (1998), Sound Alliances: Indigenous Peoples, Cultural Politics, and Popular Music in the Pacific, Continuum International Publishing Group, ISBN 978-0-304-70050-9
  • Winkler, Tim (21 January 1994), "Blackfire singing the songs of conciliation", The Age
  • "Oz group scores a coup in China", Sunday Herald Sun, 2 May 1999
  • "Hansen act is on fire", Sunday Herald Sun, 3 May 1998
  • "Blackfire on target", Sunday Herald Sun, 15 May 1994
  1. "Bands: Blackfire". CAAMA Music. Archived from the original on 15 January 2002. Retrieved 30 March 2017.CS1 maint: BOT: original-url status unknown (link)
  2. Blackfire (1994), A time to dream, Alice Springs, N.T.: Central Australian Aboriginal Media Association (CAAMA Music), retrieved 30 March 2017
  3. "Hot Stuff". Deadly Vibe (10/11). Vibe Australia. October 1997. Retrieved 31 March 2017.
  4. Blackfire (1998), Night vision, Paul Hester, retrieved 30 March 2017
  • Caritas (pdf) reconciliation. Stories of the heart / Sounds of the rock (study guide)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.