Red Raven News launched in late April 2023, where we attended 74 concerts which we captured in pictures and text. TheGood, the Bad and the Ugly. We are inclusive of all.
You must work hard to find something bad. New Zealand is bursting with talent and in a small country with a population the size of metropolitan Melbourne, it cannot fairly accommodate all this wealth.
We liked to cruise around the small venues of Auckland and check out the up-and-coming stars. Of which there are many, and it is only hard work and dedicated passion that will get artists there.
As Blind Lemon Pye told the interviewer doing a documentary on the magnificent group from Liverpool called the Rutles (in a parallel world), they come down here to Memphis and they taught me everything about Rutlemania. I been poor ever since.
If you were Searching for theYoung Post Punks, they surfaced at Clash of Arts ’23 in Henderson.
Post Punk takes a wider view and incorporates old school Heavy Metal to Garage to Power Pop. With huge chunks of what was called Glam. Yer Marc Bolan and yer T-Rex. Same as Bowie.
Add in some of the New Wave of British Heavy Metal and there you have it.
Bands like Melanie, Late to Chelsea, Skitch Hiker, Venom Dolls, Edible, The Ideas.
Some of those turned up at the massive Others Way extravaganza on Karangahape Road. As well as a showcase venue from Sweet Treats Punx at the Big Fan.
This relatively new boutique venue in Auckland is providing an ideal venue for young artists to get their shit together in a supportive atmosphere.
Ersha Island put on a stunning show there and were able to transcend technical glitches.
Chris Forster also covered their first birthday bash (only six months older than us) and was suitably impressed by Molly Payton, Lucian Rice and Judah Kelly.
An established avant-garde New Zealand Indie Pop band is the Broods, who triumphed at the Powerstation.
First show honours for Red Raven go to the Live Tribute to Kaytranada show at the Ponsonby Social Club on 6 April 2023.
The band is 75% of Yoko-Zuna (Kenji Iwamitsu-Holdaway, JY Lee and Swap Gomez) with Guy Harrison. Among the top musicians for hire in New Zealand.
Another early show for Red Raven was also a tribute. To Joni Mitchell and a portrait of the seminal artist from Folkie wonder to Jazz Pop maestro, whilst influencing everyone along the way. Beloved of top musicians as well as fans.
Performed by Folk musician Jan Elliot, songwriter poet and spiritual daughter to Mitchell Caitlin Smith and guitarist Cadzow Cossar. At the Harmony Hall in Devonport.
The first show of several, which they are keen to continue as their own Rolling Thunder Revue homage. Or a wrestle and a Last Waltz with the Ego.
The pinnacle of local musicians could well be the Come Together ensemble, as led by Jol Mulholland (often) and featuring the guitar firepower of Bret Adams.
We had impeccable tributes to Neil Young (Look at mother nature on the run in the nineteen seventies), Fleetwood Mac (Players only love you when they’re playing), Dire Straits (I’m just high on the world) and Tarantino’s Reservoir Dogs and Pulp Fiction (The Jack Rabbit Slim Dance Off).
They ended the year with a big bash at the Civic Theatre where they tore up the place more effectively than Peter Jackson’s King Kong.
Canadian-born Tami Neilson is now our own, and her Rock’n’roll Revue demonstrated that she is a Queen of that as well as Country music.
This show at the Civic on 13 October 2023 was especially momentous in seeing Dinah Lee performing live at around eighty years old.
The first genuine Kiwi Rock Chick with the classic Do the Blue Beat from 1964. They finished that show with She’s a Mod and cemented Led Zeppelin’s New Zealand connection.
Deva Mahal may also be Kiwi enough by now. The daughter of Taj Mahal who played here many times himself. Mahal is a classic Soul singer in the style of the great divas of the Sixties like Aretha.
Two superlative shows, one at WOMAD in March, and the other at the Tuning Fork in June.
Special mention also to a slightly younger Pop diva, Princess Chelsea who presented her great new album Everything is Going to be Alright at the Neck of the Woods in October.
I haven’t mentioned the overseas acts yet. That could be Part 2 if I could spend the time to do another one.
Instead, I will cram it here. Because I feel lazy.
We got to see the vast majority touring here, and brevity dictates that I can but highlight a few only.
Kraftwerk stunned everyone who attended, and Mike Beck captured it in prose. He also witnessed the stone Soul and R’n’B master that is the great Nile Rogers and Chic.
The next day we had the pinnacle of Americana and post-Springsteen with the War on Drugs and Spoon double bill.
The old bands can still show the younger fans where it all comes from. 10CC were the oldest, and seeing songwriting legend Graham Gouldman perform is worth admission price alone.
There was also Happy Mondays, Original Wailers, The Damned and Living Colour.
Rap and Hip-Hop are much bigger sellers than Rock since the Nineties and they continue to dominate.
Their shows are seamless and rehearsed down to the last second. Following in the footsteps of the Godfather and the Minister of the Super Heavy Funk, that’s Mister James Brown.
50 Cent and Fridayz Live were shows that could match the musical Hamilton for massive theatrical productions. Hamilton broke fresh ground with music based on Rap.
Prior to April I saw Snoop Dogg and Ice Cube (I’m a bad mothafucka and you know this! / But the pussy ass niggas won’t show this!) at the Trust Arena to complete a year of heavyweight Rap royalty.
Complete with foxy ladies and pole dancers who defiantly shake their money-makers.
A last shout out to the extreme Metal bands. Yer Black, Death, Technical, Gothic, Grindcore, Extreme, Doom, Christian (that’s right), Avant-garde.
I think it’s all avant-garde.
If Rap is hard to take for some, this is harder. But once it has penetrated and is in your brain it can transport you.
Behemoth were a sight to behold at the Powerstation. The dance originates in the head and not the backbone. That does not deny the beast with two backs!
We may not get all that we want, but we certainly get all that we need.
Rev. Orange Peel
Zephyr Love with Jennifer K. Austin – Anthology Lounge, 22 April 2023Broods – Powerstation, 28 April 2023: Concert ReviewCrystalator, Venom Dolls and Club Ruby at Ding Dong Lounge, 29 April 2023: Photo GalleryCome Together Play Neil Youngs Harvest – Civic Theatre, 12 May 2023: ReviewThe High Kings – The Tuning Fork, 24 May 2023: Concert ReviewKing Brothers at The Mothership 25 May 2023: Photo GallerySleaford Mods – Powerstation, 26 May 2023: Concert ReviewThe Damned – Powerstation, 2 June 2023: Review10CC – Bruce Mason Centre, 3 June 2023: Concert ReviewCome Together – Dire Straits’ Making Movies, Kiri Te Kanawa Centre, 10 June 2023: ReviewMarmalade – Big Fan, 22 June 2023: Concert ReviewRetro Valley at The Mothership, Auckland 23-06-2023: Photo galleryClash of Arts ‘23 – Zeal West Henderson, 8 July 2023: ReviewMitch James – Powerstation, 15 July 2023: Concert ReviewIdles – Spark Arena, 21 July 2023: Concert ReviewSwampsong 16, The Thirsty Dog, 22 July 2023Battle-Ska Galactica – Whammy Bar, 28 July 2023: ReviewRinglets with Oscar Dowling and Elliot & Vincent, 4 Aug 2023: Concert PhotographyCome Together Play Fleetwood Mac’s Rumours – Kiri Te Kanawa Theatre, 5 August 2023: ReviewInspiral Carpets – Tuning Fork, 9 August 2023: ReviewHannah Everingham – Wine Cellar, 17 August 2023: ReviewSeattle Tribute – Tuning Fork, 18 August 2023: ReviewCeltica – Bruce Mason Centre, 21 August 2023: Review and Photo GalleryBalu Brigada – Hollywood Theatre, 25 August 2023: ReviewHilltop Hoods – The Studio, 1 September 2023: ReviewStrung Out – Neck of the Woods, 6 October 2023: ReviewSonger – Tuning Fork, 7 October 2023: ReviewHappy Mondays – Powerstation, 17 October 2023: ReviewYulia – Civic Theatre, 21 October 2023: ReviewZiggy Alberts – Auckland Town Hall, 22 October 2023: ReviewNile Rogers and Chic at The Civic Theatre – 23 October 2023: ReviewBeastwars – Galatos, 27 October 2023: ReviewThe Chicks – Spark Arena, 28 October 2023: ReviewHalf*Alive – Tuning Fork, 29 October 2023: ReviewThe Corrs – Spark Arena, 9 November 2023: ReviewThe Original Wailers – Powerstation, 10 November 2023: ReviewAtomic: Hailing the Pioneering Women of Rock – Civic Theatre, 11 November 2023: ReviewFridayz Live ’23 – Spark Arena, 16 November 2023: ReviewKristin Hersh – Tuning Fork, 18 November 2023: ReviewDance Gavin Dance – Powerstation, 21 November 2023: ReviewThe Exploited – Whammy Bar, 24 November 2023: ReviewTash Sultana – Spark Arena, 25 November 2023: ReviewDermot Kennedy – Spark Arena, 29 November 2023: ReviewThe Others Way – Karangahape Rd Venues, 1 December 2023: ReviewL7 – Powerstation, 6 December 2023: ReviewRoyal Blood – Spark Arena, 7 December 2023: ReviewTeskey Brothers – Auckland Town Hall, 7 December 2023: ReviewThe Best of Come Together, Big End of Year Bash 2023 – Civic Theatre, 9 December 2023: ReviewLee Fields – Hollywood Theatre, 10 December 2023: ReviewMatt Joe Gow and Kerryn Fields – Wine Cellar, 16 December 2023: ReviewMatt Joe Gow and Kerryn Fields + Velvet Arrow – Presented by Roger Bowie, 17 December 2023: ReviewNessa Barrett – Powerstation, 19 December 2023: Review