<i>Songs From The Front Lawn </i>is deserving a place on any serious bookcase dedicated to New Zealand music. It is thoughtful, analytical, provocative and a mostly enjoyable insight into one of our landmark groups.
- Graham Reid, Elsewhere
Bannisterâs book is a worthy addition to the library of books about NZ acts ... importantly, itâs not just the telling of the duoâs story, but a critical essay.
- Gary Steel, Witchdoctor
Compiles fresh interviews with Don McGlashan, Harry Sinclair and Jennifer Ward-Lealand and gives a great cultural context for The Front Lawnâs multimedia weirdness popping up like a pimple on the unexpectant face of late-80s New Zealand.
- Simon Sweetman, Sounds Good!
The Front Lawn is a multi-award-winning, much-loved New Zealand duo-turned-trio made up of Don McGlashan, Harry Sinclair and, eventually, Jennifer Ward-Lealand. A 1980s variety act, The Front Lawn was part of an Aotearoa/New Zealand alternative tradition of duos that combine music, comedy, theatre and film. Their debut album Songs from The Front Lawn (1989) distilled McGlashan and Sinclairâs theatrical stage show and their groundbreaking short films, Walkshort and The Lounge Bar, while also thrusting the band into the burgeoning New Zealand indie scene. The album is a snapshot of â80s New Zealand, a turbulent, creative period for indie music, indie film and musical theatre, celebrating local identity in new ways.
Starting with a social and cultural background of New Zealand in the late 1970s, the book covers McGlashan and Sinclairâs upbringing on Aucklandâs North Shore, early artistic influences and overseas experiences leading to the formation of the group. Much attention is paid to the duoâs philosophy, early performances, the process of recording the album â including The Front Lawnâs collaboration with Wellington avant-garde/cabaret group Six Volts and the addition of Jennifer Ward-Lealand as the groupâs third member â and analysis of each of the albumâs 10 songs. In parting, Matthew Bannister discusses the groupâs second and final album, More Songs from The Front Lawn, as well as the individual membersâ subsequent artistic careers
Spanning a range of artists and genres from Australian Indigenous artists to Maori and Pasifika artists, from Aotearoa/New Zealand noise music to Australian rock, and including music from Papua and other Pacific islands, 33 1/3 Oceania offers exciting accounts of albums that illustrate the wide range of music made in the Oceania region.
Jon Stratton (jon_stratton22@outlook.com.au) and Jon Dale (jonathon.dale@gmail.com) are the series editors. Jon Stratton is the general editor and Jon Dale has particular responsibility on albums from Aotearoa New Zealand.