In other words, the former Crowded House frontman
intends to be the first to release an album in the new millennium.
And it doesn't hurt that Finn was born and raised in the part of
the world were the sun rises first. He's already surmised that
Gisborne, New Zealand, the easternmost city in the world, will be
where he'll debut his follow-up to this year's Try Whistling
This.
"I don't know if it'll mean anything to anybody apart from me,"
says Finn regarding his diabolical plan. The singer/guitarist is
actually half-kidding about the target release date and knows
another band may try to beat him to the punch. "Let 'em try," jokes
Finn, a native New Zealander. "I got good connections."
Before Finn can nail down a release date for the album, he'll
actually have to begin recording it, something he intends to do
following an upcoming tour of New Zealand. During his recent
nine-date solo tour of the U.S. -- which featured guest appearances
from Eddie Vedder, Sheryl Crow and Grant
Lee Phillips, among others -- Finn's been writing new
material. On a recent plane, without a tape recorder to hum a
melody into to, Finn wrote music for the first time since
he was fifteen years old.
Something else Finn hasn't done in a while -- fifteen years to be
exact -- is perform in the band Split Enz, the
group he was in prior to the formation of Crowded House. Because
Split Enz also included Crowded House drummer Paul
Hester and Crowded House contributor/brother Tim
Finn, the possibility of a simultaneous Crowded
House/Split Enz reunion tour isn't outside the realm of
possibility.
"At some point it would be fun to do," Finn says. "Just from the
point of view of combining all the different eras and phases of my
career. Whether that'll happen, it's probably a big logistical
expense. But, you know, it's possible."
BLAIR R. FISCHER(November 24, 1998)
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