Written largely in response to the anti-Asian politics of MP
Pauline Hanson and the far-right wing One Nation Party currently in
power in Australia, Redneck Wonderland finds Midnight Oil
experimenting with new sonic dimensions and reconnecting with the
sense of outrage that has fueled some of their best work.
"We're kicking back at the pervasive conservatism that's running
over our country a bit at the moment," explains frontman
Peter Garrett. "I guess it's inevitable that as
artists that we would come back with something strong ... you know
I think the guitar players just wanted to play some riffs."
The result is an album that strikes a balance between programmed
loops and the raw energy of Midnight Oil's live performances. To
help achieve that mix, the songs were seriously road-tested before
the band hit the studio. "There's nothing like an audience for
telling you when you've got indulgent," explains Garrett. "I think
that we were trying to do something which most other people have
either broken up by now or given up trying to do, which is to try
to get better at making records ... to use some of the influences
and things that are happening around us."
This desire to break new ground and at the same time reconnect with
the urgency of previous albums was reflected in the band's decision
to work with two different producers: the up-and-coming
Magoo (Regurgitator, Front End Loader) and
Warne Livesey who produced the Oils' breakthrough
Diesel and Dust (1987) and Blue Sky Mining
(1990). In many ways however, Redneck Wonderland is
closest in scope to their 1983 effort,
10,9,8,7,6,5,4,3,2,1 with its combination of hard-edged
sonic experimentalism and sharply focused politics.
Though he maintains that the similarity was unconscious, Garrett
agrees that the comparison is an apt one: "It's a survival record,
isn't it?" he says. "You sort of get to a point in your career
where if you're gonna bother making one at all you gotta try and
really 'reach deep,' as they say in sporting parlance ... in some
ways maybe there was a little bit of that going on when we came to
do this one."
The result is an uneven but interesting album. Though there are
moments that fall flat, the band's willingness to take risks yields
pleasant surprises. The delicate "Drop in the Ocean" with it's Pet
Sounds-ish melodies is fragile in a way that is rare for Midnight
Oil, while "Cemetery in the Mind" delivers a perfect alchemy of
electronic adventure and the Oil's unique brand of high-octane
rock. With its repetition of vacuous-sounding slogans of the new
conservatism - such as "tomorrow is better than yesterday, they
say" -- the song urges an apathetic younger generation to get off
the couch and do something.
Garrett, for one, is optimistic about the possibilities of
affecting change: "[Engagement] can take all sorts of forms," he
says. "I don't think it has to be conventionally associated with
politics. I think it's more to do with whether we should kick the
telly in or not and I get a sense that more people are kicking the
telly in ... at least they are here."
DAVE DERBY(December 23, 1998)
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- Portions of Album Content Provided by All Music Guide © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC.