Billboard
By Jim Tremayne
February 18, 1999
NEW YORK -- When Epic releases silverchair's Neon
Ballroom on March
23, the company hopes the Australian power trio will
have fully shed its
teen-titans-of-grunge image in favor of a more mature
stance and sound.
Perhaps most important, the Sony-distributed label is
counting on an audience
that pushed silverchair's first two albums to platinum
status to embrace the
group's newer, more polished musical endeavors.
As flannel-clad 15-year-olds with a high
"cute-band-alert" factor,
silverchair-singer/guitarist Daniel Johns, bassist
Chris Joannou, and drummer
Ben Gillies-broke out quickly in the wake of Nirvana's
early-'90s
breakthrough. Grunge-soaked radio hits like Tomorrow
and Abuse Me
helped make global best-sellers of 1995's frogstomp
and 1997's
Freak Show.
Now with the Nick Launay-produced Neon Ballroom,
silverchair has
ventured further musically from what principal
songwriter Johns admits were
"simply structured songs" by releasing a collection
that includes sweeping
orchestral moments (Emotion Sickness, with David
Helfgott of Shine
fame), hooky pop confections (probable future singles
Miss You Love and
Ana's Song [Open Fire]), and familiar torrents of
thud-rock (initial single
Anthem For The Year 2000).
"I think structurally the songs on this album are a lot
more creative and a lot
less generic than our previous albums," says Johns via
telephone from
Australia. "There are some songs on the album that
appeal to people who like
straight-ahead rock songs. But the majority of the
album is very structurally
different, instrumentally different. It's based more on
orchestral rock sounds
rather than traditional rock sounds."
With so many changes in the tastes of young pop
listeners in particular -- less
emphasis on rock, more on rap in the States,
electronica in Europe -- one must
ask: How much silverchair audience is left to access in
1999, and how will
the group gain new fans?
"That's always a concern," says Ron Cerrito, Epic's VP
of marketing. "That's
our job with our marketing campaign -- not only to focus
on who we feel the
existing fans were but also going down into high
schools and to the younger
teens to focus on them and introduce them to the band
or reintroduce them to
the band.
"For instance, lifestyle-wise we're planning several
targeted promotions and
competitions to take our message directly to those
audiences-high schools,
snowboarding, concerts, surf-and-skate retailers,"
Cerrito says. The
silverchair plan includes an extensive tour of North
America and Europe
beginning March 10.
According to Epic and Sony brass, the biggest advantage
the young men of
silverchair enjoy this time out is their age. At 19 and
free of compulsory
educational obligations, the trio can expect to rack up
road miles and
frequent-flyer points in the coming year.
"In the same time that these guys have matured so much
musically, we also
have really for the first time the tools to get down to
serious business around
the world, because they've graduated," says Robert
Bowlin, president of Sony
Music International. "They can now do the kind of
touring that a band like
silverchair needs to do -- that's the tour-tour-tour sort
of drill. When you also
have to worry about them having to graduate from high
school, you don't have
that kind of luxury."
In the band's native Australia -- where silverchair has
sold a staggering 1 million
units to a population of 17 million -- Neon Ballroom
hits stores March 8, with a
quick blitz of shows to follow. The American
pre-release setup includes a
concert tonight, Feb. 18, at New Orleans' House of
Blues, which will be
broadcast on the Internet through label and band World
Wide Web sites.