Hot
Style - Daniel Johns
Kerrang!
Picture the scene. A comprehensive school in the tough industrial town of Newcastle,
Australia. A classroom full of surf kids and hardnuts. Enter
a scrawny blond lad,pale-skinned, a bit on the feminine side,
pretending he's Mr T, hulking,mowhawked black dude from 'The
A-Team'. Like his hero, the blond kid has a mess of gold chains
around his neck. He makes an awkward and ill-advised attempt
to breakdance. He promptly has the shit kicked out of him.
This is a scene from the childhood of Daniel Johns, silverchair's troubled
and precociously gifted singer, guitarist and songwriter.
It's always the kids who stand out from the crowd who get
picked on, and from an early age, young Johns stood out in
Newcastle with his misguided notion of style.
"I was really young whrn I tried to dress like Mr T," Daniel recalls with a
smile. "I used to be quite good at breakdancing, and I had
all these chains on and everything. I tired to be like Mr
T with the exception of the mohawk and the darkskin. Being
white, I can't really achieve the full Mr T look, but my mum
wouldn't even let me have a mohawk.
"It would have been so cool if I'd done it," he adds with a rueful shake of
the head. "I'd love it if there were pictures of me with a
mohawk.I'd be so proud."
When silverchair shot to fame off the back of their mega-selling first album
Frogstomp, Daniel dressed like a young Kurt Cobain,
a likenss amplified by his straggly blond hair and grunge-icon
status. Johns still wears Coban approved silk shirts over
fading T-shirts, but a lot of the gear he's bought recently,baggy
trousers and the like, are from dance music stores.
"A lot of people think I'm a raver because I wear a lot of dance clothes,"
he explains, "but the stuff I wear is stuff that's comfortable,
with the exception of all the things round my neck.
"I wouldn't say these chains aren't uncomfortable, but they're not exactly
comfortable either," he chuckles. "They're something different
to wear.
A millionaire at an age when most people are scraping together pocket money
by delivering papers, Daniel could buy tons of swanky designer-label
gear if he wanted,but it's just not his style. Or rather,
he just doesn't see the point of spending a huge wad of cash
on a simple shirt.
"I'm not impressed by that kind of stuff at all, although," he concedes, "you
can tell they're good clothes. If I got designer things for
free I'd wear them, but I wouldn't buy them, because it's
just giving money to people who've already got too much!"
What would you wear to a wedding, then?
"I've got a couple of old 70s suits that I got second-hand,"
he says. "A black one and a dark grey one. They've got flares
and big lapels. They're not designer suits. They're very cheap,
but I really like them. As long as it looks cool, it doesn't
matter how cheap something is."
As if to back up this last statement, Daniel picks out an old T-shirt as his
very favorite thing to wear. It's just a cheap black shirt
with has shrunk a little over the years to fit his skinny
frame. The print on the front features a decidedly harmless-looking
cartoon alligator.
"I bought this shirt from a second-hand store when I was 13," Daniel says.
"It's been my favorite thing fro seven years. I liked it because
it has an alligator on it and I was fascinated by them at
the time." Who needs posh gear? Not this Mr T fan, that's
for sure.
Daniel is wearing:Trousers, $30 from a rave shop in New York ; T-Shirt, $5
from a second hand shop in Newcastle,Australia ; Watch, 100
pounds from Club Blueroom,London(tel:0171 434 0627) ; Jumper,
$10 from "a shop back in Newcastle";Shoes, $150, from "some
Japanese techno store in LA"
[Thanks to Ariela for the transcript]