Los
Angeles, Sept. 12, 1995
By LORRAINE ALI
Los Angeles Times, September 1995
There's no denying that silverchair is the
cutest band around. The three Australians, aged 15 and 16,
have captured the hearts of even the most cynical rock pop
fans with their little-kid looks and their sweet grunge hit
Tomorrow. It's almost enough to make you forgive the Pearl
Jam feel that dominates their debut album frogstomp. Hey,
they're young -- and besides, could you have pulled together
a fairly cohesive album when you were 15?
But one thing you wouldn't expect is for silverchair,
in all its cuteness, to blow you away live, to prove [that
they are] one of the most exciting live acts since alternatrive
became a sales term rather than an aesthetic [one].
But that's exactly what [silverchair] did
at the Whisky. The band, which was greeted by the female sector
of the auidence with screams and whistles, launched into its
songs with such power and focus that it put vaguely similar
bands like Catherine Wheel, which has at least 10 years experience
on it, to shame.
The band, which was discovered in working-class
Newcastle through a 1994 demo contest sponsored by an Australian
radio station, has clearly outgrown an early Pearl Jam fixation,
playing its songs with a hard-hitting and improvisational
edge. Black Sabbath (a favorite of the members' parents) seemed
more at the root as silverchair played fat riffs that rocked
like a good Metallica song. Helmet and Nirvana strains could
also be detected, but all the influences were used as a conduit
rather than a confining mold.
Of all the singers who have tried to emulate
Kurt Cobain, singer-guitarist Daniel Johns (who looks eerily
like the late Nirvana frontman) displays most strongly that
soulfulness at the base of his crackling voice. He let the
numbers rip, not really paying attention to what he would
sound like but instead using his voice to convey myriad emotions
[and] feelings you sensed that he may not even consciously
realize are there.
Johns, bassist Chris Joannou and drummer Ben
Gillies have also mastered the art of writing a good song
-- a rarity in alternative rock, where most bands seem to
think that sounding like Sonic Youth is enough. Its numbers
rang like teen anthems, as catchy and rebellious as Cheap
Trick's Surrender days, but as sonically booming as new bands
like Helmet (minus the intensity).
The band inserted lots of improvisational
interludes, alternating minimal and overpowering doses of
feedback. Rather than coming off as obligatory noise, it complemented
the songs with delicate and twisted dynamics.
silverchair is one of the more exciting prospects
to hit rock in a while. The band is teeming with potential,
not to mention personality. The legions of Nirvana Jam bands
out there should feel ashamed that a group of unassuming teenagers
has beaten them at their own game.
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