Noah Learmouth is craning over the edge of the stage at Manchesterâs Yes Basement, every limb stretched outwards. âI havenât said a thing since 2010, my heart is bleeding, my heart explodes for you,â he sings with a visceral friction. It is Melbourne band Radio Free Aliceâs first ever UK show, and a performance that is sparky and effervescent spills over into mayhem during the bandâs recent single â2010â, the crowd reciprocating the taut energy emanating from the stage.
âGod that was great,â Learmouth tells NME after the show. âThat was our first time playing overseas, it felt loose and a little bit chaotic, it was fun. Itâs surprising that there are people here who know us, itâs just so weird.â
It is not surprising when you hear â2010â, a calling card for Radio Free Alice. Its twinkling, melodic guitar licks and bopping basslines immediately throw listeners into the warm embrace of the â80s indie greats, a musical happy place where the bandâs five members were brought up. âWe grew up on those bands,â Learmouth explains. âOur core favourites that we come back to are early New Order, The Jam, The Housemartins.â
As NME chats to the band, it quickly becomes clear that these passions run deep, with Learmouth happy to talk extensively about things like favourite Smiths B-sides (âHalf A Personâ, for those wondering). âItâs not a deliberate thing,â adds bassist and saxophonist Michael Phillips about the influence of that era on the band. âThatâs just the music we grew up listening to through our parents and itâs what we love, and it bleeds through.â
â2010â is part of the bandâs second project, set to be released this summer and recorded over three days in Melbourne with producer Nao Anzai [The Belair Lip Bombs, HighSchool]. It includes the enchanting track âSpainâ, a spacious, creeping song that boasts the kind of prowling menace that conjures The Cureâs âDisintegrationâ, with Phillipsâ sly bass taking centre stage with a command that would make Simon Gallup proud.
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That songâs secret weapon, and one of the bandâs distinguishing features, is its restrained use of Phillipsâ saxophone, something that allows the band to explore sonic real estate that is often deemed off-grounds for indie rock groups. Phillips has been mastering the instrument for a decade, and draws from his love of Sonny Rollins, Stan Getz and JoĂŁo Gilberto.
Given Radio Free Aliceâs apparent fixation on the music of the era, and the colourful guitar notes of Jules Paradiso, it would be a short leap of faith to assume that the band were named in tribute to R.E.M.âs legendary 1981 debut single âRadio Free Europeâ. In fact, they only discovered the song after they had decided to take their name from a Sydney record store of the same name.
Sydney had been the childhood home of Learmouth and Paradiso, who first started playing music together at high school, aged 14. When pushed, they will admit that the first recorded evidence of their musical collaboration is a video of them covering Mudhoneyâs âTouch Me Iâm Sickâ at a school assembly. âItâs a very hard watch,â Learmouth concedes. âThe headmaster was covering his earsâ.
The two moved to Melbourne upon graduation, bringing in Phillips, drummer Lochie Dowd and eventually synth player Maayan Barnatan. They set about honing in on the sound we hear now, and, feeling disconnected from their musical home, began setting their sights on the world beyond their borders.
This first visit to the UK, which has also included a show at Londonâs Shacklewell Arms and dates at The Great Escape Festival among others, is what they see as the start of something that could become permanent.
âThereâs a low ceiling in Australia in terms of how many people there are who are interested in indie rock,â Learmouth says. âThereâs a limit to how many venues there are, how many cities there are. If youâre successful in Australia, youâre just successful in Australia, but if youâre successful in the UK, that then goes into Europe, and then it keeps going.â
They explain that they feel at armâs length from the dominant voices in the alternative scene in their home country â Triple J and bands like Spacey Jane and Ocean Alley. âI donât think thatâs our people, our sound,â Learmouth adds. âIâm just sick of surf rock, itâs not for us.â
They are keen to add that they consider Melbourne a âvibrantâ and âworld classâ music city, but it is clear from speaking to them and from the sheer urgency of the music they are already creating that they feel they are ready for more. âWeâre passionate about Australia and we donât want to lose our Australian audience, but we donât want to be an âAustralianâ band, we want to be bigger than that,â Learmouth says.
With the promise of a return to British shores later this summer and plans to record their debut album here later in 2024, it seems the band is gravitating toward their permanent home. If their first show in Manchester is anything to go by, theyâll fit in just fine.
Radio Free Alice’s second project is due to be released later this summer
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