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Creative Differences



Last Updated: 12/5/2009

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Status: Single
City: Melbourne
State: Victoria
Country: AU
Signup Date: 12/15/2007

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Wednesday, October 28, 2009 
Monday, June 22, 2009 

Category: Music
Every once in a while one gets to hear an artist who truly understands the notion of melancholy. Not depressing, not necessarily full of the vim of life, but never the less honestly regarding the notion of the human condition. Very rarely, one gets to hear somebody who truly expresses it. On his debut album, Rick Ralli (from Melbourne, Australia) has done just that. Over 2 years in the making ‘Permanently on the Verge’ challenges the listener through phases that straddle the sublime and the ridiculous, the childlike and the morbid, the ecstasy and the defeat. It’s a wonderful combination, and when an artist can find their way through the miasma of possible prog rock self indulgence, they can truly end up with a spectacular result. This is one of those albums. Beginning with a sweet nod to ‘Tomorrow never knows’, Ralli quickly changes pace in to an almost Pink Floydesque charger of a song, ‘Let Up’. Influences are obvious and lovingly revered, with nods to CSNY, The Who, Cheap Trick and even the early seventies acid movement, Ralli makes sure, that even if he is displaying a taste for certain genres, the album is still truly his.
A change of pace is evident in ‘Nothing But Healthy’, (the first single) a sympathetic lament to the Sunday mornings we’ve all had, as we stumble to put the kettle on, with the radio on in the background, reminding ourselves that we should be up and about when all we want is to stay in bed, reading the Life section, reprimanding ourselves that we really shouldn’t be doing that at our age. “Could haves and didn’t do’s, shouldn’t haves with a different view, can let it do my, do my head in.” (POTV)
‘Adopted Garden’ bursts in with a skewed look at the kind of folk song that teases that it wants to bite your head off. A lovely turn of phrase and the kind of lyrics that remind us that sometimes simple is still best.
A slower paced ‘Learn To Merge’ brings the melodies to the fore, and the sweet vocals of Ralli, along with the very smooth guitar and charming piano certaincy of Ben Timmis (Silver Night Drive) make for one of the more beautiful, if slightly dark, tracks of the album. As a ponderous conversation with a possible ex-lover, Ralli communicates that “I don’t know why you seem to make me hang on the things you say, All I really want is you to make me feel sane.” "Bitter can fight jealousy, I’m happy dealing with envy, its harder to catch in captivity". Simple, succinct, and very powerful.
As one of the standout tracks, ‘Happiness’, co-written with and featuring the vocals of Andre Warhurst (Silver Night Drive), is a sublime piece of writing, showing they've mastered the art of a big emotional rock song here. And kudos to them for it; also featuring a mindblowing drum track from the albums drummer Ian Kitney. This track could honestly lift this album to classic status.
In a slightly country rock twist, ‘Talking Her ‘Round’ plays on the combination of strings, quiet guitar, and a lovely melody that I can still barely believe come just predominantly from Ralli (who played most of the instruments on the album), and with massive respect, reminded me of Fleet Foxes; soft, but strong. It’s a truly sweet and moving combination, with a vibrant punch at the end. Lovely.
After an almost Celtic beginning, ‘Ten Square Feet’ lends itself to the wonderful genre of Folk Rock, with a loving reference to Easey St, the lyrics move between truly lyrical and mellifluous (sorry but there’s no better word), to slightly grating. It creates a mood of disaster. The production is miles deep with subtle layers of overdubs coming to the fore with every listen. It may sound strange, but with the reverse sampling at the end of the track, its catch cry of “hold on to the light” seems honest and forceful in its dynamic refrain.
            “Behind The Cosmic Mess” is just that. With its powerful guitar, we remember Ralli’s most prominent talent. He is wonderful with an axe. Simple, clever, strong and cutting, this song brings the CSNY ideas in true conflict with moments of Page and Townshend with the call-backs, it makes for a stunning combination.
Getting funkier, ‘Wide Awake’ changes the tone of the album entirely, but without losing the listener, shifting gears from a beautiful lyrical and slightly melancholic trip to a possibly dangerous and very sexy world where we get to see a different side of Ralli. After the distortion of the opening moments, we get drums and a bass line that verge on dirty.  The drums are possibly perfect for this track. If your hips don’t move, you may be in a coma.
The brilliant track, ‘No Fun In A Crisis’ has plenty o’ tricks up its sleeve, as of course we would hope. Permanently on the verge, (basically, all I wanted to do was get a Bourbon (I don’t drink bourbon) and slam my head into oncoming cyclists...) Anyhoo, the riffs are excellent and  features a vicious guitar solo, Ralli obviously knows and respects his teachers, as well as giving a nod to Sabbath and Zeppelin with the drum call back sequence. The only track with a roll out fade, credit must also be given to mixer Tim Johnston (Nick Cave, Stereophonics) for taming such a huge barrage of guitars, aggressive, spiteful, but a lot of fun.
And to finish off, ‘Beauty Rash’ is sweet and melodic but with wonderfully sour lyrics "Then the doubt set in, so homely its been breeding" and what I believe to be a wonderful ending to a spectacular album. I may be a harsh critic, but I defy anyone (and I’ve had eight listens) to disregard the beauty and honestly beautiful melancholy which is Permanently On The Verge. Absolutely lovely. Do yourself a favour.
Cookie. (Educator and rock piglet)
Monday, May 25, 2009 



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Sunday, May 10, 2009 

Category: Music
Tonight I went to a friend's showing of a work-in-progress dance piece. This piece has been a work-in-progress for many years and my friend is a professional artist who tours the world and is very respected in his field. After the performance was a Q&A feedback session with people offering a few suggestions, comments, observations and most asking questions about certain aspects of the piece, the development of it, etc...
Now, while this is common practice in the 'art world', and a valid and serious part of the artist's development, my question is this: would this model work in music? Could this model work if a band were to invite their piers, some industry people, etc to a live performance that was presented as a developmental stage of their career and then sit down at the end and have a Q&A session with those present?
Part of me thinks that this could be a revolution in developing an artist's career - another part of me thinks that it couldn't possibly work due to the nature of the perceived difference between the two art forms.
Anyway, lemme know what you think!
Saturday, March 14, 2009 
........................

......Rick Ralli – Permanently On The Verge (CDMF0001)....

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Creative Differences – Music & Film is proud to announce the release of Rick Ralli’s album, Permanently On The Verge.....

Peaking at #1 (and consistently charting) on the Myspace Classic Rock charts and with over 800,000 plays Rick Ralli’s music has been touching the hearts and souls of people in the know both in Australia and in the USA.....

Featuring Ian Kitney from Tim Rogers and the Temperance Union and Andre Warhurst from Silver Night Drive and Spoonful.....

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Background:....

In 2006 a young man wrote a letter to his favourite band, explaining how, after seeing them play in the Royal Albert Hall in London, they saved his life during a difficult patch. ....

In his letter he happened to mention that he had some songs on Myspace and included the link to his site.....

That band was Cheap Trick and during an interview with Smashing Pumpkins' Billy Corgan Rick Neilsen said that he had been listening to these great songs by this guy from Australia, and mentioned the Myspace site.....

That young man was, and still is, Rick Ralli, and you can imagine his surprise when he checked his Myspace to find hundreds of friend requests and song plays, as well as comments and messages, mostly from the U.S.....

Over the next year those hundreds grew into thousands (332807 Profile Views, 819,810 Total Plays as at 12/01/09).....

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In 2009 Rick has his album, Permanently On The Verge, ready to unleash here in Australia and in the U.S. He has been warming up for the launch with some solo shows and headliner shows with his band, Done With Mirrors.....

Release date is set for early April.....

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Rick's music will at once conjure up those goosebump moments usually associated with Big Star, Crazy Horse, CSNY, Pink Floyd and then just as effectively set heads rocking a la Led Zeppelin, Cheap Trick, The Who, at the next turn.....

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In support of the album release Rick and his band will be performing two small launch tours from Melbourne and Sydney, taking in Victoria and NSW, and securing radio airplay on NOVA and TRIPLEJ.....

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Permanently On The Verge was produced by Rick and mostly recorded at Rick's home studio SONIC CAVE in Collingwood, Melbourne, on a 16 track recording unit.....

Additional overdubs and drums were added at THE FORUM with Ian Kitney (Tim Rogers and the Temperance Union, Ross McLennan) and mixed at STUDIO 94 with Tim Johnston (Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, Stereophonics).....

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Tracks to look out for are ‘Nothing But Healthy’, ‘Learn To Merge’, ‘No Fun In A Crisis’ and ‘Happiness’ featuring Andre Warhurst.....

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The standout track is ‘Nothing But Healthy’ - built for radio, gentle on the ears and with a softly spoken message of positivity.....

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The Main Players:....

RICK RALLI....

..-        ..accomplished hard rock guitarist, based in Melbourne, Australia, with several albums already under his belt. (Through To China, Stone Motherless to name a couple)....

..-        ..plays most instruments on the album including electric and acoustic guitars, bass, slide, keyboards, string arrangments, percussion, theremin, sings all vocal parts and plays drums on ''No Fun In A Crisis''.....

.. ..

IAN KITNEY....

..-        ..Creative Differences label manager, plays drums on the album and executive producer....

..-        ..has been playing drums with too many Melbourne artists to name here....

..-        ..currently drums with (and is original member) Tim Rogers and the Temperance Union and plays guitar with Ross McLennan.....

.. ..

TIM JOHNSTON....

..-        ..mixer and executive producer on  Permanently On The Verge....

..-        ..recorded Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, Stereophonics, Silver Night Drive, The Cruel Sea and many more.....

Saturday, July 19, 2008 

Category: Music
Watch this space for Rick Ralli's (Done With Mirrors) beautiful debut album Permanently On The Verge, due for release this Spring on iTunes through CDM&F! It's been 'on the verge' for a couple of years now and it's finally going to drop! Watch this space....
Wednesday, March 12, 2008 

Current mood:  cultured
Category: Music
Astrid Munday, accompanied on guitar by Ian Kitney (yes, the same one that plays drums for Tim Rogers, etc...) subtely took the stage while there was still daylight streaming in through the large windoors of the Ed. Castle. Astrid’s delivery is sweet, flighty and transportive and all of these elements were there for the small crowd of friends and aquaintances. Her voice and songs transcend the surroundings and the environment and held the audience in rapt appreciation of her beautiful songsmithing.
Casionova came on with arms full of 1980’s Casio home keyboards, a DH-1 (DH stands for Digital Horn of course, again a Casio... of course) and a Casio guitar (complete with Duran Duran cassette in the guitar’s on-board cassette deck). After getting off to a glitchy start, compounded by MIDI gear misbehaving, he recovered majestically to deliver a string of strong pop/dance/electro tunes covering such vital themes as ’Penguins Are Cool’, ’This Is Not The Future’ and ’Library’ - how the hell does he do it?!
Headlining was the debut live performance of RobotTurboMarie - Ian Kitney’s long-running solo project which started out years ago involving a few songs on a guitar, and has now evolved into a Hawkwind/Pink Floyd audio/visual feast of sumptuous animated images and very soundtracky music. RobotTurboMarie, consisting of Ian with Sayako ..boards and guest vocal spots from Astrid and Maki, performed songs from their album ’CINEMATOPOEIA’. There was a slight hint of nervousness at such a large undertaking but the small crowd of friends and aquaintances (still there from earlier) was very appreciative and maybe even a little surprised at the depth of the content...
Looking forward to the focus and content to be sharpened in future gigs.
Astrid and Ian play the Retreat this Thursday 13th March.