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LOUIS TILLET – THE HANGED
MAN (Timberyard) 2005
Throughout the 1980s and 1990s LOUIS TILLETT provided a commanding and
distinctive presence on the Australian alternative music scene. He was a
softly spoken individual, yet it was his rich baritone singing voice
(once described as “burning like a deep wound… like it’s oozing from the
cracks of a tomb”), characteristic keyboard technique and exceptional
song writing skills that earned him a reputation as an artist of
considerable imagination, authority and conviction, and as a sideman of
redoubtable stature. In addition to leading groups like the Wet Taxis,
Paris Green and the Aspersion Caste, his work as a backing musician with
Catfish, Ed Kuepper, the New Christs and Tex Perkins kept him firmly in
the public eye.
Louis’s first band, the Wet Taxis, commenced life as an experimental
outfit in the manner of fellow Sydneysiders Severed Heads and Scattered
Order before taking on a tougher 1960s-influenced direction. Their
classic debut single on the Hot label, ‘C’mon’ (1984), boasted an
authentic garage/R&B sound heavily influenced by such American
garage/punk bands as the Moving Sidewalks, We the People and the
Chocolate Watchband plus legendary Australian group the Atlantics (who
originally issued the song as ‘Come On’ in 1967). Alongside the likes of
Died Pretty, the Celibate Rifles, the Lime Spiders, the New Christs, the
Hoodoo Gurus and the Eastern Dark, the Wet Taxis came to epitomise the
Australian garage rock sound and aesthetic of the 1980s. The band’s only
album was the appropriately named From the Archives (Hot, 1984).
The 1960s garage rock sound served the Wet Taxis well, yet Louis was
constantly in search of new musical terrain to explore. This led him to
the acoustic-based No Dance side project with Died Pretty’s Brett Myers
and Celibate Rifles’ Damien Lovelock (one EP, ‘Carnival of Souls’ in
1984) and the improvisational jazz/blues-influenced Paris Green ensemble
which covered material ranging from Mose Allison and John Coltrane to
Ray Charles. Following the release of the Wet Taxis single ‘Sailor’s
Dream’ on the Citadel label (1987), Louis folded the band and
immediately recorded his debut solo album Ego Tripping at the Gates of
Hell with support from a stellar array of local musicians including
guitarist Charlie Owen and drummer Louis Burdett. The album relied upon
a brooding intensity for its emotional effect, yet there was always a
lighter more positive side as displayed on tracks like ‘Trip to
Kalu-Ki-Bar’.
His next band the Aspersion Caste included Owen, Burdett, ex-Wet Taxis
guitarist Penny Ikinger and a powerful horn section and was heard on A
Cast of Aspersions (1990) and its astonishing single ‘Condemned to
Live’. A Cast of Aspersions was an eclectic and potent exploration of
mood and emotions driven by Louis’s booming baritone voice and
smouldering organ, jagged guitar lines and the swinging brass
arrangements. Louis kept the Aspersion Caste on the road (including
performances in Europe and New York) until 1992 when he recorded his
next solo album Letters to a Dream. In 1995, he collaborated with Owen
on the album Midnight Rain before they joined Ken Gormly and Jim Elliot
(from the Cruel Sea) as backing musicians for Tex Perkins, on tour to
promote his 1996 solo album Far be it From Me.
Louis released his last album, Cry against the Faith, in 1999. As well
as travelling overseas and succumbing to bouts of ill-health due to his
well-publicised battle with alcoholism, he continued to put in
occasional live performances around Sydney (often with help from Gormly
and Elliot). An ABC-TV documentary produced a few years ago on the man,
A Night at Sea, provided rare insight into his role as a performer and
his struggles with personal demons. He has now emerged in 2005 with
renewed vigour. All of which brings us to his new album, The Hanged Man,
an exemplary return to form and a solo release in the truest sense.
Louis recorded The Hanged Man in Bangkok, Thailand in July 2004 with a
local engineer called O, and it focuses squarely on his skills as a song
writer, producer, singer and multi-instrumentalist par excellence – a
remarkable achievement from a remarkable musician.
The deep connection to the blues/jazz/swamp rock feel essential to his
sound has remained, yet there is so much more. One only has to listen to
the nine brilliant tracks to hear the emotional outpouring on offer
here. Louis has opened his heart and soul, faced down his demons and
overcome his fears in the most cathartic way – song writing and
recording as personal therapy. With lyric lines throughout the album as
compelling and insightful as the following:
“… shows me the journey I must make” (‘Ocean Bound’)
“… I now have some hope, this will keep me afloat” (‘Four Walls’)
“… the main thing I want is these voices to stop” (‘Through the Dream’)
“… I pray for redemption and hope for a sign” (‘Prayer Before Dawn’)
“… it all seems to go away with the start of a brand new day” (‘Around
You’)
“… I’m looking high I’m looking low, now it’s clear what I must do”
(‘It’s Alright Now’)
and
“… a dream fulfilled, a love rebuilt… I’ve returned to a perfect friend,
the journey’s end”
(‘Teary Eyes’)
…this is Louis embracing the very joyousness of a bright future.
The Hanged Man features music as vital, beautiful, emotional and
uncompromising as any in the history of Australian rock. Take the time
to accept this incredible musician and his art.
Ian McFarlane (Author of ‘The Encyclopedia of Australian Rock and Pop’)
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