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Warumpi Band - 4 Ever [2CD 25th Anniversary Remastered Edition] (2015)

Warumpi Band - 4 Ever [2CD 25th Anniversary Remastered Edition] (2015)

BAND/ARTIST: Warumpi Band

  • Title: 4 Ever
  • Year Of Release: 2015 [2005]
  • Label: Festival Records [FEST601040]
  • Genre: Rock, Folk Rock, Alternative Rock
  • Quality: 320 kbps / FLAC (tracks+cue, log, scans)
  • Total Time: 2:38:21
  • Total Size: 472 mb / 1.17 gb
  • WebSite:
To have all three Warumpi Band albums combined on one Double CD set is quite a revelation. Warumpi Band 4 Ever brings together Big Name, No Blankets (1985), Go Bush! (1987) and Too Much Humbug (1996) plus the addition of early demos and non-LP singles as bonus tracks. Hearing the transition from the ragged yet authentic roots rock of the debut to the slicker, modern rock sheen of the third album puts the band’s story into sharp focus.

Led by the charismatic yet volatile George Rrurrambu, along with Neil Murray’s song writing skills and Sammy Butcher’s tasteful guitar playing, Warumpi Band was a mixed race band of seemingly disparate elements. Yet the whole was always greater than the sum of its parts. The bottom line is that this was just a classic rock band with a powerful presence and resonating message. The group was such a potent force that none other than Midnight Oil linked up with them to tour remote Aboriginal outback communities. The life-changing Blackfella/Whitefella tour inspired the Oils to write their landmark Diesel and Dust album.

Formed in 1981 at Papunya, a remote Aboriginal community 150 miles west of Alice Springs, the Warumpis started out playing covers of vintage rock ’n’ roll songs before writing original material that reflected their own experiences and celebrated Aboriginal cultural values.

Their 1983, independent debut single, ‘Jailanguru Pakarnu (Out From Jail)’ was the first rock song sung in an Aboriginal dialect (Luritja). Big Name, No Blankets appeared on the Oils’ Powderworks label in April 1985. Grounded in early American R&B and boogie as it was, the album was nevertheless an honest, bare-boned and enduring slice of indigenous country music, or desert rock if you will. Most importantly the songs are brilliant, from the chiming ‘Waru (Fire)’ and the sprightly ‘Breadline’ to the prickly rocker ‘Mulga & Spinifex Plain’ and the epochal ‘Blackfella / Whitefella’.

‘Blackfella / Whitefella’ remains the most engaging song, Rrurrambu’s message as relevant as ever: “Blackfella, whitefella / It doesn’t matter what your colour / As long as you a true fella / As long as you a real fella”.

With the line-up of Murray, Rrurrambu, Kenny Smith (bass) and American Allen Murphy (drums) the Warumpis recorded Go Bush! in late 1986. It’s a tougher sounding work overall (‘No Fear’, ‘Secret War’, ‘From The Bush’) although the archetypal track is the deeply melodic ‘My Island Home’. It features Murray’s lyrics yet it’s Rrurrambu’s own story and he delivers the words in a truly spectacular manner. Christine Anu later won an APRA Song of the Year Award (1995) for her version of the song.

Murray left at the end of 1988 to pursue a solo career which effectively meant the end of the Warumpi Band. Nevertheless, they reunited in 1995 for a successful European tour and new album Too Much Humbug (April 1996). It boasted slicker production values, courtesy of producer Mark Ovendon (You Am I, Yothu Yindi). Standouts are ‘Wayathul’ (epic and expansive), ‘Djulpan’ (sparse and twangy), ‘Stompin’ Ground’ (sinewy and hard rocking) and ‘Holdin’ You In My Arms’ (sweetened by the voices of Amy Saunders and Sally Dastey from Tiddas).

Rounding out the set are the non-LP singles ‘Sitdown Money’ and the aforementioned ‘Jailanguru Pakarnu (Out From Jail)’, plus the four tracks that made up their first cassette release from 1983. While covers of ‘Route 66’, ‘It’s All Over Now’ and ‘Promised Land’ are perfunctory, it’s the self-referring ‘Warumpi Rock’ that points the way forward. George passed away in June 2007.

Also worth getting hold of is Archie Roach’s Charcoal Lane 25th Anniversary Edition (2-CD).

TRACKLIST:

Disc 1 - “Big Name No Blankets” (1985)
1. Waru (Fire)
2. Blackfella / Whitefella
3. Breadline
4. Nyuntu Nyaaltjirruku (What Are You Going
To Do?)
5. Animal Song
6. Warumpinya (Papunya)
7. Wima Tjuta (All The Kids)
8. Fitzroy Crossing
9. Mulga & Spinifex Plain
10. Gotta Be Strong

“Go Bush!” (1987)
11. No Fear
12. Jailanguru Pakarnu (Out From Jail)
13. Yolngu Boy
14. Secret War
15. My Island Home
16. Didjeridoo Blue
17. Kintorelakutu (Towards Kintore)
18. Tjiluru Tjiluru (Sad And Lonely)
19. My Countryside
20. Falling Down
21. From The Bush

Disc 2 - “Too Much Humbug” (1996)
1. Wayathul
2. Stompin’ Ground
3. Makes You Feel
4. Never Change
5. Djulpan
6. Stars
7. Cold Weather
8. Marrayilyil
9. Joining My Life
10. Koori Man
11. Holdin’ You In My Arms
12. We Shall Cry
13. Blackfella / Whitefella (Remake)

Bonus Tracks
14. Yaka Bayungu (live, Broome, 2000)
15. Sitdown Money (Powderworks A-side, 1986)
16. Jailanguru Pakarnu (Out From Jail) (Hot Records A-side, 1983)
17. Route 66 (CAAMA cassette, 1983)
18. It’s All Over Now (CAAMA cassette, 1983)
19. Promised Land (CAAMA cassette, 1983)
20. Warumpi Rock (CAAMA cassette, 1983)

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  • User offline
  • stacky
  •  wrote in 23:25
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Great post Artmuss - thank you
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  • skipshaw3
  •  wrote in 08:22
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thank you for reposting!
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  • whiskers
  •  wrote in 12:12
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Many thanks