Party Dozen
Sydney’s Party Dozen (saxophonist Kirsty Tickle and percussionist Jonathan Boulet) are back with a new album Crime In Australia, the follow-up to 2022’s The Real Work. The Real Work proved to be an international breakthrough for the group. Tracks such as the Nick Cave-featuring “Macca The Mutt”, the radio-friendly skronk of “Fruits Of Labour” and the epic string-drenched beauty of “Risky Behaviour” won fans far and wide, enabling the group to take their wild and intense live show across four continents.
As with its predecessor, Crime In Australia was written, recorded, produced and mixed by the duo themselves in their studio in Marrickville, Sydney. This time, the location was more of an influence than on previous occasions: “Marrickville in the 1960s-70s was a notorious crime hot spot. If a car was stolen, or someone was missing, they’d look for them in Marrickville. Since then, the area has been highly gentrified and slowly the once grimy industrial warehouse lined streets are being swapped for monstrous apartment blocks with palm trees. We began without any theme in mind, just the beginnings of some song ideas. As we were discovering the songs for this album, each song felt more and more at home in an old cop tv series’ soundtrack. The Crime theme quickly became apparent.
The record feels split into two contrasting sides. The first half is ‘order’, being as listenable as Party Dozen has ever been. Each song is law abiding and dignified in its own place. The second half is ‘disorder,’ becoming more unlawful, unhinged, louder and noisier.”
While plenty of people all over the world have found Party Dozen to be perfectly listenable, even at their loudest and wildest, the first side does feature some of their least abrasive moments. Certainly, track 1, “Coup De Gronk” is a lower barrier-to-entry than opened any of their first three albums, described by the band as both “as catchy and danceable as we’ve ever been” and “one of Jono’s many dumb ideas”.
And closing side one is “The Big Man Upstairs”, a song arguably as conventional in structure as anything to bear the Party Dozen name. Obviously by the time Kirsty’s words have left her mouth, travelled through her sax bell and bank of pedals, and hit your ears they’ve lost all literal meaning and any right to be referred to as “lyrics”, but her intention isn’t any less clear. The loop is almost reminiscent of shoegaze, the band describing it as “a softer, sweeter side to Party Dozen. An antidote to the swash tubbery and sax honkery”.
This isn’t to say the record doesn’t contain moments that hark back to older PD. “Money & The Drugs” is “a frenzy... inspired by a sound that we heard at the airport pick-up zone in Sydney. A small aircraft coming in to land low would project this low bending rumble into the cement car park filling it with resonant frequencies”. The verse of “Piss On Earth” feels like one of the dirtiest, nastiest, sludgiest things ever committed to vinyl until you realise it’s the calm before the chorus’ storm. “Les Crimes” occupies a space not too far from “Fruits Of Labour”, or as the band put it: “a pocket of music we find ourselves accessing that is just so silly but at the same time irresistible. Yes, we are serious about our craft, but yes, we are also exceedingly immature.” And Wednesday Adams is going to need to learn a new dance for “Bad News Department”.
Across its ten tracks Crime In Australia showcases a group absolutely unafraid to explore their “many dumb ideas” and as a result going places that are thrilling, visceral, face-melting, surprisingly danceable and frequently ridiculous, often all at the same time.
The Real Work was Album of the Week in Stereogum, Bandcamp and Brooklyn Vegan amongst others. It was Feature album at 5 Australian community radio stations and received support globally from 6 Music, KEXP and KCRW who filmed a live session in Seattle. Party Dozen toured Europe twice, as well as North America, China and Japan, playing with the likes of The Bad Seeds, Spiritualized, Tropical Fuck Storm and Algiers. They released a 7” on Sub Pop’s Singles Club and signed with the legendary Temporary Residence Ltd. The album was a finalist for the Australian Music Prize and the Sydney Music And Creative Awards Best Album. “Macca The Mutt ft. Nick Cave” was nominated for the Triple J Award for Best Video. Kirsty won the National Live Music Awards Instrumentalist Of The Year. Album track “Earthly Times” was re-recorded with guest vocals from billy woods.