Bagdad Cafe (1987)

It was with some trepidation I re-viewed ‘Bagdad Cafe’ again since first seeing it shortly after it was released in Australia. Produced in 1987, directed by resolutely independent filmmaker, Percy Adlon, it was a hit with audiences – and with me – back then, and I was concerned the freshness may have faded in the intervening years. I need not have worried.

Adlon was a German filmmaker (I guess he’s still a German filmmaker – but since ‘Bagdad Cafe’ he has been based in California), with European sensibilities, making a movie set at a truckstop cafe/motel in the Mojave desert on route 66.

A tourist couple from Bavaria are driving through the desert. (Spoiler alert for the rest of this paragraph – not much of a spoiler as it happens only a few minutes in.) Their marriage is unravelling. When the Mrs – Jasmin Munchgstettner, played by Marianne Sagebrecht – decides enough is enough, leaving the car and her husband, we see her pulling a wheelie suitcase along the desert road, wearing a woollen suit, Bavarian feathered hat, and heels. She is strikingly out of place here.

We find our way to the Bagdad Cafe, peopled by a motley cast of characters, including the owner of the place, Brenda (played by CCH Pounder), whose hostility appears impenetrable.

Neither Jasmin nor Brenda have ever met anyone like the other before, so each is alien and unknown to the other – the ample, white Bavarian with the coiffed hair and the wild-haired, angry, black roadhouse owner.

Jack Palance plays Rudi Cox, formerly from Hollywood and ‘the pictures’ – adorned in a variety of headbands and a rainbow assortment of wide-sleeved satin shirts, living in a caravan onsite. Palance brings compassion and tenderness to this role.

Adlon reveals the humanity of characters that, in other hands, may have appeared only as superficial stereotypes. These are people not of the mainstream; on the borders of the current of life. We feel them battling anger and loneliness, quietly yearning for human warmth and understanding in the desolation of the desert. There is also delight in the humour Adlon weaves through the film; humour not at the expense of his characters but which provides insight into them.

And for me one of the great joys in this film is the delicious Marianne Sagebrecht, who plays the central role with depth, compassion and sparkle. It is marvellous to see a large woman express herself as sexy and playful. Still, after all these years, very rare on screen.

This is a film of gentle surprises and surprising gentleness (despite a few cheesy moments).

Percy Adlon’s method is beautifully described on his website, where he quotes from a letter he wrote to a German film student:

“I never forced my filmmaking but made the necessary decisions step by step when they were needed – a beautiful and exciting and not always successful procedure.

“Style was always very important to me. A lead color for an entire film. A sparse environment. A limited space. One song. No real score. Just the separate instrumental tracks of the song. A lot of original sounds. Not too much dialogue. No violence. Praise of woman. A mood between tears and laughter. Others later called it my ‘poetic realism’. Light and color, motion and calm, emotion, surprise, hope, joy, being touched, fulfillment, images that doesn’t have to be explained. This is what’s important for my films. Some conflict, some suspense. But just very carefully used like some spice that should never overpower the more subtle flavors.”

Adlon trivia: Percy Adlon’s grandfather, Lorenz Adlon, developed the Adlon Hotel in Berlin – where Greta Garbo uttered the famous line: ‘I want to be alone’ in the film ‘Grand Hotel’. It also has the room from which Michael Jackson showed his son, Blanket, to fans by dangling him over a balcony.

irmah

John Jacobs – video commentator

“Hey you! Square eyes! You got any idea what’s goin’ on inside TV?”

Watch ‘Inside TV’, an Australian media mashup from 1984, that John Jacobs crash edited on a pair of back-to-back domestic VHS decks.

A recent photograph of John Jacobs

A recent photograph of John Jacobs

John Jacobs spent much of the 1980s entangled in a deep love-hate abusive relationship with television. It involved many late nights of taping and cutting up TV on a then newfangled gadget: the VCR. Not having any other outlet for the resulting videos, they were distributed by dubbing them back onto the ends of hire video tapes (an amusement at the time and now a snapshot of bad hairdos and silly game shows).

irmah

Darren Jones – BMX

Darren Jones airing the end wall of the old Five Dock Bowl in the 1980s

Darren Jones airing the end wall of the old Five Dock Bowl in the 1980s; photo by Jim Brock

What were you doing in the 1980s?

Living a split life of debauchery which shifted between Freestyle BMX and heavy metal depending what events were going down at any particular time. BMX riding all the time though during the week. At school and living in Mt Druitt.

What are your strongest impressions of the 1980s?
KISS, BMX and girls with tights on covered with leg warmers just above their kt 26 joggers – haha. I guess realising as I got into my teenage years how lucky I was to be an Australian. I began taking notice of events on the news at this stage for the first time. The happenings in the Middle East did concern me.

What historical event of the 1980s has most resonance for you?

Definitely the first Space Shuttle launch. Without question.

What was an event/party/pub session/nightclub of the 80s that stands out? …. And any memories (fond or foul) of what you were wearing in the 1980s?

Darren Jones at the Lakemba water pipe in 1985

Darren Jones at the Lakemba water pipe in 1985; photo by Jim Brock

Had to have been going to see KISS the first time they toured Australia.

I was in the queue with my school mates for an hour eating a can of tuna I had brought along with me wearing a white KISS T-shirt, tight black jeans with a blue flanny tied around my waist. haha.

What music/movies/TV engaged you in the 1980s (and did you takes sides on VHS versus Betamax), and now?

STAR WARS, Without a doubt.

What were you listening to – and was it on a Walkman?

Haha – it was on my stereo and my walkman. I’ll keep this list short as it could go on forever. MOTLEY CRUE, KISS, DEVO and LED ZEPPELIN.

What did you do for entertainment/leisure then and now?

RIDE BMX. We used to spend most of our time at Five Dock skate park, Emerton BMX Track, North Ryde skate park, the local quarter pipes that were dotted around the neighbourhood and on Friday night hit up Blacktown TIMEZONE.

Oh yeah, and try and avoid getting into too much mischief.

Darren Jones competing in 2009

Darren Jones, left - with purple mohawk, competing in 2009 where he won 2nd place for the east coast in the over 40s division


Darren Jones in 2010

Darren Jones in 2010; photo by Karla Jarvis

What do you think are the main differences between the 80s and how the world and/or your life is today?

In the 1980s my life was mostly riding and racing bikes, and pushing them and myself to our limits.

These days I still do that but I also have managed to make a business out of my passion, running the shop, Warzone Bikes, in Sutherland, where we do retro BMX rebuilds as well as modern freestyle and modern race BMXs.

Darren Jones' 1985 SE quadangle bike

Darren Jones' 1985 SE quadangle bike

What was a prized object you owned then (and do you still have it)?
One of my prized objects was my 1985 S.E. QUADANGLE – and, yes, I still have it (pictured at left) and currently race it in the Retro Race Series.

irmah

Chris Doheny – Geisha

What were you doing in the 1980s?

Chris Doheny performing in the 80s

Chris Doheny performing in the 80s. Photo by Serge Thomann.

I was playing in a band full time (which means gigging maybe once a week and rehearsing five days a week). Going to bed at 3AM and sleeping in until midday. Doing it pretty hard on the dole living in a one-bedroom flat that cost $55 per week in rent!! That was in an inner suburb of Melbourne called Richmond. It was a pretty rough neighbourhood back in the early 80s. I would go and meet someone using public transport such as tram or train wearing my 80s finery and my hair would be gelled up to the sky! People would either stare in amazement or hurl abuse.
 
What are your strongest impressions of the 1980s?
Most of my memories of the 80s revolve around the fact that I was in a successful band and all the peripheral garbage that goes with that. I think that people in general were much more interested in music and band culture back then. I always joke with my friends that these days all the rock stars are athletes and not musicians and singers!

Definitely the music and fashion were fun and exciting and the feeling of innocence in a pre internet society.

*Video:geisha

Geisha’s first video, ‘Fool’s way’, 1985, directed by Karl Stienberg
 
What historical event of the 1980s has most resonance for you? Why?
The morning I woke up to see the Challenger space shuttle blow up in the sky was such a shock. The terrible loss of life from something we had come to take for granted as safe and mundane as space flight. All of a sudden the whole world stopped for a moment and we all seemed to be watching it. In a time before instant news reporting, the internet and mobile phones, we still all sat glued to the TV and reeled in horror.

Geisha, August 1985

Geisha, August 1985. Standing, l-r: John Nyman, Donoghue Doheny, Peter Robertson, Ken Sheppard; sitting: Chris Doheny. Photo by Chris Paris.

What was an event/party/pub session/nightclub of the 80s that stands out?
There was so many! Generally venues didn’t seem to be open as late as they are now of course. But quite often after a show we might go and have a drink or a dance at nightclubs such as The Ritz in St Kilda. Also The Ivy in Melbourne City.

The Ritz was this sleazy strip bar where we could go and have a quiet drink without being bothered by fans. We also knew quite a lot of the “dancers”, so it was a very friendly atmosphere. There was also a famous nightclub in St Kilda called The Razor Club – we used to love going there after a gig and usually not emerging until broad daylight!

Any memories (fond or foul) of what you were wearing in the 1980s?
Oh yeah! Pointy-toed leather shoes, coats with padded shoulders. Baggy high waisted trousers with braces. Neon coloured singlets! Junk jewellery. bangles and earrings. Eyeliner and mascara (sometimes even eye shadow!).
 

Geisha 3-piece line-up, 1987.

Geisha 3-piece line-up, 1987. Photo by Wendy MacDougall.

What music/movies/TV engaged you in the 1980s (and did you takes sides on VHS versus Betamax), and now?
I didn’t watch TV soap only news and ‘Sale of the century’ with Tony Barber. But I loved the ‘Back to the future’ movies also ‘Raiders of the lost ark’ etc….

I actually owned a Beta recorder and I still think it was a better quality picture than VHS – too bad the world went VHS as the 80s wore on; it got harder and harder to get Beta movies!

What were you listening to?
I used to listen to albums by bands like The Fixx, INXS, Simple Minds, Japan, Angels, Flowers (Icehouse), David Bowie, Peter Gabriel.

What did you do for entertainment/leisure then and now?
I think everything I did for leisure back in those days was something that got me out of the house as opposed to now where we have everything we need at home. I was never a big computer game kind of guy. I did spend a lot of time home recording music in my studio.

Geisha, 2009

Photo by Charlie Suriano

What do you think are the main differences between the 80s and how the world and/or your life is today?
In the 80s there were no mobile phones no internet and no immediate news coverage. To be a successful musician/singer/writer you needed to go out and travel around the country/world and sing your heart out every night to empty rooms until you caught a break. I also think that fame and talent were interlinked.

Nowadays we have the cult of celebrity. You can talk to someone on the other side of the planet from your car or canoe. You can make a record and video in your bedroom and post it on youtube for global broadcast without leaving the house!

Personally, I’m still involved in music with Geisha. We’re currently signed to Oz label Diamond Dod Records and we’ve just released a new album, ‘Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow’.

What was a prized object you owned then (and do you still have it)?
My Kawai baby grand piano that I bought with my very first publishing cheque in 1985; it had been a personal goal of mine to own one from the age of ten.

 

*Video:geisha

Geisha’s 2010 video, ‘Mystery writer’, directed by Liam Firmagher
 

What event (personal or public) in the 1980s would you either revisit or undo if you could?
I had another personal goal when I was a kid which was to appear on ‘Countdown’ (music show in the 80s presented by Molly Meldrum).

By 1987 I had been on ‘Countdown’ more than a dozen times. I would love to relive the feeling of the first time that I got to appear on that iconic show!


Listen to Geisha songs on iTunesListen to Geisha songs on iTunes

irmah

Mother Inferior – Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence

(Alter ego of Fabian LoSchiavo)

Mother Inferior of the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence

Mother Inferior of the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence

The Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence began in San Francisco in 1979 as a small group of gay men who protested against and drew attention to social problems (such as prejudice against gay people) by wearing nuns’ habits when protesting. In the 80s the order spread around the world and was enthusiastically taken up in Sydney, where the Sisters achieved significant media coverage through their humorous and highly entertaining presentations – which included singing satirical lyrics in Gregorian chant. Mother Inferior was an influential founding member of the order whose Sisterly contributions included sewing costumes, making props, writing songs and spiritedly playing her piano accordion in their performances.

 
What were you doing in the 1980s (your job/where you were living, etc)?
My job was as an archivist in government archives. I had completed my Diploma in Archives Admin in 1980 and started work in 1981.
 

What are your strongest impressions of the 1980s?
My strongest impression of the 1980s were of a time of big changes in my life, away from feeling vaguely guilty about being gay or apologetic at the least to a stance of being quite assertive and ‘out’. These were the years when I was on the Anglican Diocese of Sydney’s Synod, and being radicalised by the homophobia I saw there, and the moving away from being a well-behaved discreet homosexual to a public homosexual.

There was AngGays, the Anglican gay group, and then the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence, and the Gay Liberation Choir, and the Mardi Gras ….. all combining to push me away from invisibility.

Also the experience of being bashed up by homophobic thugs …. but matched to the extraordinary experience of being the focus of an ‘Encounters’ programme (like ‘Compass’ – ABC-TV religion dept) in 1985 .… And the focus if the ‘Monsignor Porcamadonna’ affair when Don Dunstan resigned after a book launch I attended ‘in persona’ – which was even reported in the European media.

Getting arrested for demonstrating against the visit of Pope John Paul II. Going to court and getting convicted. And the beginning of the Safe Sex teaching which the Sisters initiated in Sydney.

The 90s and after have been sleepy times indeed after all this 80s stuff!

*Video:mother inferior

Duration: 5 minutes
A longer video is available below.

What historical event of the 1980s has most resonance for you? Why?
Ordination of women in the Anglican Church and the first women bishops (it said so much about the Church moving towards inclusion and the future it would hold for the inclusion of gay people. And the decriminalisation and anti-discrimination legislation affecting gay people in 1985. The fall of the Iron Curtain. Lockerbie bombing and shooting down of KAL by Russians.

What was an event/party/pub session/nightclub of the 80s that stands out?
The rally against Jerry Falwell at Top Ryde in 1983.

Any memories (fond or foul) of what you were wearing in the 1980s?
Putting on the habit for the first time in public…that was THE clothing of the 80s for me!

What music/movies/TV engaged you in the 1980s and now?
E M Forster’s gay novel, ‘Maurice’, which he wouldn’t allow to be published until after his death. It was an early gay novel with a happy ending, and the film version was excellent!!! There was also a book, ‘The youngest director’, which was an 80s British book …. a coming out story with a HAPPY ending.

Fabian Lo Schiavo

Fabian Lo Schiavo

What were you listening to – and was it on a Walkman?
When not listening to myself singing in the parish choir, I was listening to gregorian chant and byzantine chant and bagpipes and country folk and ethnic. I was learning belly dance for three years in the 80s.

What did you do for entertainment/leisure then and now? (Did it include computer games or the Rubik’s Cube?)
I did a hell of a lot of sewing: banner, flags and habits.

What do you think are the main differences between the 80s and how the world and/or your life is today?
Now I don’t care to go out a lot…. I like to stay at home, sewing, reading, listening to music, watching TV. I will go to rallies and even go on my own to make a political statement…. like walking the whole length of Oxford Street and Elizabeth Street from Taylors Sq. to the Rocks at afternoon peak hour in my habit as Mother Inferior with a big sign ‘ANNOYING’ because the government was going to pass laws making it illegal to ‘annoy’ pilgrims to the World Youth Day…. that made me sooooo angry. I thought, ‘I can’t let THIS pass’. Otherwise I have a very quiet, anonymous, peaceful life now…. not like the 80s.

What was a prized object you owned then (and do you still have it)?
The pink triangle flag I was carrying when I was arrested at Sydney Uni for telling the Pope: ‘Anti woman, anti gay, fascist Pope go away’. It’s ripped, but the police gave it back to me in the court room.

In the following video, Mother Inferior and Fabian LoSchiavo reminisce the 1980s
(This is an extended version of the video above.)

*Video:mother inferior

Duration: 13 minutes 24 seconds

What event (personal or public) in the 1980s would you either revisit or undo if you could?
The first live safe sex demonstration at Ken’s Karate Klub at Kensington in 1985…. that was great fun for old Mother Inferior. Although the habit was hot inside the sauna, I felt very satisfied with my presentation and commentary (I don’t know about the two poor ‘performers’!!). I could revisit it with pleasure. I would like to undo some of the media coverage around the ‘Monsignor Porcamadonna’ affair, but I suppose even that had some good outcomes. It certainly put our poor parish on the map!! (whether they liked it or not). And it made sure the book ‘Being Different’ (an anthology of Australian gay men’s stories) was widely publicised and sold out its first edition!

My 1980s were a time of big change…. I think I had had enough of trying to convince the Diocese to be kinder to gays…. life was short enough, especially with people dropping dead from AIDS…. I would have liked to continue to irritate them (the homophobes in the churches) but.… well…. there is more to life!

irmah

Stephen Roberts, designer

Rockpool Chair designed by Stephen Roberts, Michael Scott-Mitchell and Bill MacMahon as D4DESIGN, for Rockpool Restaurant, 1988.

Rockpool Chair designed by Stephen Roberts, Michael Scott-Mitchell and Bill MacMahon as D4DESIGN, for Rockpool Restaurant, 1988. Photo by Ashley Barber.

What were you doing in the 1980s (your job/where you were living, etc)?
In the 1980s I was living and working in Sydney, in the field of design. In 1987 I was a founding member of the design group and registered architects D4DESIGN, along with set designer Michael Scott-Mitchell and architect Bill MacMahon. During the five years we were together we completed many types of projects, including the Rockpool for Neil Perry. (In 1992 we disbanded and I moved to New York.)


What are your strongest impressions of the 1980s?

Perhaps it had something to do our innocent nature at the time and of being in our 20s and the fact that I had moved down from the Blue Mountains at the end of the 70s, but Sydney in the 80s was a magical place where it felt like anything was possible, creatively and otherwise. In the first half of the decade we were all still in college and by the second half doing million-dollar projects.

What historical event of the 1980s has most resonance for you? Why?
The recession at the end of the 1980s. For most of us the party was over and it felt like things would never be the same. It was a major reason I left for New York.

Stephen Roberts, 1987.

Stephen Roberts, 1987. Photo by Ashley Barber.

What was an event/party/pub session/nightclub of the 80s that stands out? For me it all started with The Exchange. The club and pub scene in the 80s, probably because it was built on so secure a rock as the fantastic music that seemed to come out every week, was really unmatched. Even when I moved to New York in 1992 I found nothing like it. Perhaps the easy merging with the large gay scene in Sydney helped? Certainly it helped general creativity.

Any memories (fond or foul) of what you were wearing in the 1980s?
After spending 3 months in Tokyo in 1986 I like to think that most of my sartorial influences were purely Japanese but of course I am reminded all the time that in trying to be ‘creative’ we usually pushed the limits of what is now considered good taste.

What music/movies/TV engaged you in the 1980s and now?
‘E.T.’, ‘Blade Runner’, ‘The Last Emperor’, ‘The Shining’, ‘Raiders of the Lost Ark’, ‘Empire of the Sun’, ‘Moonstruck’, ‘Out of Africa’, ‘Dangerous Liaisons’, ‘Kiss of the Spider Woman’, ‘Ordinary People’, ‘Poltergeist’, ‘Ghostbusters’, ‘Aliens’. Some of the best movies in the last two years include ‘District 9′, ‘Where the Wild Things Are’, ‘Public Enemies’, ‘Slumdog Millionaire’, ‘Revolutionary Road’, ‘Doubt’, ‘The Reader’.

What were you listening to – and was it on a Walkman?
No Walkman…. If not in a bar or a club, playing music in my car driving somewhere by the water. Mostly British but some American music – ABC, Bryan Ferry, The Clash, The Cure, David Bowie, Depeche Mode, The Smiths, Echo and the Bunnymen, Eurythmics, Fine Young Cannibals, Heaven 17, The Human League, Japan, New Order, Pet Shop Boys, Psychedelic Furs, Siouxsie and the Banshees, Soft Cell, Spandau Ballet, The Style Council, Talk Talk, Talking Heads, Tears for Fears, Violent Femmes, Blondie….

What did you do for entertainment/leisure then and now?
We first bought Apple computers back in the late 1980s and I remember throwing one in the back of the car when we went down to my partner’s weekender because it seemed so small and portable. Now even laptops are too big to pack in your luggage.

What do you think are the main differences between the 80s and how the world and/or your life is today?
Of course it was a much simpler time and even though we tried for a world view, I don’t remember it so much as a political world view. Today we are much better informed but also, unfortunately, tend to feed ourselves bad news far too quickly. A problem with instant access to too much information.

What was a prized object you owned then (and do you still have it)?
My BMW 2002. I sold it when I came here and ended up with a 911S, also from the ’70s. Now, like most New Yorkers, I use a Zipcar instead.

What event (personal or public) in the 1980s would you either revisit or undo if you could?
Nothing really. Even the Recession led to me coming to New York, so that very rough ending opened up much better doors, in the long run.

irmah

Senator Bob Brown, Leader of the Greens

What were you doing in the 1980s?
At the beginning of the decade I was still doing rare locum general practice work as a doctor but most of my time was spent on the campaign to save Tasmania’s magnificent Franklin River from damming.

Bob Brown on the Franklin River in the 1980s.

Bob Brown on the Franklin River in the 1980s. Image care of Office of Senator Bob Brown.

Along with a group of other dedicated volunteers we managed to bring the Franklin’s fate to the attention of the rest of the country and in 1983 the federal government overrode the Tasmanian Government to stop construction once it got the go-ahead from the High Court.

For a while I camped in empty houses and raided food bins behind restaurants at night and my pensioner mother sent me $20 per month.

In the same year the river was saved I became a member of the Tasmanian Parliament. After being arrested for protesting against the dam I discovered on the day I was released from prison that a recount of the seat of Denison had put me in Parliament.

What historical event of the 1980s has most resonance for you? Why?
Obviously the saving of the Franklin River was a momentous decision that has continued to provide benefits to Tasmania’s tourism industry and opened up the beauty of the state’s wilderness from people across the globe.

The fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 was also a great testament to democracy and the power of people to bring about change.

Meanwhile, peaceful opponents of the Argentinian regime were being arrested, drugged and dropped from planes over the Atlantic Ocean.

Any memories of what you were wearing in the 1980s?
During the Franklin River campaign I was often on the move between the blockade at the river and the demands of the media. As a consequence I kept a few suits in wardrobes around the state that I could pull on for a last-minute TV interview. I wore one of these pin-striped suits at the recent 25 year anniversary celebration of the Franklin campaign – and now pin-striped suits are back in fashion!

Senator Bob Brown around 2008

Senator Bob Brown around 2008. Image care of Office of Senator Bob Brown.

What do you think are the main differences between the 80s and how the world and/or your life is today?
There are two billion more people, millions of hectares less forests, scores of fisheries have collapsed and Greenland’s ice cap is melting. But I’m a little wiser. Optimism beats pessimism. Human intelligence can save us from ourselves and so the future beckons in a world in which, unlike the 80s, we are all connected in one global community.

irmah

Darian Zam – artist, designer, illustrator, social historian, writer

Darian Zam is an artist and designer who has exhibited and published his work for over 20 years in Australia and New Zealand. He has been commissioned by the Powerhouse Museum to design the merchandise for ‘The 80s are back’ exhibition.

Darian Zam at his school formal in 1988. Photo by Miranda Dempster.

Darian Zam at his school formal in 1988. Photo by Miranda Dempster.


What were you doing in the 1980s?
I was the best, most fun thing you could be if you lived in the 80s – a teenager!

I was living in New Zealand at that time so it was isolated and fairly limited, and still more tied to the UK culturally than the U.S. Any music that wasn’t at the very top of the charts had to be ordered as import vinyl from the record store and would take weeks or months if you could get it at all. We also eagerly anticipated our order of music mags like ‘No1′ (Britain) so we could find out what was happening in London, or ‘Smash Hits’ (Australia) for what was going on there. Literally the only way to find out about music releases and fashions was from ads and photos of pop stars in these publications. If it wasn’t on the Saturday night top 20 or on the radio’s Sunday top 40 then forget it. If you wanted cool shoes you had to wait for someone to go overseas and get them for you. I was stuck in West Auckland so I was surrounded by boring suburbanites or hippies. It wasn’t my idea of glamour.

Darian Zam with his sister, Gemma Bergin, in 1988.

Darian Zam with his sister, Gemma Bergin, in 1988.

What are your strongest impressions of the 1980s?
Music and fashion. It was an exciting time with a lot of experimentation for us teenagers. A lot of it was kind of do-it-yourself, as I mentioned, it was hard to get stuff down the bottom of the world and it was pretty dull for choice – we couldn’t Google anything or check websites or even buy online. It was pitiful when you think back! Computers and CDs, let alone MP3s weren’t part of our lives. It seems quite isolated now, and a whole planet away even though it’s only 20 years or so.

So there was a lot of fabric painting and refashioning vintage clothes, which were just becoming an idea in the mid 80s. It was considered shocking to wear ‘old clothes’; it was such an upwardly mobile environment where everything was shiny and new – it was all about convenience. A lot of safety pins, badges and jewellery to customise the look. Forget the accounts of how outré the decade was. It was so conservative really – people would just gawk at you if you so much as blonded your hair, like you’d just arrived from outer space. To me the decade is clearly gradated from one end where it was daggy, clunky, and hideous (‘Footloose’ still makes me shudder) to the end where it was actually quite cool, glamorous and exciting. Perhaps that had to do with my age as well.

What historical event of the 1980s has most resonance for you? Why?
I remember there being a huge amount of excitement over every detail of the wedding of Charles and Diana. Everyone was obsessed with that big meringue of a dress! How many smaller countries of the British Empire were bankrupted over that thing? It was disgustingly decadent, not in a good way, when you look back at it.

I also remember the shock of the Rainbow Warrior bombing as it happened right in my city only 20 minutes drive from where we lived – people were just sick with disbelief and outrage.

Also there was a lot of development as huge areas of the city were razed ‘in the name of progress’, (ie corporate greed), and subsequent protests over the demolition of historic buildings. I went to the His Majesty’s Theatre protest to demonstrate, for one. People were up in arms – but they pulled it down anyway.

I remember being roused in the early hours of the morning to see Halley’s Comet which was all blurry because I was half asleep and entirely grumpy. I was a teenager so I really didn’t give a toss about current events or politics, but I really cared about my hair!

One event I think that really changed everything for me was a student exchange program at school. We got this kid from Los Angeles, a punk. He had an overcoat and studs and an American drawl and brought all his records with him. He was bad ass, and we got on like a guitar on fire. We were desperate for anything American then, believe it or not – anything different.

What was an event/party/pub session/nightclub of the 80s that stands out?
There were a lot. We would see just about any live act we could get a ticket for because it was so limited. Imagine how many overseas acts came to that little country then. Nobody! Mostly we were just fantasising about it! I remember seeing ‘The Jesus and Mary Chain’ and getting on the front page of the paper because it qualified as ‘news’ of interest. One club I remember was called The Fingerpop Club and everyone would get there before it opened on Saturday nights and parade around in the courtyard in front of everyone showing off their new look. It was a lot of fun creating your clothes and hair for that night and seeing how much you could shock or outdo everyone. Such poseurs!

Any memories (fond or foul) of what you were wearing in the 1980s?
Where do you start? You could write an essay on it. It was punk, it was romantic, it was Goth, it was retro Americana, it was a combination of a bunch of things. Lots of accessories, bandanas, hats and little suitcases, doctor’s bags or children’s lunch boxes. Back then you could get amazing stuff from op shops without trying too hard. I had just about every colour and style of hair. I was always in trouble at school for what I was wearing or my fringe and almost got expelled a couple of times for my dress sense. The headmaster despised me and thought I was the end of civilization. I found it so frustrating being stuck in that town in that little country when there was all this excitement going on in New York and London and Sydney. If you ask any of my friends about the 80s, they have story after story of some ridiculous hairdo I had, or some obscenely over-the- top outfit I wore. There were some basics that were a must-have though, like Doc Martens boots, army surplus, especially overcoats, and a vintage cardigan. The rest you could mix and match. I never went anywhere without a can of hairspray and am personally responsible for part of the hole in the Ozone Layer. That said, for all the unconventional looks people remember, there was just as much disgusting dagginess and humdrum junk – that hasn’t changed.

What music/movies/TV engaged you in the 1980s, and now?
Just anything on New York, London or Sydney and the clubs. The ones that stood out for me were movies about anyone who was ‘different’ like ‘Pretty in Pink’, Molly Ringwald wearing vintage clothes which as almost unheard of. Ally Sheedy as the introverted artist and all the other misfits in ‘Breakfast Club’. I was completely taken with the style of Melanie Griffith’s character in ‘Something Wild’ and Madonna in ‘Desperately seeking Susan’. All those bangles and necklaces, and the hatbox with all the grafitti and decoupage! I also remember being really excited about ‘Mondo New York’, which was about the downtown Manhattan scene, featuring The B52s, Joey Arias, John Sex, Lydia Lunch and Karen Finley. It was SO exciting. I just wanted to jump on a plane and move there to do performance art.

What were you listening to – and was it on a Walkman?
I had a turntable as well as a Walkman, of course. Mostly I was interested in more alternative music, or electronic music like The Cure and Depeche Mode – neither of which are considered outrageous now, in fact almost the opposite. But then it was very different and shocking, and people thought it was just noise, crap. I would be heaped with abuse!

What did you do for entertainment/leisure then and now? (Did it include computer games or the Rubik’s Cube?)
I remember those little hand-held games like Donkey Kong. Definitely a lot of Space Invaders. Roller-skating was big. Going to the movies to see ‘Fright Night’ or ‘Poltergeist’. Mostly it was sitting at friends’ houses listening to the latest 12 inch mix of a single that had just come in, if we were lucky to get our hands on something. There was a lot of hair teasing and cigarette smoking and sneaking drinks from parents’ cocktail bars. As the 80s progressed, we were more sophisticated: Japanese cuisine was new and extremely glamorous, or a café, then maybe a nightclub. No, we certainly didn’t sit around playing with Rubik’s Cubes! Are you mad?

What are some of the major changes for you from then to now?
In the 80s I was obsessed with Andy Warhol and all I wanted to do was go to New York, and befriend him and become a famous artist. Then in 1987 he died and I was devastated. I would never get to meet him and become one of his superstars! I also remember Black Monday the same year being the cap of a rather a glum period, especially for people who were business entrepreneurs like my father, but as a kid you couldn’t really understand. All I could see was Haring, Basquiat and Kostabi becoming feted and rich in Manhattan, and so being creative seemed like a very feasible and glamorous career. It’s simply the difference between being a teen and being nearly forty! Now experience has just ground me down and I have a horrifyingly definite reality of how the business works… if only we could stay that naïve forever!

Darian Zam in 2007. Photo by Susie Hagon.

Darian Zam in 2007. Photo by Susie Hagon.

What was a prized object you owned then (and do you still have it)?
I have a handmade badge I painted that I wore for years that said ‘CULTURE HERO’. I thought it was the coolest thing. I still have some beautiful, handmade vintage waistcoats I had then. The little old ladies at Vinnies would see me coming, and say, ‘Something came in this week we saved for you dear…’ I mean, nobody else wanted it. I still have them but of course now I can’t fit into them…

What event (personal or public) in the 1980s would you either revisit or undo if you could?
If anything I wish I had been far more outrageous and cared less what people said and even less what they thought of me. In youth you can get away with just about anything but of course then, you don’t know that everything eventually sags, expands, and falls apart. You just don’t have the experience or power to stand up for yourself or what you believe in when you’re young a lot of the time. There’s a few teachers I would tell to go screw themselves if I could travel back in time.

Anything else you’d like to share with us about your 1980s?
I think that people look back and package the 80s up as this very superficial decade of excess, where we all just pranced around with enormous hair and ra-ra skirts drinking chardonnay at French bistros. They look back at a decade where they think all the political work of the 60s and 70s was undone by ‘greed is good’. This is not necessarily true. I remember a lot of political action. Look what was going on with Thatcher and Regan. It was rather grim really, not to mention the AIDS crisis which dear Ronald deliberately ignored. It was quite conservative and dull unless you were prepared to seek out things that were exciting. It wasn’t all fruity cocktails, chromed highrise bars and celebrities. But it was all there to be had if you really wanted it, with mile high hair moussed on end.

What do you think are the main differences between the 80s and how the world and/or your life is today?
Obviously the main difference is the Internet. It very much determines how we shape our lives, and how we are in turn approached. In the 80s, as I’ve outlined, we had no freedom in comparison to now – there just weren’t the avenues. Because there is so much to explore and discover without even leaving the house – I think that big corporations and organisations don’t have a stranglehold on limited information highways with product or beliefs. It’s great for creative people like bands because they can promote themselves, build up a fanbase and sell records without a big company behind them. On the down side, people are a lot lazier physically and probably mentally because so much is delivered to them on a platter. People are a bit more environmentally conscious, but how much are they actually doing about it? The jury is out on that one, but still, I shudder to think what we were doing back then that we didn’t have a high awareness of the ramifications. Chernobyl, anyone?

Something amusing is that teenagers today are wearing exactly what we were wearing 20 years ago, thinking they’ve invented the wheel. The flat canvas shoes, saggy cardies, stovepipes and oversize tees, quirky hats. They smirk but they don’t know we invented it. Been there, done that, kids. There’s a lot of noise about teens today being the new conservatives. What a hideous idea. Live it up while you can I say.

irmah

Brian Canham – Pseudo Echo

What were you doing in the 1980s (your job/where you were living, etc)?
Fronting Pseudo Echo and living in Melbourne’s inner city South Yarra.

Pseudo Echo in the 1980s

Pseudo Echo in the 1980s. (L-R) Pierre Pierre, Brian Canham, Tony Lugton, Anthony Agiro.

What are your strongest impressions of the 1980s?
The fashion & music.

What historical event of the 1980s has most resonance for you? Why?
Death of John Lennon… was driving down the coast for a holiday with a group of friends (including my, now, wife), and heard the announcement on the radio… seemed surreal.

What was an event/party/pub session/nightclub of the 80s that stands out?
Inflation, The Jump Club (inner city Melbourne), and Benny’s (Kings Cross) Sydney.

Pseudo Echo Autumnal Park promotion, 1984

Pseudo Echo 'Autumnal Park' promotion, 1984. (L-R) Brian Canham, Tony Lugton, Pierre Pierre, Anthony Agiro.

Any memories (fond or foul) of what you were wearing in the 1980s?
Pointy suede boots with lots of buckles, studded belt, frilly shirt, and headbands.. . sandblasted leather jacket… Chinese (kung fu) slippers.

What music/movies/TV engaged you in the 1980s (and did you takes sides on VHS versus Betamax), and now?
Music produced by Trevor Horn.. The movie ‘Blade Runner’… VHS for me… well Betamax was a better format… but the good guy doesn’t always win.

Brian Canham performing recently. Photo by Gerry Nicholls.

Brian Canham performing recently. Photo by Gerry Nicholls.

What were you listening to – and was it on a Walkman?
Simple Minds, Spandau Ballet, Durran Durran, Human League, Ultravox, Jean Michel Jarre, Japan. Etc… I think mainly in the car, or on my ‘Silver’ ghetto balster.

What did you do for entertainment/leisure then and now? (Did it include computer games or the Rubik’s Cube?)
There was an arcade game (in Bondi) called Astron Belt… (a Star Wars knock off)… loved that… and also in a venue in called The Jump Club – Collingwood (Melbourne) there was an arcade game called Moon Patrol, had the coolest electro 12 bar sound track… I also rode trail bikes too.

These days I still ride motorcycles, and I scuba dive any time I can too.

Brian Canham performing recently. Photo by Gerry Nicholls.

Brian Canham performing recently. Photo by Gerry Nicholls.

What do you think are the main differences between the 80s and how the world and/or your life is today?
Technology has changed (among other things) how our youth are entertained.
I don’t think kids are that excited over a ‘pop star’ these days… seems like it’s no big deal… they see ‘Joe Average’ become a star overnight on things like ‘Idol’.

What was a prized object you owned then (and do you still have it)?
My black suede boots (I still have), and also my father’s car (Datsun 280ZX) had a huge impression on me… I own a beautiful original 280ZX these days.

What event (personal or public) in the 1980s would you either revisit or undo if you could?
Definitely Lennon’s assassination would be something I would undo.
I’d also rewrite all of my lyrics to say something worth saying.

Brian Canham in his Metro Mix Studio. Photo by Brian Canham.

Recent photo of Brian Canham in his MetroMix Studio. Photo by Brian Canham.

Anything else you’d like to share with us about your 1980s?
I was a teenage rock star! I had hit records, was chased by screaming girls, toured the world, met the Prime Minister, Bob Hawke (and hung out with him in his office)…
I married my true love and had our first child. It was fun, if not a bit of a blur…

Check out Pseudo Echo albums on iTunes Check out Check out Pseudo Echo albums on iTunes.

irmah