Journal

GLITCH IN TIME, OUTBACK PT 2 – STRAIGHT LINES OF INSANITY

Press play to listen to the brand new track from MT WARNING whilst you get taken on the GLITCH IN TIME tour  The sales and storage speech from the Grain Corpse (sic) representative came to a halt as I meandered to the bar, the vacant look on the bar ladies face as I asked what food they had a second time made me re-approach for landing. "Ow's it ga'arn" I said, "6 schooeys and some hot chips thanks love." She seemed to disarm, "Sit outside, and I'll bring them over, darl." A couple curious cockies came to stir us up and when we told them we make music, hats and video's they all seemed to have a story to tell about some part of that, even it was Braithewaite, Akubra, Debbie Does Dubbo. The pub owner came out and was excited to have some weird folk around, I grabbed my guitar and started taking requests, a couple of the old lads were into it, but I was REALLY into it, after our high vibing sunset shoot I was ready to rock, so up on the tables I went banging out Farnsy, Barnsy, Hank and Johnny. About 16kg's of hot chips and frozen calamari was served aplomb and the publican directed us to a secret campsite with power and gave us a discount on the meals and beers. Premer, you bloody ripper.   I awoke at 4am on top of the bus in my swag, confused, there was movement on the ground and by the time I tumbled down 3 of us were bumping into each other in the dark, the 2 others asking me if I'd just come into each bus, I had not, they said someone had, we packed and stacked like nobodies business and got the fuck outta there. The other 4 members still sound asleep in the backs of each bus. I started searching the map for a ridge to film a sunrise shoot, the dawn was coming and this magic hour approaching was too good to miss. We burned off to a dusty track and found OZTRAYA!, a windmill, a 10 metre feed trough and a road to nowhere. Clambering around in the pre dawn light, exploring the rusty mill and testing its build by climbing to the top, shitting myself as the wind spun it's massive blade around, almost toppling me off. Along the road we burned, me atop playing tunes, crew running through paddocks and barbed wire to get the shot, everyone eating dust, but this is the rush we live for. Placing ourselves in the path of beauty hoping to add rather than detract……  The hunger was as real as the hangovers and we headed for Dunedoo. We stumbled into the bakery, the staff trying their best to understand our coffee orders, Ollie and I considered the raffle to win a prize bull but wondered how long it would be funny for had we had to care for the massive stud, our manhoods were far too threatened to support the local cause. On the main street we met a man who was an orange vendor, 70 years old, been doing it since 17. His wife was aboriginal and the stories he told us of the abuse and injustice around these parts was horrifying, and that the only reason he opened his mind was the love he fell in to. He now spreads that message with a local radio show, hoping his community will understand the wealth of knowledge and the strength the custodians of this land could lead us with if we could listen. I think he and his wife should be this nations leaders. Whilst fuelling the bus I look across the road to see Justin and family washing in the sprinklers in the bindie laced park. Closest thing to a surf out here, we stripped down and ran over, Dunedoo quivered at the sight, we washed off the road thus far in front of honking semi trailers and offended locals. We set course for 'the dish', installed between Parkes and Forbes to listen for aliens. I shit you not. A giant satellite in the conservative farming community awaiting a response to messages sent by Carl Sagan and Dr. Spock. We dressed up and grabbed some rum and played out our romantic version of waiting for the aliens to sing, can we act you ask? With rum, we can do anything….. A quick jaunt through the hay bales had me scratched up and sweaty, exhausted and parched, why didn't we get a water sponsor? The next destination was the farm I grew up on near Shepparton, 514km's away, with only 3 turns. I've driven these roads a lot, the crew had not, the insanity was building fast with the straight roads and not a hill in sight. The occasional tree would get a yelp of excitement, but the rum and the beer was helping us invent entertainment in the back of the bus. We stopped in West Wyalong for some uppers, and the townsfolk were gawking at me harder than usual as I scrounged the supermarket for fresh fruit and veg I was hoping to intravenously inject. The checkout chick wouldn't scan my items but just stared, "Everything ok?" I asked. "Your face is weird" she replied "it's got little shiny bits all over it". I forgot that at the dish our Galaxy Girl cinematographer and stylist and model for the bus, Claudia, had made me more galactic with glitter. Glitter on a man in the outback is a no-no I now know. I grabbed my supplies and bee-lined to the beast. We ducked into a pub and met a sheep farmer who when asked what he thought of the bus out front replied "mobile rape dungeon" with a sadistic little smile, we grabbed each other close and backed out, wondering if we could padlock ourselves in for the remaining 376km and 2 remaining bends. This is the country I grew up in, the roads ghostly quiet at the best of times, deathly quiet at the worst. I wanted to show the crew the old train bridge at the border town of Tocumwal. We used to drive our cows across it in winter so we could holiday at the exotic Gold Coast. You'd say climbing it at night is a poor idea, but climbing at day it way scarier, we'd hear stories of adolescent local legends landing backflips from it's huge height and of the mishaps of tourists and we'd shake our heads as kids, dreaming and judging. Ollie and I did not back flip, but marvelled at the engineering feat of the 19th century draw bridge and its rusted mechanisms. Nerds r us. We came in hot to the family farm, and it was like the old teenage days, lucky mum and dad were away, sorry if you're reading this…. I wanted to show off everything all at once, it was midnight, dark moon, we were wired tired and pretty well excited. After showing off my tractor skills and not being able to attach the bucket to collect wood I thought rolling a hay bale by the bus would suffice. Suffice to say it did. We're in dry country and this was dry hay, that thing lit up like it had been soaked in petrol for weeks. We madly danced around it and marvelled at the little swirly bits heading off into the stars. Had I known the whole paddock had been cut for weeks and ready to blaze I hope I would have thought twice. So many things I hope for in hindsight….. I sent the crew down to the old dairy to finally sleep and snuck out to my old bed. Home you wicked beast, like a missing lovers touch. Up to smouldering bales and river swims, the Broken River of all the places we would find ourselves. Ha. We made video's through the orchard and I tried to hotwire the quad bike to rip some skids, but the old man knows me too well and got that shit offline at the thought of my prodigal return. We wanted an appropriate exit so we devised a scene of me starting on the roof as the bus rolled out. I would leap from there to the bales along the lane, then in the window and we'd make our way toward Melbourne. Up I jumped, off took the bus, onto the bales I somehow made it, then across to the window. The beautiful rings made by our driver Adelaide adorning my fingers had become stuck that morning after the straight road rum swelling of my hands. As I used all my strength to pull into the window, my bare feet an inch from the front wheel, I slipped. Fuck. I hit back on to the bale, trying to keep my feet clear of Frankie Vans fresh rubber, but then felt a tingle in my hand. The stuck rings had caught the sill but my body weight had relieved them from my finger, along with all my skin between the palm and the second knuckle. Oh how I shook at the sight. Adelaide had the first aid kit and set to work, Ollie had the rum and set to work, Justin and Claudia had the camera's and kept working. Yeah team. Patched up and blood pumping we needed to get to Melbourne, my hand throbbing and adrenaline high. I hit that strange place of euphoria and arrogance after a self inflicted injury and set about being tough and playing it cool… with a bottle of rum. Melbourne had no idea what was about to hit it, we were high flying and feeling free, some may say we had jumped the gun, but the weekend about to be had could only be described as the mother of all destructions…... Photography || Justin Crawford @thecrawfordcosmosMusic and words || MT WARNING @mtwarningFluids, Fuel and Sanity || Young Henrys @younghenrysBoots || Blundstone Australia @blundstoneMore fluids and morale || Rum Co Fiji

Read more
GLITCH IN TIME, OUTBACK PT 2 – STRAIGHT LINES OF INSANITY

MT WARNING "SEE MY NOW"

"This song began on the 405 in LA with original MT instigator Taylor Steele one helluva night // I thought I was done with wild rides but this one came up again and began the journey with the FallenBROKENStreet bus adventure. The song is a story of my experience, chasing, burning, yearning. The chorus a plea to be in the moment, and I've used that for and against myself at times, hindsight tells me what 'now' I created, ha, go figure. Enjoy, play it loud"  - Mikey || MT WARNING   LISTEN TO "SEE MY NOW" HERE, NOW! 

Read more
MT WARNING "SEE MY NOW"

GLITCH IN TIME - PART 1 - THE OUTBACK

"Glitch in Time is the current East Coast tour of Australia by the creative wizards at Fallen broken Street and Byron Bay man band Mt Warning. Tripping on down the highway in the now legendary FBS festival Bedford school bus and accompanied by a bunch of their mates and obligatory cold cases of  Young Henry's, this live rock n roll roadshow is coming to a town near you to play, stay and disobey. Enter the cloakroom here..." - Summersite  The Friday before our Tuesday departure we needed an auto electrician for the bus. Badly. The alternator was sending too much charge to the batteries and our local car sparky Graeme said to drop it round. Getting a 6-tonne ex-schoolbus built in 1977 around the corner is no mean feat.  Justin hooked up a heavy industrial chain to his ex-postal Mercedes Sprinter and decided to drag it around to old mates. Old mate was under the pump and unable to see us, we created traffic chaos for the yoga benders and coffee drinkers that inhabit the Byron Bay Industrial Estate and as we towed off with our tail between our mechanical legs. Then a giant BOOM echoed through both vehicles and up to the lighthouse. Justin assumed we ripped the back off the Sprinter or front off the bus, but it was just the inch thick chain that couldn't handle the awesome weight.    Traffic of disgruntled highly caffeinated yogis was seamlessly coordinated by yours truly and legendary local builder Baz as Justin and bus driver Adelaide jimmied together a new chain in the rain. There's something to be said about trying the same thing expecting a different result, but we got the old bus rolling again and almost back to base before another almighty SNAP. Traffic, yogis, coffee, rain, jimmied, away she rolled again, limping to the FallenBROKENStreet headquarters.  Mobile mechanics were called, the mythical skills of the mechanics of Ballina were our only hope... This was the leg of the journey I was most excited and most anxious about. Getting the bus from Byron Bay to Melbourne. We had a 4 am departure planned. By midday, we still didn't know if we'd find the bus in running order after Justin had cowboyed it down to Ballina the day before (commandeering two free batteries as our faulty alternator had drained our 24-volt marine batteries completely, Century's lifetime guarantee may change soon folks). We hooked up a support bus (the mighty ex-postal Sprinter) and headed out of the industrial estate of Byron, scooping up Ollie who was on a seemingly innocent bike ride, poor bastard thought we were just going shopping.  Onto Ballina to find the black beast that the magician mechanic had restored to running order (on the proviso of using a can of 'Start Ya Bastard' every time we start it).  If you need a tyre for a heavy vehicle from the 70's it turns out only one man can help, Frankie Vans of Lismore and his muse, Lillibeth. We ventured out there and the boys got to work. I went to the pub next door and met Trish who was searching for her soul mate Darren, I assured her I was not Darren. Tyred up and ready to roll it was 4 pm, 12 hours late, 60kms down, we headed for the Great Dividing Range to make the pass from Grafton. We screamed into the purple lined streets with the jacaranda's in full bloom and accosted a pub as I climbed up on the bus roof stage and entertained the stunned locals with what I'm sure was a very witty song about purple flowers. A bow, a beer, and we were off. The celebration began on the road, finally leaving it all behind, our bus commander, Adelaide, bossed the back roads as we climbed the Great Divide and graciously stopped for me after I'd climbed out the window on the hairpin turns to check if the stage on the roof could double as a viewing platform. Turns out not while in motion. We reached the sleepy town of Ebor about 9 pm, in quite a state, and pulled the bus in behind the Hotel Motel and took stock of our distance and made our beds for the night. By morning I realised we were 7 people running on different schedules with no authority and that's just what we would have to deal with. Found Fusspots cafe and gratefully ate canned mushrooms on tip-top toast as the locals came in to stare at us, we are quite an assortment together once out of the rainbow of the Byron hipster cuddle. The cutie in the kitchen laconically suggested the falls were the only thing in the area worth checking out, I now know that Ebor has two worthy sites. We were away in high country now, rich farmlands with impressive rock-strewn fields. In Armidale I met eyes with an old bearded man at the petrol station who beckoned me over, "There's not many of our kind out here, you better be careful," I looked at him quizzically, he winked and pulled me closer "I'm a lefty too, good on ya's". We aimed for Tamworth, the country music capital, still so far to go, picking up shots on the way, still excited at being out and finally taking this adventure on.   We nodded at the Golden Guitar, the grey nomads enjoying my rendition of Hank Williams dancing around on the bus roof, but we couldn't stay long, had to keep on moving.  We took the back roads out of there, destination still unknown, just needing to make some distance. Driving into an everlasting sunset, the bus was popping yet again, playing songs and screaming stories over the deafening roar of the motor. Up I jumped to the roof, these flat roads make good for playing while driving. Vibe was high. It was after dark and we needed food, one broken sign pointed us down a dark road to the Premer Pub, we gave it go. When a crew like us walk into a pub that's holding a dinner for all the local grain growers in the area, it's like throwing a cat into a room full of pigeons, the curiosity and hunger for fresh blood was rife…. it was visible from both sides, and I couldn't be sure we get out of this one without a scar…… Photography || Justin Crawford @thecrawfordcosmosMusic and words ||  MT Warning @mtwarningFluids, Fuel and Sanity || Young Henrys @younghenrysBoots || Blundstone @blundstoneMore fluids and morale || Bati Rum @bati_rum

Read more
GLITCH IN TIME - PART 1 - THE OUTBACK

MISFIT, SEEKER, LOVER

  Fallen Broken Street X Summersite || super 8 Full from Jess James on Vimeo.   "A timeless video that captures Fallen Broken Street's aesthetics of the misfit, seeker, creator & lover. Using 8mm film for this short video, I wanted to capture the free spirit of the youth, the effortless beauty of the ocean, the land and the girl." - Jess Ruby James _ _X || SummersiteFeaturing The Jay Hat in Orange, The Slipway Cap in Black & The Boonie Doon Cap BlackFilm & edit || Jess Ruby James @jessrubyjamesMuse || Rosie Bahen-Wright @rosiebahenwrightMusic ||  Mulatu Astatke - Tezeta

Read more
MISFIT, SEEKER, LOVER