Blackfella/Whitefella: The Warumpi Band
Until about five years ago, I was totally
ignorant of Australian rock 'n' roll. Then I watched the closing ceremonies of
the Sydney Olympics, and everything changed. I guess I'd heard of Midnight Oil,
but didn't know anything about them, including the fact that they were
Australian. But when they took the stage in black T-shirts and warmups
emblazoned with the white word "SORRY," they caught my attention quickly. When
they launched into "Beds are Burning," they knocked me
over.The time has come to say fair's fair
To pay the rent now, to pay our share
The time has come, a fact's a fact
It belongs to them, let's give it back. I
couldn't believe my eyes and ears. Was this band for real? Where were they
coming from?A quick search of the
Internet confirmed the obvious: the Oils were a politically active band with a
long history of engagement with Aboriginal issues. The songs on their album
Diesel and
Dust, including with the land rights anthem
"Beds are Burning," repeatedly addressed themes of Aborginal land. There were
songs with titles like "Warakurna" and "Bullroarer." And there was "The Dead
Heart," commissioned by the Mutitjulu community for the celebration at the
handover of Uluru to its traditional owners in 1985. To my surprise, Peter
Garrett, the long bald singer of the band, had been invited to give the Australia Day Address in 1998, and he spoke
passionately about the place of indigenous people in the Australian nation. And
I also discovered that Diesel and
Dust had emerged from a tour the band had
taken through communities in the Western Desert and Arnhem Land with an
Aboriginal rock 'n' roll group called the Warumpi
Band.Tracking down the Warumpi Band
proved a little harder, and in fact it wasn't until we returned to Australia in
2001 that I found their CDs in a small shop in Brisbane. (They're also
available now online from Skinnyfish Music, in the "Indigenous Roots
"section.) But the search was definitely worth the wait, and the
effort.The Warumpi Band started life
in Papunya and indeed were known for a long time simply as "that Papunya Band,"
or "Warumpinya band" in the local Kriol. Like most fledgling rock 'n' roll
outfits, they were a cover band, performing songs by acts like Chuck Berry and
the Rolling Stones, and indeed, those roots are as evident in their later
recordings as the Aboriginal influences. The original line-up included Sammy
Butcher Tjapanangka on guitar and bass, Neil Murray, a whitefella from western
Victoria who'd gone to Papunya as a schoolteacher, on guitar and vocals, and
George Rrurrambu in the lead singer/frontman slot. (Rrurrambu is the son of
Gumatj artist Charlie Matjuwi from Elcho Island, and the brother of Peter
Datjin.) The band's rhythm section changed personnel many times over the years,
but originally included Sammy's brother Gordon Butcher on
drums.In 1983 the Warumpi Band made
history of sorts by releasing the first rock record in an Aboriginal language.
The A side was "Jailanguru Pakarnu" (Out from Jail), and it many ways it's a
rock 'n' roll classic: a twelve-bar blues structure and the simple story of a
young man who sings "Today I just got out from jail/I'm going to Papunya now/I'm
going in a hurry for my girl is waiting/I'm gonna sit down good--no more
fighting/Today I'll be together with my family." Except for the reference to
Papunya and the fact that the lyrics are sung in Luritja, this could be the
lament of any sorry Southerner in the USA: the jailhouse has been an icon of the
blues as long as there's been blues to be
had.The flip side of the single
stands, in my mind, as the best song the Warumpis ever recorded,
"Kintorelakutu." If the homelands or outstation movement needed an anthem, the
Warumpi Band gave it one with this song. A crisp chopping guitar riff opens the
song, before the bass and drums rumble in underneath and propel the verse along
like trucks racing westwards through the desert. The verses lament the lot of
the Western Desert people at Papunya. "After drinking grog we always start
fighting/At that place in the east we are becoming nothing/We are yearning for
our own country." The chorus proposes the solution: we must go west to Kintore.
After what's known in the trade as a "blistering guitar solo," the
four-beats-to-the-measure pounding of guitar and bass snaps into a single
staccato chop on the first downbeat, the drums roll on, and Rrurrambu's vocal
goes into
overdrive:Anangu tjuta! Anangu tjuta!
Irritja nyinapayi ngurra panya Walangurru
Kuwarrilatju nyinanyilpi Kuwarrilatju nyinanyilpi
Tjamaku ngurrangka ngurra panya Kintorela
Arralaka! Wilurarra! Kintorelakutu!
(Mobs of people! Mobs of people!
Those olden times ones always lived at that same place--Kintore
Finally now we are sitting. Finally now we are sitting at our
Grandfather's camp in the same home at Kintore.
We must go! West! To Kintore!) After
four years of listening to this track, that coda still starts a chill in my
scalp that runs right on down past my
knees.Their first album,
Big Name, No
Blankets, was released in 1985 without either
of these songs. It did include four more songs in language, including "Nyuntu
Nyaaltjirrku," a plea to beat the grog. Where the music video for "Jailanguru
Pakarnu" featured the members of the band running joyously, instruments in hand,
from the gates of the jail, "Nyuntu Nyaaltjirrku" offered documentary footage of
Aboriginal men and women being herded into the back of police wagons. Neil
Murray and Sammy Butcher contributed the jazzy complaints "Breadline" and
"Sitdown Money" that addressed issues of welfare dependence and its demoralizing
side effects in Papunya. But the mainstay of the album was
'Blackfella/Whitefella," the anthem of racial harmony and cooperation that lent
its title to the tour of the Outback communities undertaken jointly by Midnight
Oil and the Warumpi Band.The
Blackfella/Whitefella tour was documented in a film of the same name, and by
journalist Andrew McMillan in his book
Strict Rules
(Hodder and Stoughton, 1988). In both cases the Oils are treated,
understandably, as the star attraction. But the Warumpi Band shines. They are
both at home in the environment and uncomfortable at the center of attention,
while the Oils sometimes struggle against the unaccustomed venues and are
sometimes liberated by the energy of the audience of kids dancing ten feet in
front of them. One thing is certain, both bands emerged from the tour with the
best albums of their careers in hand,
Diesel and
Dust and the Warumpi's
Go
Bush!Go
Bush! includes both "Jailanguru Pakarnu" and
"Kintorelakutu" as well as the song that's probably done more to secure the
band's reputation than any other (albeit via Christine Anu's cover version,
which incidentally, she performed at the 2000 Olympics). "My Island Home" is
emblematic of the Warumpi blackfella/whitefella collaboration: it is Rrurrambu's
sung autobiography, written by Murray. The final and "title" track of the
album, "From the Bush," is a passionate rebuke to opponents of land
rights:You can keep your Opera House and your MCG*
You can keep your company home it don't mean nothing to me
We're not trying to take away your suburban backyard
We won't be spearing any sheep down on your farm
My life is different to yours
What are you worried for
You got the money, you got the lot
You got it all but you still don't stop (*Melbourne
Cricket Ground to us Yanks in the
audience)True to the rock 'n' roll
form, after the achievement of Go Bush!
the band nearly fell apart. Neil Murray had
major ambitions for the band, and pushed for national exposure and recognition.
The Tjapanangka brothers had little interest in performing or traveling outside
of Papunya, and indeed in the sections of
Blackfella/Whitefella
filmed in the Top End, Sammy Butcher has been replaced by Hilary Wirri. They
and Rrurrambu also had family business that conflicted with the demands of
touring and rock 'n' roll stardom. Rrurrambu developed problems with the grog
that led to tensions between him and Murray, who by his own account demanded a
kind of discipline that the other band members had little shared investment in.
For the next nine years the band
re-united, toured, and broke up repeatedly, and it wasn't until 1996 that
Murray, Rrurrambu, and Sammy Butcher rebuilt the core of the band and returned
to the recording studio. Too Much
Humbug (Murray claimed the title reflected his
general opinion of the band's worth at the time) reflected the members'
divergent musical interests and the decade-long gap. The songs were less
elemental rock 'n' roll. Murray's contributions were more crafted, slicker, and
to my ears, not as convincing. Rrurrambu had embraced his Yolngu heritage on
the one hand in songs like "Wayathul" and his status as a cosmopolitan, urban
rock hero on the other with "Koori Man." Even the closing reprise of
"Blackfella/Whitefella" fell flat. By this time though the fans were, as they
say, legion, and the band had a hard time giving it up once and for all. They
played their last dates in 2000, including the opening of the
Papunya Tula: Genesis and
Genius show at the Art Gallery of New South
Wales.In 2001 ABC's
Message
Stick produced a half hour documentary tribute
to the band, The End of the Corrugated
Road, which featured excerpts from their
videos, interviews, and concert footage. In 2002 Sammy Butcher released a solo
album of guitar instrumentals called
Desert Surf
Guitar, which is one of the loveliest electric
guitar records I know. It's a work of a truly individual guitar genius, unlike
the music of the Warumpi Band, or indeed any other contemporary Aboriginal music
that I'm familiar with. George Rrurrambu's solo,
Nerbu
Message, came out in 2004, a mix of reggae
styles, Yolngu tones, and his familiar exhortative brand of rock, along with new
treatments of two old Warumpi songs, "Mayalil" and "Ronu Wanga (My Island
Home)." Neil Murray released his sixth solo album this year, a two-disc
compilation of his work from the last 15
years.Murray has also written an
autobiographical novel, Sing For Me,
Countryman (Hodder and Stoughton, 1993), long
out of print, but now available again by direct purchase from Murray. (See his
website for details.) To call the book "thinly
disguised" would be something of an overstatement; the names have been changed
but that's about it. I found the book to be a fascinating chronicle of the
band's history, remarkable especially in its frankness. Murray himself isn't
always a sympathetic character; he is driven by his own desire for fame as much
as he is by his love of Aboriginal culture. He is warm-hearted and impatient,
sentimental and self-absorbed, and I figure that if he can present himself in
this manner, he can probably be trusted reasonably well in his depictions of his
bandmates and their associates. As
the song says, I love rock 'n' roll, so I was a sucker for the Warumpi Band from
the start. But the more I listened to their music, sought out the videos, and
read about them, the more convinced I became that there was something
extra-ordinary about them. In Sing For
Me, Countryman, Murray recounts with some
bitterness a time when he was trying to organize a second tour with Midnight Oil
and was frustrated at every turn by the impossibility of getting the other
members of the band committed to the effort it would take to make the dates and
do the touring. Eventually, the project collapses on him; the Oils want the
Warumpis aboard, but the logistics can't be conquered, and another Aboriginal
band is recruited to take their place. Murray has nothing but scorn for this
replacement bunch of "stage Aborigines" with their tribal costumes and paint.
This sounds a lot like a caustic assessment of Yothu Yindi to me, and while it's
generally agreed in the press that the Warumpi Band opened doors for many other
Aboriginal rock 'n' rollers, including Yothu Yindi, it also sounds like sour
grapes. But the pieces of the story are all familiar. There's the whitefella
trying to organize his Aboriginal cohorts, who for their part don't really want
the same thing that he does. There's' impatience on all sides. There's the
implicit criticism that people "down South" don't really understand Aboriginal
culture but are ready to snap up something that looks authentic, but only
because it looks "primitive" or "tribal." But perhaps the importance of the
Warumpi Band lies in the fact that they didn't try to sell traditional
Aboriginal culture. Their authenticity lies rather in their melding of bush and
city, black and white, electric guitars and clapsticks, Gumatj, Luritja, and
Kriol. Big name, no blankets.Murray
caught a lot of flack for being the whitefella in an Aboriginal band. When the
Warumpis came to Sydney, black activists tried to force him out, threatening to
cancel dates if he played with the band. Other critics have claimed that he
used the banner of Aboriginal rock to advance his own career, and that without
his Pintupi friends, he'd still be busking on the Todd Mall. I don't think
there's any denying that Murray brought a white Australian sensibility to the
band in many ways. But I also think it's unfair to say that the man who could
write "My Island Home" for Rrurrambu was a freeloader on the country's interest
in Aboriginal culture. A pair of songs like "Breadline" and "Sitdown Money"
work precisely because they tell the story of people down on their luck, out of
work, with no prospects. Whether they're luckless pastoralists or dislocated
Pintupi doesn't really matter to the spirit of the song. In
The End of the Corrugated
Road, Archie Roach calls them "the first
reconciliators."Murray's song "Fitzroy
Crossing," a lament for a love left behind, sounds like a traditional lover's
lament, but the story told in Sing For
Me, Countryman reveals that the love he left
behind is a son fathered on an Aboriginal woman, and the family places a distant
second to Murray's aspirations to be a star. Here again, there's a story of
modern Australia, of Aboriginal experience with the Anglo interloper. And yet,
in "Mulga and Spinifex Plain," Murray's yearning for a return to the bush is
made of equal parts of a romantic yearning for the country and his desire to sit
down with a
tjilpi,
or old man, to whom he
saysI'm a stranger to your life for a start
And I'm not sure if I can really play a part
Still I came to your country
Don't know what you're thinking of me
All I know is I can't forget these times here with you. On
another song from Big Name, No
Blankets, "Falling Down," there's a small
detail that rings true of bush courtship. Murray describes a lover's tryst at
sunset. The man sets out to meet his woman; she slips out to meet him and as
she walks along the road "she lets her footprints fall in his." The full import
of this escaped me until one day in Broome, I listened to Roy Wiggan tell
stories about the many ways in which boys and girls got in trouble out in the
bush, especially boys. He talked about how jealous boyfriends would follow
their girlfriend's footprints, and then watch for places where another man's
footprints crossed or seemed to follow hers. If they went in the same direction
too far, the jealous boyfriend would often come out with his boomerang.
In the film
Blackfella/Whitefella,
much of the screen time is given over to Rrurrambu, whose flamboyant stage
presence led to his characterization as a "Aborginal Bon Scott" (Scott was the
lead singer of the Australian hard rock band AC/DC). Murray, as the other
frontman, gets his share of camera time as well, and this is all within the
conventions of the rock documentary. But in the long shots that capture the
whole band, Gordon and Sammy Butcher strike me as more than unusually retiring.
Their faces are almost always averted from the crowd and they give the first
impression of being distinctly uncomfortable on the stage. Gordon Butcher looks
up at the camera only as if to check whether it has turned its focus away from
him. I was reminded of the Pintupi concept of
kunta,
which is variously translated as "shame" or "embarrassment," and is an
appropriate behavior to exhibit when one is the center of attention in a group
of people. I wonder if the feeling of being, literally, in the spotlight, could
account for the Tjapanangkas' stage
affect.So it isn't just the obvious
homeland anthem or the songs in language that make the Warumpi Band so important
to me and to their other diehard fans. Yes, language was immensely important,
and I can only imagine what people felt when they turned on the radio and heard
rock 'n' roll in their native tongue. My command of Pintupi is limited to about
two dozen words at best, most of them picked up on trips to Uluru.
Anangu.
Kata
tjuta. Stuff like that. But when Rrrurrambu
shouted "Anangu
tjuta" in the middle of "Kintorelakutu" and I
understood what he was saying, if only for an instant, it was a pretty amazing
thrill for me.But it's the intimacy of
detail, the way that living with the Warumpis' music in my head continually
enriches my readings and my experiences in Australia. How stories I hear
suddenly make sense out of something in a song lyric, and vice-versa, and how
that process continues after years, is what makes them important to me. At the
end of Painting
Culture, after Fred Myers has traced the
development of Papunya Tula painting through three decades, he describes a
homecoming of sorts in Sydney at the opening of the
Genesis and
Genius show. Fred is re-united after many
years with his friends from the days at Yayayi, especially with Bobby West
Tjupurrula. It's a very emotional section of the book; there's a sense of
triumph for all parties involved, and it climaxes at the opening gala in the Art
Gallery with the Warumpi Band playing one of their last gigs. When I read this,
all I could think of was the conclusion of many a Shakespearian comedy, say,
As You Like
It, where all parties are reconciled,
dissension put aside, and the music plays and the ensemble joins in a dance of
celebration. Reflecting on the performance and its significance in light of the
success of Papunya Tula, Fred has this to say, in
part:In ... its music, culture, and personnel, Warumpi was an expression of the emergent mixing of indigenous and white counterculture, a rejection of the Anglophilic or even the middle class--and in this lay the band's appeal for a new Australia rather similar to the appeal of the dot paintings. Both represent forms of collaboration between white and black, mixings of sensibility, a shifting of Aboriginal specificity into terms more easily assimilated within the sensibilities of the broader population. (Myers, Painting Culture, 350) Or,
to let the Warumpis have the final
word:Blackfella, whitefella
Yellafella, any fella
It doesn't matter what your colour
As long as you are true fella
Are you the one who's gonna stand up and be counted?
Posted: Sat
- October 29, 2005 at 11:26 PM
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A collection of personal reflections and readings on the art of the indigenous people of Australia, their culture, anthropological studies, the art market, and whatever else strays across the cultural horizon.
If you don't wish to leave comments on the blog itself please fee free to contact me directly. Will Owen
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Published On: Nov 02, 2005 08:08 PM
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