Clifton Hill Community Music Centre

The Clifton Hill Community Music Centre (CHCMC), also known as the Organ Factory, was an artist-run music and performance art space in Clifton Hill, a suburb of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. Located in a 19th-century factory used to construct the grand organ in the Melbourne Town Hall, it was co-founded in 1976 by composers Warren Burt and Ron Nagorcka, and ran weekly concerts until 1983. It closed the following year.

The CHCMC was guided by anarchist principles, with no money being charged of audience members or supplied to performers, and no restrictions on access to the space. This alternative set of values fostered a highly eclectic and experimental scene involving "a strange mix of Melbourne intelligentsia, music academics, and precocious post-punks".[1] Bands that frequently performed at the CHCMC include Tsk Tsk Tsk and Essendon Airport, fronted by Philip Brophy and David Chesworth, respectively. In 1979, the pair established both the magazine New Music and the record label Innocent Records as a means of documenting the CHCMC scene.[2] Other CHCMC regulars included composers Paul Schütze, Ernie Althoff and Keith Humble, as well as art critic Paul Taylor, whose journal Art & Text served as an outlet for critical post-structuralist discussion of CHCMC performances.

Today the CHCMC is "one of the better-documented scenes in Australian experimental music history",[3] and is regarded as both "an important place in the history of new music in Australia"[3] and "a significant site for the development of Australian cultural postmodernism".[4]

History

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The Clifton Hill Community Music Centre (CHCMC) was co-founded in 1976 by composers Warren Burt and Ron Nagorcka. Around this time, experimental music began to find institutional support in Melbourne, particularly at La Trobe University, which established an electronic music department in 1975 with Nagorcka and the American-born Burt teaching its classes. Earlier, Nagorcka had initiated innovative projects such as the New Improvisers Action Group for Gnostic and Rhythmic Awareness (NIAGGRA) at La Mama Theatre (1972–74) and co-founded the New Music Centre (NMC), a hub for contemporary and electronic musicians. During a stint at the University of California in the United States, Nagorcka collaborated with Burt on a performance series called the Atomic Cafe. Their experiences from these ventures inspired them to establish the principles for what would become the CHCMC: no entry fees or performer payments, open access for all types of performances, and an anarchic, non-hierarchical structure. A coordinator handled scheduling, building access, and basic publicity, with minimal equipment and promotion provided. The CHCMC found a home in a disused factory in inner suburban Clifton Hill. Built in the 1880s, it was used to construct the grand organ in the Melbourne Town Hall.[5]

The CHCMC, through its "anyone can do it" ethos, nurtured many young composers, including Paul Schütze, Ernie Althoff,[6] Ros Bandt, David Brown, Rik Rue[7] and Adrian Martin. Many others performed there, from Les Gilbert of the psychedelic rock band Wild Cherries, to interstate and overseas acts, including Severed Heads from Sydney and New Zealand's David Watson.[8][9] CHCMC performances were often multimedia in nature, incorporating cheap electronics and readymade materials in ways that dissolved boundaries of music, video art, performance art and installation art.[10] "Post-Cagean" composers associated with La Trobe's music department, such as Keith Humble, often maintained a formal, academic approach when creating pieces for the CHCMC.[11] A younger generation of acts, including post-punk bands Tsk Tsk Tsk (fronted by Philip Brophy) and Essendon Airport (fronted by David Chesworth), developed a consciously kitsch, muzak-inspired take on pop music. This distinguished the Clifton Hill scene from other post-punk scenes in Melbourne, including the Little Band scene, based in nearby Fitzroy. According to John Murphy, the Little Band scene was "in some ways very anti" what the "Clifton Hill mob" were doing: "Philip Brophy was very against emotion in music, while the little bands thing was meant to be wild and chaotic".[12] St Kilda's Crystal Ballroom scene, although more rock-orientated, proved receptive, with CHCMC acts playing there on occasion.

Much of the activity at the CHCMC was documented in its own quarterly magazine, New Music, co-founded by Brophy and Chesworth. The magazine invited any person, regardless of background, to submit a review of a CHCMC performance they had seen, which the performer would then respond to in an interview with the reviewer. New Music published each review and a transcript of its follow-up interview side by side.[13] Brophy and Chesworth also founded Innocent Records in 1979, which released compilations of CHCMC recordings. Severed Heads founder Tom Ellard included many CHCMC performers on One Stop Shopping (1981), a compilation released through his label Terse Tapes.[14]

In 1981, members of Tsk Tsk Tsk staged their disco project Asphixiation at the George Paton Gallery, which Althoff identified as "probably the first major acceptance by the visual arts world of [the CHCMC]".[8] Around this time, art critic Paul Taylor, a regular attendee and one-time performer at the CHCMC, emerged as one of its most prominent supporters.[10] His journal Art & Text, founded in 1981, published writing on the CHCMC through the lens of France-based post-structuralist theories. Art & Text also featured written contributions from CHCMC stalwarts, including Chesworth, who later said that the journal "started the process of legitimisation" of their ideas, and that "all of a sudden this output of people ... [Taylor] introduced back into the discourse."[15] Many CHCMC artists were represented in Taylor's landmark exhibition POPISM (1982), held at the National Gallery of Victoria.[10] It helped introduce the work of the CHCMC to a wider audience and sparked the first public debate in Australia about structuralist theories.[16]

The CHCMC hosted Melbourne Fringe Festival events in February and March of 1983, and in early 1984, it was granted funding for the first time by the Victorian Ministry for the Arts. Despite these strides, audience attendance began to decline, as did the presence of regular performers, many of whom had gone to Europe for the Festival d'automne à Paris. Also, in June 1983, the Organ Factory closed to undergo extensive renovations, forcing the CHCMC to move to a venue in Richmond. The following year in March, it was decided to disband the CHCMC.[8]

Legacy

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The National Gallery of Victoria has collected CHCMC-related works,[17][18] and drew on the scene's output in curating the 2013 exhibition Mix Tape 1980s: Appropriation, Subculture, Critical Style.[19] The CHCMC is also represented in the collection of the Melbourne Electronic Sound Studio, which has lent relevant artefacts to the Australian Music Vault. In 2009, the Melbourne International Film Festival screened CHCMC short films and video art as part of the program “Punk Becomes Pop: The Australian Post-Punk Underground”.[20]

In its 2019–20 lecture series Defining Moments: Australian Exhibition Histories 1968–1999, the Australian Centre for Contemporary Art (ACCA) invited guest lecturers to each speak on one of sixteen key events that have shaped Australian art since 1968. Chesworth presented on the CHCMC.[10]

References

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  1. ^ Davis, Sharon (8 January 2012). "Do That Dance! Australian Post Punk, 1977-1983", Australian Broadcasting Corporation, Hindsight. Retrieved 10 September 2024.
  2. ^ Andrews 2009, p. 43.
  3. ^ a b Knowles 2008, p. 38.
  4. ^ Davis 2018, p. 14.
  5. ^ Davis 2018, p. 40–44.
  6. ^ Broadstock 1995, p. 33.
  7. ^ Licht 2019, p. 120.
  8. ^ a b c Althoff 1989.
  9. ^ Severed Heads, Listen to the Archive. Retrieved 11 September 2024.
  10. ^ a b c d "Defining Moments: Clifton Hill Community Music Centre", Australian Centre for Contemporary Art. Retrieved 10 September 2024.
  11. ^ Andrews 2009, p. 44.
  12. ^ Walker 1996, p. 68.
  13. ^ Davis 2018, p. 47.
  14. ^ Fielke, Giles (2014). "Old News and Refuse". Meanjin. 73 (2).
  15. ^ Davis 2018, p. 54.
  16. ^ Davis 2018, p. 56.
  17. ^ Clifton Hill Community Music Centre, Melbourne, NGV. Retrieved 10 September 2024.
  18. ^ Innocent Records, NGV. Retrieved 10 September 2024.
  19. ^ Sutton, Anna (9 April 2013). "An 80s Mix Tape at the NGV", Broadsheet. Retrieved 11 September 2024.
  20. ^ Dale 2009.

Bibliography

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Theses

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