Papa Smurf Interview Part 1: The History of Melbourne's Rave Scene
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 17 พ.ย. 2024
- Australian trance legend Papa Smurf took Beat Repeat back through his last 30 years in the electronic music scene. He told the story of how Melbourne formed to have one of the largest rave scenes globally. From the 1990's dance music rave culture in all its glory to memories of the late music industry legend Mickey B (Michael Bradley), tune in for a sit down with Papa - one of Australia's greats.
Producer/Interviewer: Liz Holliday
Camera/Edit: Cohen Medson
Location: Inner North Brewing Co
RIP Micky B & Phil K they were ahead of there time DJ’s and total gentleman. Papa played from the heart and with passion the people rocking were his energizer his sets at ZOS and all the other places will always stay with everyone who was there to feel his music and the atmosphere it created. Good to see him looking well was always fun to be around and have a laugh drink and splif with and still has the one of kind unique hollywood movie star sopranos voice. Back when it wasn’t commercialized the crowds atmosphere and the feel were in another stratasphere everything about what it’s all about clicked into place.
What an interview. Nothing will or ever compare to clubbing in the 90's in Melbourne.
Fuck man.. you just unloaded some of the best memories during this interview. I remember everything Papa said and went to all those parties. We were the clubbing capital of the world and it all turned to shit.
I'm glad we didn't have social media back then. It was all about the music , the vibe , the Chartreuse shots and Lamb on Chapel at fkn 4am😂
RIP Micky B and Phil K. Those guys were the ultimate.
Haha chartreuse!! Yes so true
I miss the 90s. Two Tribes, Every Picture Tells a Story, SummaDayze, Welcome 2000, QBH, The Dome ( Jane’s Bar)
Not to forget Wizz back of The Palace and Sunday morning recovery at that little bar at the top end of Queens St - name escapes me. (93 onwards)
Let's not forget Hard Kandy, Bass Station, Zos & Monkey.....good times
Hey Papa I gave you a pat on the back after the recent Revs. It's so good to know who you are thanks to this interview
Chasers Sunday nights was one of the best nights out anywhere. Not just the music, it was 2-3 girls for every guy in there, intentionally, and it worked. Wild times, loved it. Then some building renos happened, closed for a bit, never came back the scene was lost. Awesome memories, glad we got to experience it all, I bet those there feel the same.
Perfectly said. By the 97 chasers renovation, the crowd moved over to heat nightclub and chasers died.
I don't know who made this video, but God Damn thank you so much!!!!!!
Bro....Will-E-Tell...what a DJ... totally agree with you Papa Smurf...late 90's was the best for me
My first raves were the Wet Music parties they (Wll-E-Tell and co.) put on at Storey Hall.
What a beautiful interview. So true about the vibe back then. Peace Love Unity and Respect. It was a really special time.
Beautiful. Absolutely describes my experience of the Melbourne dance, primarily techno & live music scene late 90's/2000's. Watching this has reinforced my commitment to keep going to festivals & gigs plus gotta get to my 1st bush doof before I lose the urge haha. Peace.
RIP Mick B. What a great guy he was!
great interview. Im glad i caught the tail end of the golden era of the dance scene in Melbourne. it truely was a special time. People were friendly, it wasn't commercialised, there were no bad vibes at all. Then something shifted and it was never the same. 😢
This is great interview about a unique time in Melbourne's cultural history. This guy epitomises the inclusive and progressive culture of the scene. Raves, especially the bush doofs, were like Christmas when you are a kid and still excited about it
Positives: music, needless to say, drugs, people, freedom, culture
Negatives: drugs, for my health, dickheads who I hung around with, selfishness associated with drugs. I would love to step in a time machine and experience it as I am now. Global village, dane centre in Brunswick, earthcores, technofest,. Cheers
Giovans does a great job of capturing the essence of Melb’s doof scene - and sharing his own beautiful character. Thank you to everyone who made this interview happen. It really was an amazing time in history. #MAJIK 🗿❤️
Dome Brooo
"social media has done alot of damage" Well Said Old Mate.
Amazing stuff...so true! Best days back then! Shed 14!
lol love the passion and the trip down memory lane . yeah i must say i miss it
Spoken with so much passion which we all relate to and what made us... very emotional towards the end... said with love...
Man the way you describe first seeing these parties resonates with me soo much. Really feel blessed to have been part of that scene and movement during the 90's. There simply hasn't been anything like it in my life since. The way people were so chill back then you could approach anybody. PLUR!!
Described an underground era of Melbournes club scene thats unprecedented and unique. Winterdaze, Red Raw, Sleezeball The Loft, Tasty, Dome, Mansion, Check Point Charlie, Fantasia and Freakzoid.
ROCKKKKK IT PAPA............
Don't know how I stumbled across this but it brings back some of the best memories spanning 15yrs.
Same
By the 2000s the rave scene started to attract the steroid/angry/poser type. The vibe totally changed from one of love, fun, acceptance, freedom to the exact opposite. Next thing you see is everyone to obsessed with how cool they looked, no more love n hugs but lots of anger, posing and intimidation.
Fuck yea bring on the old muzza
We need more interviews please.
Great interview 😊
Loved Giovannis sets back in the zos / evo days
Filter @the Lounge on Wednesdays with DJ Rudeboy and co. was pretty good for a midweek intimate dance off or just chill on the balcony. Hardware at Shed14 on the docklands was the only reason you would go to the docklands. And Every Picture at global village in Footscray watching Derrick May or listening to happy hardcore and jungle (i cannot remember where now lol). Papa Smurf kinda reminds me of Chopper if he was into techno....😅 Jokes aside... I learnt alot in the 90's. Used to buy records from Rebound Records on Sydney road where Mickey B. used to work. And from Willie Tell at Central Station on Flinders... Ah the memories... And Kiss90 and Kate Bathgate on trance mission RRR pushing the music boundaries whilst the rest of the stations bombarded us with Aussie Rock...
Also great interview, a true lover of the scene
Amen brother ❤️ I have so many videos of the old Melbourne parties... Posting on here soon 🙂
The size of the scene is what made it I reckon enough people that you didn’t know everyone but not to many where every one seemed like a stranger
Awesome stuff・what a good dude
Brilliant 👌
Willie tell I haven’t heard that for 20 years
Wow, I remember those parties in Bunswick. Ministry of style, with Itchy's record shop upstairs, though I can't remember if it opened a few years after the street parties?
Take me back to Zos and Evo!
Escape, standing next to simon digby and will-e-tell doing the lights and smoke machine teaches you alot about mixing
Well said brother 😊
Friday nights at Savage were funk awesome. All us Ravers in one corner with our talcum powder and the gays on the other side with the best DJ’s of the time falling over themselves to play.
bro is nailing this interview, highlight the most important issues in Melbourne underground rave scene
3:36 bad people, "they were the best people" 🤣. That comment is gold, I can relate 👍.Papa Smurf Sounds like a top genuine bloke. He's right about clubs these days, the best one's are still gay clubs, everyone there just to have a great time and not pass judgement on anyone.
Bring back will e tell
"If you wanted to be a DJ, you had to really work to be a DJ" .... *100%*
I did the work myself in the early 2000s...1200s, a series of gradually better mixers, really good headphones, and SO _ MUCH _ VINYL _.......
PLUS the hundreds if not thousands of hours to get your mixing really, really tight. Some people online say "beatmatching is easy, you can learn it in a couple of hours"....no. Really bad mixing, maybe. But even if you're playing digital, a couple of hours will only teach you how to mix in a very crappy fashion, compared to the greats. And on vinyl...forget about it. To be average, to be 'just ok', you had hundreds of hours of practice ahead of you.
And all that created a barrier to entry...which was actually a good thing. Because the people who just wanted to be famous, or popular, who would never have had a deep love of the music, or the ability to build an amazing set....who would just dilute the scene with cheesy track selection and sub-standard mixing....they didn't make it. If they started at all, they soon gave up.
But now we have cheap digital files, and technology that will take care of the technical side...fwiw, I have no issue with playing MP3s, I'm not a vinyl purist....but 'DJs' are now being booked based on their social media footprint, *because with sync they don't even need to know how to beatmatch or mix* .
And unfortunately, so much of the arguing ends up being about whether digital is valid, whether sync is valid...instead of what it should be about....has the DJ in question earned their stripes by playing small gigs for years? Have they *shown* on repeated occasions that they can build a set? Or are they just there because even tho they probably suck, they are popular online.
Which leads me to the final note - when people get introduced to a scene, they form a 'baseline' of what they like, what they think is good. I had a Dutch girl (of all people) tell me recently that 'all the best DJs, like Martin Garrix, play at Tomorrowland". Which tells us that standards can drop sharply when the criteria for booking is popularity not skill, and a large portion of the scene can be diluted into a housified version of pop music, if newbies to dance music are exposed to Guetta and Swedish House Mafia, instead of Carl Cox, Sasha, Digweed, etc. It's too late to stop that now tbh....the horse has bolted...but it would be good to see more underground-type events focusing on DJs who've really put the effort in.
Papa Smurf 💯💯💯💯💯
There’ll never be another Chasers - every night (except Monday’s) was a different night. If Inwas at a loss for what to do it was always Chasers. I thought I was the nuts when I got my Membership - thanks to the doorman whose name I forget (he was the short old guy on every night) I would even go on a Wednesday night to Hard n Fast - I was into my metal & hard rock before Beltran, Bolland, Väth etc.
I would argue that south of the river ie Prahran, South Yarra, contributed more to the Rave scene in Melbourne then North, Brunswick st that he is referring to was later around the mid 90ies. Also the Rave scene in the UK wasnt the 90ies it was the definitely kicking off in the 80ies.
UK rave scene was 88-92 👍🏻
@@thehitman1980 indeed
Dunno why people hated him at Cake last night. I recon he fucking killed it!
4:20 100%
The truth is, it was all about the various drugs taking hold on the dance floor , lol
This sounds like robbery.
Cant cope this bloke trying to tell us about the history. Pure? Back of the palace.
He is the best best
Thanks bring back street dance parties. .
Chapel street.
Those were the days Gians. Hope your well bello
Crazy that Melb had that Techno scene and Sydney had the gay club scene. Both were huge mid/late 90s and early 2000s