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  • Big bands make it a big day

    The West Australian (Perth)
    February 7, 2005 Monday
    METRO

    Big bands make it a big day

    by SIMON COLLINS


    Techno, hip-hop and good old rock'n'roll - there was something for
    every one of the 36,000 music lovers

    More than 36,000 fans rocked into Claremont Showground yesterday for
    Perth's sell-out instalment of the Big Day Out.

    They flocked to hear a big range of acts from the hip-hop of Beastie
    Boys, the Streets and Scribe, and techno of Chemical Brothers, to
    straight-up rock'n'roll from Powderfinger, Spiderbait and the Donnas.


    There was something for just about everyone - if you didn't like the
    Aussie hip-hop of Adelaide's Hilltop Hoods, you could squeeze through
    the huge crowd to catch almost veteran rockers Grinspoon.

    Punters turned to one another to comment how much Melbourne act
    Dallas Crane rocked on the green stage. Or agreed to disagree about
    Leeds dance rock act The Music. Or asked the quickest way to the beer
    ticket stall.

    The Big Day Out is also the ultimate opportunity for self-expression,
    with hairstyles designed to turn heads and shock mothers, or bodies
    painted head-to-toe in blue paint.

    Many simply declared their allegiance by wearing their favourite
    band's T-shirt, usually black.

    One of the biggest acts were Iowa hardcore band Slipknot, whose
    unrelenting barrage of drums, guitars and guttural roars nearly shook
    the Showground into rubble.

    The nine-piece act took the stage in their trademark fright-masks,
    welcomed by their legion of fans whom the band refer to as Maggots.

    Based on the tried and true method of determining a band's popularity
    by the number of T-shirts worn by punters, Slipknot seemed streets
    ahead - and the screams of the Maggots confirmed it.

    Slipknot and Armenian-American hard rockers System of a Down
    delivered the most intense effort segment of the day, prompting mass
    moshing and headbanging.

    Stage announcers asked for calm in the crowd as the testosterone
    flowed as thick and mean as the dense noise.

    Decked out in matching Aussie green-and-gold tracksuits,
    forty-something rap veterans Beastie Boys busted out some fly hip-hop
    jams - that means they were good - to complete 11 hours of action on
    the main stages.

    There were seven stages in all, including the Local Produce stage
    where Screwtop Detonators rocked as if their lives depended on it.

    Ten Perth bands performed on this comparatively tiny stage, nestled
    in a nook of the venue between the bastion of dance music, the Boiler
    Room, and the smaller green and essential stages.

    Many local acts have moved beyond this stage in their careers, with
    Eskimo Joe and the John Butler Trio earning their spots in the main
    arena, while Little Birdy followed Jebediah on the back stages.

    And if you felt overwhelmed by the musical smorgasbord, you could
    take it easy in a chill-out tent.

    GRAPHIC: Home-grown talent: Local boy made good John Butler shows how
    his trio earned a spot in the main arena of the Big Day Out.
    Pictures: Lee Griffiths.; Fun in the sun: Zeb Hollingsworth and Ashar
    Lumsdaine enjoy their big day out at Claremont Showground.;
    Rock'n'roll: Powderfinger delivered lashings of straight-up
    rock'n'roll.; Surf's up: Some of the more adventurous fans had a go
    at crowd surfing, seen here during Grinspoon's performance.
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