Boom Crash Opera was formed in late 1984 in Melbourne with a lineup of Peter Farnan on guitar, keyboards and backing vocals (ex-Urtle Urtle Urtle, Serious Young Insects); Peter 'Maz' Maslen on drums, percussion and backing vocals (ex-One Hand Clapping); Greg O'Connor on keyboards; Richard Pleasance on bass guitar, guitar and backing vocals (ex-Government Drum, Bang, One Hand Clapping); and Dale Ryder on lead vocals.
In September 1985 three Australian journalists, Paul Gardiner, Jane Gardiner and Toby Creswell, listed twelve groups as The Next Big Thing, with Boom Crash Opera described as "one name that stands out ... a Melbourne band that has every A-and-R man and his dog salivating. There are some other bands which, if not attracting the same sort of frenetic endorsement, are nevertheless on the minds of the scouts".
Farnan described his bandmates, other than Pleasance, to The Canberra Times' Pollyanna Sutton in May 1986 "the others are sort of from nowhere ... Drummer Peter "Maz" Maslen, has and still does a lot of recording sessions, in early 1984 he met Richard in this avante-garde band called One Hand Clapping, then played together with Venetta Fields in the time just before Boom Crash Opera. Dale came out of the blue, he has done some singing with bands but never had a serious crack at it until now."
Boom Crash Opera were signed to WEA and in April 1986 they released their debut single "Great Wall", which was produced by Steve Brown. "Great Wall" reached #5 on the Australian Kent Music Report Singles Chart in the next month. The track was written by Ryder, Pleasance and O'Connor. According to Farnan: "Richard wrote the music and Dale helped him finish the words, but they did not know what they wanted to write about so I suggested they write about the Hume Weir. Like, it isn't specifically about the Hume Weir but they used the idea about a dam wall that dams up fear and prejudice, it is also the wall that shores up relationship". McFarlane described it as an "exuberant" single, which "established the hallmarks of their sound: the tight, funky rock of the music, the boom-like crack of the drums and the work song chant of the vocals". The group toured the Australian pub rock circuit promoting the single.
Their second single, "Hands up in the Air", followed in August, which peaked at #16. It was written by Pleasance, Ryder and Farnan; and was produced by Brown. A music video was directed by Kimble Rendall (ex-XL Capris, Hoodoo Gurus). At the ARIA Music Awards of 1987 the group were nominated for three awards: Highest Selling Single for "Great Wall", Best New Talent for both singles, and Best Video for "Hands up in the Air". At the Countdown Music and Video Awards of 1986, held in July 1987, "Great Wall" won Best Debut Single. A self-titled debut album, followed in September 1987, which was recorded in London and produced by Alex Sadkin (Grace Jones, Duran Duran, James Brown, Simply Red, Talking Heads). Both "Great Wall" and "Hands up in the Air" were remixed for their album versions. After recording the album Sadkin travelled to the Bahamas to work, where he died in a car accident in July.
'Boom Crash Opera' reached #19 on the Kent Music Report Albums Chart and was certified as a gold album. Stuart Coupe of The Sydney Morning Herald reported there were "impressive notices" for the album and that the group had "been tipped for mega-stardom". Follow-up singles were "City Flat" (June 1987), "Her Charity" (September) and "Love Me to Death" (March 1988), which were "minor hits". Coupe felt that "City Flat" was "one of the more outstanding tracks" and it "appears to paint a fairly bleak picture of their home town". AllMusic's Kevin Hayes compared their sound to Tears for Fears, Icehouse and INXS. He felt it was an "impressive debut. Pete Maslen's drumming keeps pulse. A pensive guitar leads into the most brilliant of bridges and a lilting melody underpinned by Richard Pleasance's strong bassline". However "Hands up in the Air" was "musically strong but weak in its lyrics ... It's a wonder it made the album, let alone became a single it has a teeny naïveté".
In August 1989 they released a single, "Onion Skin", ahead of their second album 'These Here Are Crazy Times' (October), which was produced by Jimmy Iovine, Pete Smith and Pleasance, and mixed by Nick Launay. The album reached #10 on the ARIA Albums Chart, it spent 40 weeks in the Top 50 and achieved a double platinum certificate. Allmusic's Jonathan Lewis opined that "it was slick, commercial pop. As in previous outings, lead singer Dale Ryder's effortless (although somewhat limited) vocal delivery and Richard Pleasance's skillful guitar work helped disguise the fact that underneath the catchy melodies and slick production, there wasn't a lot of substance to their music". "Onion Skin" peaked at #11 on the ARIA Singles Chart and was followed by four more singles, "Get Out of the House!" (September), "The Best Thing" (December), "Dancing in the Storm" (April 1990) and "Talk About It" (July). "Dancing in the Storm" also featured in the 1990 Australian comedy film The Big Steal.
In 1990 they released a compilation album, 'Look! Listen!!', which featured remixed versions of songs from their first two albums plus two new songs. At the end of that year Pleasance was diagnosed with tinnitus and was unable to perform with the group. He was temporarily replaced on bass guitar by former bandmate from Serious Young Insects, Mick Vallance. During his break from the band, in 1991, Pleasance released his debut solo album, 'Galleon'. Late that year Boom Crash Opera released a four-track extended play, 'Dreams on Fire', with both Pleasance and Vallance aboard. The EP was produced by Keith Forsey and the band; it appeared on the ARIA Singles Chart Top 50, and featured the track, "Holy Water". In 1992 they travelled to Los Angeles and began work on a follow-up album, 'Fabulous Beast'. However, during early writing sessions, Pleasance left the band and returned to Australia; he was temporarily replaced by Dorian West on bass guitar (ex-Wildland). It was during the recording of 'Fabulous Beast' that the band found themselves impacted by the 1992 Los Angeles riots. The song "The Last Place On Earth", that appears on the album was inspired and written as a result of this experience. The final vocal line of Ryder's in the song which is "just look out the window", has his voice actually breaking due to being so emotionally moved by the experience.
After Boom Crash Opera returned from L.A. Ian Tilley joined on bass guitar, keyboards and backing vocals, as the permanent replacement for Pleasance following the departure of Dorian West. In late 1992 they released a single, "Bettadaze". The track was written by Farnan and O'Connor and early in 1993 the Liberal Party wanted to use it for their federal election campaign theme but were refused permission. "Bettadaze" was followed in March by the related album, 'Fabulous Beast', which was produced by Forsey, Don Gehman, and the group. It peaked at #15, while it provided two further singles "In the Morning" and "This Isn't Love". The Canberra Times' Bevan Hannan noted the album's "overall strength" was "especially evident when you compare it to" their previous work. It had an "acoustic flavour" which Hannan found "striking" with "In the Morning" as the "best example" of the style.
The group toured Australia to promote the album and its singles and were "road testing songs". In October they headlined the World's Biggest Barbie in Canberra with Weddings Parties Anything as their support act. Farnan described how they had been "flogging our wares" to Nicole Leedham of The Canberra Times. He noted that "Rock and Roll bands are strange, creative beasts ... We indulge ourselves now and again and take a radical left-hand turn and get off the track". He remembered playing alongside Weddings Parties Anything "they started at about the same time as us and we were sharing bits of equipment while we were both getting established". Mark Wallace, piano accordionist of the latter group, agreed that the two bands had an affinity but "we haven't seen them for a couple of years".
The four remaining members: Farnan, Maslen, Ryder, and Tilley, continued the band and in October 1994 they issued a single, "Gimme", on their newly signed label, BMG. It reached #14 and was followed by their next single, "Tongue Tied", which appeared in the top 30 in February 1995. The parent album, 'Born' was released in March and was produced by Farnan and Neil Wiles, and engineered by Kalju Tonuma. It was issued in a double CD package with space reserved for a second disc, 'Born Again', which was due to be released in April. McFarlane declared the album was a "tougher affair which found the band embracing hi-tech pop, techno-metal and all manner of sound effects and cyberpunk studio trickery". Although "Gimme" had received generous radio airplay and the album had reached the top 40, BMG scrapped the release of the second part, 'Born Again'.
In November 1997 Boom Crash Opera released a studio album, 'Gizmo Mantra', which was produced by Daniel Denholm, Kalju Tonuma and the group. Pulling back from the electronic sounding previous album, 'Gizmo Mantra' was a return to the melodic rock sounds of earlier work It included the singles, "All" and "Dreaming up a Fire" – the latter had been written by Farnan and Pleasance at the time of the 'Dreams on Fire' sessions. However, 'Gizmo Mantra' failed to reach the top 50. McFarlane noted that "after 1997 the band disappeared from view" but during their main career they had a "strong visual image and the uncanny ability of its principal songwriters to pen catchy, commercial songs ensured a string of successful releases"
Boom Crash Opera continued performing and releasing material. In August 1998 BMG issued a compilation album, 'The Best Things – Greatest Hits', which featured their singles from previous albums plus two tracks, "Soundtrack" and "Radio", from their unreleased album, 'Born Again'.
On 5 April 2009 the group performed at Alistair Knox Park, Eltham for A Day of Healing – a benefit concert to support the Country Fire Authority and affected communities following the Black Saturday bush fires. During those bush fires the group had been in Pleasance's studio in Hepburn Springs, recording an acoustic disc for 'Dancing in the Storm'.
On 1 May 2009 Boom Crash Opera released 'Dancing in the Storm' as part of the Liberation Blue series. It comprises a compilation CD with acoustic re-workings of their songs and a live DVD recorded during the Fabulous Beast Tour. The acoustic disc had the lineup of Ryder on vocals, Farnan on acoustic guitar, Maslen on drums, Pleasance on acoustic bass guitar, acoustic guitar, mandolin, sitar and Oud, and Tilley on bass guitar. Pleasance guested with the band for the first time since 1992. The live DVD was from a performance for MTV Australia's Unplugged, at Melbourne's Channel Nine studios, back in June 1993. Both discs were engineered and produced by Pleasance. The band promoted Dancing in the Storm with a national tour. Boom Crash Opera headlining the 2017 Australia Day celebrations at Rooty Hill, New South Wales.
The band's song "Dancing in the Storm" was used in 2010 for the Mt Franklin Water TV ad. On 12 February 2012 the group performed at the St Kilda Festival. Three releases were issued on 18 October 2013 by Liberation Records; 'The Best Things – Greatest Hits', and album of rare tracks called 'The Lost Things' and a 4-CD set called 'Rattle it Out'. In March 2016, Drummer Peter ‘Maz’ Maslen advised media that original member and lead singer Dale Ryder had resigned from the band, replaced by Andrew De Silva. The band toured across Australia throughout 2016 and January 2017. Ryder rejoined in 2019.
Members
Dale Ryder (vocals), Peter Farnan (guitar, keyboards), Peter Maslen (drums, percussion), Richard Pleasance (guitar, bass), Greg O'Connor (keyboards, guitar), Mick Vallance (bass), Dorian West (bass), Ian Tilley (bass, keyboards), Andrew De Silva (vocals)
''Great Wall (#5) / Caught Between Two Towns'' 1986 WEA
''Hands Up In The Air (#16) / Leave'' 1986 WEA
''City Flat (#42) / Spirit Of Progress'' 1987 WEA
''Her Charity (#32) / The Face That I'm Living In'' 1987 WEA
''Love Me To Death (#72) / Bombshell'' 1988 WEA
''Onion Skin (#11) / Rocks Are In My Head'' 1989 WEA
''Get Out Of The House (#24) / Thinking In Slow Motion'' 1989 WEA
''The Best Thing (#67) / Flying A Kite In The Rain / Safer In Cages'' 1989 WEA
''Dancing In The Storm (#21) / Mountain Of Strength'' 1990 WEA
''Talk About It (Iovine Version) (#35) / Talk About It (Pleasance Version)'' 1990 WEA
"The Best Thing 1991 WEA
"Bettadaze" (#43) 1992 EastWest
"In the Morning" (#36) 1993 EastWest
"This Isn't Love" (#78) 1993 EastWest
"Gimme" (#14) 1994 BMG
"Tongue Tied" (#25) 1995 BMG
"Dissemble" 1995 BMG
"Soundtrack (So Lonely)"1995 BMG
"Dreaming up a Fire" 1997 BMG
''Air'' 1997 BMG
EPs
'Dreams on Fire' (#44) 1991 East West
'Kick it Out... Live' 2022 Boom Crash Opera
EPs
'Dreams on Fire' (#44) 1991 East West
'Kick it Out... Live' 2022 Boom Crash Opera
'Boom Crash Opera' (#19) 1987 WEA
'These Here Are Crazy Times!' (#10) 1989 WEA
'Fabulous Beast' (#15) 1993 EastWest
'Born' (#37) 1995 BMG
'Gizmo Mantra' 1997 BMG
'Dancing in the Storm' 2009 Liberation
References
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boom_Crash_Opera
http://top100singles.blogspot.com.au/
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