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Split Enz
Okay, I'll admit it - I'm in my thirties. I'm a member of that generation
who used to stay up until all hours on the weekends watching Night Flight,
nearly two decades before Rhonda Shear was staying Up All Night. I
remember fondly the music of Gary Numan and A Flock of Seagulls and the Human League
- and the videos that went with that music. Oh, how I remember the videos.
Weird settings, weirder costumes, and quite probably the weirdest hairstyles
human history had ever produced. And as works of amateur filmmaking, music
videos wore the "amateur" part of that description as a badge of
honor. Jump cuts, massive leaps in continuity and visual logic, that signature
overlit-low-budget video look, and a total disconnect between the song's lyrics
and the video's imagery...nothing was too weird, and it wasn't entirely
improbable that the whole thing was shot in a single day. It was the age
before MTV took over from radio the task of deciding what got listened
to. It was the age when music video was truly in its infancy, not yet bestowed
with mammoth budgets that would dwarf some hour-long television shows. Or some
feature films.
And at the dawn of the music video age, on the first night MTV went on the
air, who came on after the Buggles' Video Killed The Radio Star? None
other than a young Neil Finn and his cohorts, still riding the crest of their
greatest popularity ever as Split Enz,
dressed in clown suits and bouncing beach balls around a studio in time with the
chiming electric guitar chords of History Never Repeats. Already
hitmakers as close as the Canadian border, Split Enz had recently been signed by
A&M for North American distribution, and surely they'd soon be famous
worldwide. Or at least that was the thinking at the time.
I just wanted to impress upon you for a moment that Split Enz was a
seminal voice in the infancy of music video, and their stuff did
get played outside of Australia and New Zealand. But now that their
nearly-complete video catalog has been committed to DVD for our digital
preservation and enjoyment, it seems somehow unfair that I should have to go to
great lengths to get a copy of it sent to America. But it was worth the
effort.
A huge number of these videos display the influence of Split Enz
percussionist Noel Crombie - an accomplished artist and designer in his own
right who directed videos, designed sets and costumes (as he did for the band's
renowned live appearances), and otherwise stamped his own uniquely humorous
imprint. Crombie's contribution to the band's look may, in retrospect, have
been more important than his contribution to their sound. Though the first
Split Enz album cover was painted by founding member Phil Judd, the look of
Split Enz on stage - and on future album covers - was a bizarrely
ahead-of-its-time aesthetic invented by Crombie, anticipating the new wave look
of the 80s as far back at the mid 1970s. The look of Split Enz was humorous,
even though the sound was frequently dramatic.
I've praised the songs themselves at some length in my album reviews, so here
I'll concentrate on the videos themselves and this DVD's extras. One of the
band's first promotional clips, Late Last Night, may give you a momentary
pause if you've seen it before. On my aging copy of the A&M Records VHS
video compilation History Never Repeats: The Best Of Split Enz, Late
Last Night is in color from beginning to end, and it sounds different. This
is the first example of some of the trade-offs that had to be made to get this
Split Enz DVD released: all of the sound is sourced from an Eddie
Rayner-remastered best-of compilation, Spellbound - whether that
version of the song is what was used in the original videos or not.
Now, to be sure, Late Last Night is crisp and clear on this DVD, but
portions of it suddenly turn into sepia-tinted B&W with an annoying
"film flicker" effect. Make no mistake, I'm glad to have the clip on
here, but it's sad to hear that the original version of the video had sections
that were too deteriorated for remastering. The substitution of the
slickly-remastered album version of the song for the early 7" single
version doesn't bug me as much, but if you're a hardcore Enz fan, it may rankle
you a bit. And this isn't the only place where the use of the Spellbound
remasters dictated the DVD's content.
It's with clips like Sweet Dreams, Bold As Brass and My
Mistake that Split Enz defined itself on video: they take the
mock-performance genre of music video and send it up for all it's worth. This
ranges from the bizarre dancing of the Bold As Brass video (Neil Finn's
first appearance in one of the band's clips) to the amusing disappearance of the
toupeè from Phil Judd's head in one of the most perfectly-executed jump
cuts I've ever seen. With the videos from Frenzy, the group's financial low
point is evident from the quickly-thrown-together clips for I See Red and
Give It A Whirl.
The Split Enz you have the best chance of remembering is 80s Enz, and the
videos of that era are, while still colorful, a little more self-consciously
slick. It's this era that brings us the familiar I Got You and
History Never Repeats, as well as the more low-key Six Months In A
Leaky Boat, which is a nice example of matching song and video
thematically, but not necessarily playing out the lyrics word-for-word.
Curiously, almost identical videos were made for Strait Old Line and
I Walk Away, though I like both. Hidden on the third page of the
"clipz" menu is the video for Things, a mighty catchy
between-album single released in 1979; go to Message To My Girl and then
hit the right arrow on your remote, and the "Things" button between
the two columns of menu selections should light up. Enjoy - it's hard to
imagine squirreling a whole video away as an Easter Egg.
Omitted due to the lack of a remastered sound source, sadly, was one of my
favorite videos, Next Exit. While I understand the need to have
high-quality sound to go along with the restored video, I'm disappointed by
this particular omission - and according to reports, no one in the band really
expressed any disappointment than it was being left out. Sad, really - the
goofiness of this particular video, which involved the members crammed into
cars "driving" against a moving background, was its appeal. I
Don't Wanna Dance was also left out, as was
Never Ceases To Amaze Me, a video in which green-skinned "aliens"
Neil, Noel, Nigel Griggs and Eddie Rayner beam down to a zoo, where zookeeper
Tim promptly escorts them around, both for the same reason. (And
yet the video of Things is from a very scratchy film source; were these
other videos, or indeed the substituted scenes of Late Last Night, really
worse off than that?) Looks like I need to hang on to that History
Never Repeats compilation for a while yet.
There's also a wealth of live material here, ranging from a 1977 visit to
the BBC's Sight & Sound (an already-bizarre performance made that much more
surreal by the polite, appreciative applause of the well-dressed music hall
audience in attendance) to chronicles of the 1985 Enz With A Bang tour and even
the 20th anniversary reunion performances.
The real killer app of this DVD, however, is the outstanding career-spanning
documentary Spellbound, narrated by Sam Neill, and featuring interviews with
virtually every member of every incarnation of the band - really, the only two
past members I didn't spot were Miles Golding and Div Vercoe from the
group's very first all-acoustic lineup. Everyone else - Tim, Neil, Noel, Eddie,
even Phil Judd - is interviewed at length in an hour-long show that would sit
very nicely alongside the very best episodes of VH1's Behind The Music
series (and why VH1 doesn't license this for inclusion in that series would be
baffling were it not for the band's relative obscurity north of the equator -
it's that good). The heartbreaking thing about Spellbound is that it shows us
clips from further live performances and videos not included in their
full-length form on the DVD (including Maybe, one of my all-time Enz
favorites from any of the band's incarnations).
There is also a photo/poster gallery, and a discography with brief song
samples. The videos would be enough of a prize all in one place, but the
documentary makes an enormously compelling bonus. Highly recommended for any
frenz of the Enz out there - if you're outside of the south Pacific, get a
multi-region DVD player. This one's worth the special hardware.
Reviewed by Earl
Green theLogBook.com webmaster / editor-in-chief


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