Beasts of Bourbon

How a 'pot-smoking, acid-gobbling smart-arse' became the producer behind some of Australia's greatest music

Retrieved on: 
Monday, June 19, 2023

Or maybe this excellent memoir by engineer and producer Tony Cohen, who died in 2017, will fling him into the spotlight.

Key Points: 
  • Or maybe this excellent memoir by engineer and producer Tony Cohen, who died in 2017, will fling him into the spotlight.
  • Cohen, who was mostly Melbourne-based, made an astonishing contribution to Australian recorded music in the 70s and 80s.
  • The gist of the stories was pure, even if the dates might have needed a bit of research on Olson’s part.
  • Read more:
    'A gentleman with the mad soul of an Irish convict poet': remembering Chris Bailey, and the blazing comet that was The Saints

‘Turn it up a bit more!’

    • Working as an assistant, cleaning toilets and getting coffees, he was 15 and he had a job!
    • In the first week he was paid $17 – “I was so young I spent it on lollies.
    • I was up myself: a pot-smoking, acid-gobbling smart-arse who thought he knew it all.
    • This time at Armstrong’s was informative, not just in learning what to do, but what not to do.
    • And he talks a bit about Molly [Meldrum], which people will probably be surprised to read.” Cohen’s regard for Molly Meldrum is clear.

A strange, scrambled method

    • He was daring to do different things, and there was a bit of "Fuck you!” to what the normal music benchmarks were.
    • He was daring to do different things, and there was a bit of "Fuck you!” to what the normal music benchmarks were.
    • He didn’t care that I wanted to tune my drums differently, it was all cool.
    • Cohen wrote:
      I’ve got a strange, scrambled way of working.
    • I know how to use most pieces of equipment, but I don’t necessarily know what they do or why they do it.
    • I’ve got a strange, scrambled way of working.
    • He was a master at both what not to do in the studio and what to do in the studio.

Xiaozhi Rao won Best Director at the 3rd Golden Elm Flower Awards in Macau, and "Avatar 2" was selected as one of the top 10 foreign language films

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, January 31, 2023

The 3rd Golden Elm Flower Awards, the global first film awards of 2023, were announced in Macau.

Key Points: 
  • The 3rd Golden Elm Flower Awards, the global first film awards of 2023, were announced in Macau.
  • View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20230110005854/en/
    The 3rd Golden Elm Flower Awards (Graphic: Business Wire)
    Sunny Chan won Best Screenwriter for "Table for Six".
  • Technical awards such as Best Cinematography, Best Film Editing and Best Art also went to their respective winners.
  • To encourage the creation of Chinese animations and short films, this year's Golden Elm Flower Awards for the first time included two awards: Best Animation and Best Short Film.