Dallas Crane

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Dallas Crane are a triple ARIA Award–nominated Australian alternative rock band from Melbourne. Their self-titled third album was released on 10 July 2004, and it peaked in the ARIA Albums Chart top 50. Its lead single, "Dirty Hearts" (June 2004), debuted in the related ARIA Singles Chart top 50.

Dallas Crane's fourth album, Factory Girls, peaked in the top 30. Their highest charting single, "Sit on My Knee" – a duet with Jimmy Barnes – reached No. 14 in July 2005. In 2009 they featured as a support act for The Who on a national stadium tour. After re-grouping following a short hiatus in 2012, Dallas Crane began work on their 5th studio album "Scoundrels" featuring Chris Brodie on bass guitar, Dave Larkin on vocals and guitar, Steve Pinkerton on drums and Pete Satchell on guitar and vocals.

History

1996–1999: Formation and debut album

Dallas Crane formed in 1996 in Melbourne by Chris Brodie on bass guitar, Dave Larkin on lead vocals and guitar, Pete Satchell on guitar and vocals and Shan Vanderwert on drums.<ref name="Macgregor">Template:Cite web</ref> Satchell and Larkin were former school mates and Brodie and Vanderwert joined soon after. They rehearsed material for their debut album, Lent (1998), in a Port Melbourne oil shed on the property of Dallas Crane Transport.<ref name="Macgregor"/> The local trucking company was owned by friends: their rehearsals were paid for in beer, and the group were renamed, Dallas Crane.<ref name="Macgregor"/>

After working the Melbourne pub circuit they befriended local sound engineer, Robbie Rowlands, (The Fauves, Morning After Girls), who produced their debut self-funded album, Lent, which was released locally on their own label, Slant 6.<ref name="Howlspace Dallas">Template:Cite webTemplate:Cbignore</ref> Larkin later recalled "We were pretty young and that was the swag of songs we had at the time. It's a fairly incongruous record when you look at it, but we probably rate it as our favorite for that reason. And because it was our first and the whole recording experience was new to us."<ref name="Adamcewicz"/>

File:Dclent.jpg
Dallas Crane, 2001

One of their fans was Richard Kingsmill of national radio station, Triple J, who invited them to record a track, "Nylon Don't Breathe", live in the ABC studios, during his Australian Music Show.<ref name="Howlspace Dallas"/> The track was co-written by Larkin and Satchell:<ref name="APRA TV Nylon">Template:Cite web Note: User may have to click "Search again" and provide details at "Enter a title:" e.g. Nylon Don't Breathe; or at "Performer:" Dallas Crane</ref> it appeared on the Five Alive: Live at the Wireless (1999) live 2× CD compilation.<ref name="Howlspace Dallas"/> They were the only unsigned act of 35 artists to appear on the album.<ref name="Howlspace Dallas"/> This endorsement led to wider interest in the band interstate as they began touring nationally.

2000–2001: Twenty Four Seven to Dirty Deeds Soundtrack

Dallas Crane toured Australia in support of You Am I and then Regurgitator.<ref name="Macgregor"/><ref name="Matera">Template:Cite journal</ref> Larkin later reflected that You Am I "were instrumental for us in many ways ... When we started out, they were the band that everyone wanted to be. If you could go really well in Australia, you would be going as well as You Am I. In terms of cred and how good you were as a live band, they were it."<ref name="Dwyer"/> Dallas Crane became the head-liners at St. Kilda's Esplanade Hotel. Their live repertoire featured tracks that were recorded for a second studio album, Twenty Four Seven, which was released on 17 October 2000. They had recorded and mixed the album in a week at Melbourne's Hothouse Recording Studios with Craig Harnath producing.<ref name="Adamcewicz">Template:Cite journal</ref> Shortly after its release Brodie left due to commitments with his brother Dan Brodie and their band, the Broken Arrows, which had signed to a record label, EMI. Chris Brodie was replaced in Dallas Crane by Pat Bourke on bass guitar in early 2001.<ref name="Macgregor"/>

Twenty Four Seven received widely positive responses from Australian rock music critics with local rock street press, Beat Magazine and In-Press, hailing it as "Album of the Week" and "Rock Record of the Summer", respectively. The lead track, "Sit on My Knee", which was written by Larkin,<ref name="APRA Sit">Template:Cite web Note: User may have to click "Search again" and provide details at "Enter a title:" e.g. Sit on My Knee; or at "Performer:" Dallas Crane</ref> was released as a single.<ref name="Tran"/> It was placed on high rotation by Triple J. The group followed with "Sold Me" and "Already Gone".

Dallas Crane won Best Live Band at the Australian Live Music Awards, leading to them representing their country at the International Live Music Awards in London in 2002, featuring their debut performance at Shepherd's Bush Empire alongside Russell Crowe's "Thirty Odd Foot of Grunt"

They continued to win support slots to a number of artists including Ryan Adams, The Black Keys, You Am I and Rocket Science.<ref name="Archbold">Template:Cite web</ref> During their shows with You Am I, lead singer Tim Rogers touted, "Dallas Crane is the best band in the country" and made reference to them in the You Am I single, "Who Put the Devil in You" (September 2002).<ref name="Dwyer">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="Archbold"/> Rogers curated the soundtrack for a feature film, Dirty Deeds (2002), and asked Dallas Crane to supply a cover version of "Wild About You", originally performed by Australian 1960's band, the Missing Links.<ref name="Macgregor"/><ref name="Archbold"/>

2002–2003: No Through Road to Ladybird EPs

Midway through 2002 Dallas Crane signed a management deal with talent managers, Majorbox Music, in Melbourne. The band's follow up release was a five-track extended play, No Through Road. It was also released as a 7" vinyl single, with the title track and a raucous B-side, "Wannabe". It was recorded at Sing Sing Studios with Rowlands as producer. The song was well received critically and earned high-rotation on Triple J, consolidating them as a prospering force in the local music scene.<ref name="Archbold"/>

Dallas Crane continued to tour Australia, joining the Whitlams, and Rocket Science on national runs consecutively. They played at Homebake in Sydney in 2003, joining fellow Australian groups the Church and Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds for the festival's line-up. Then they teamed up with music mates Dan Brodie and the Broken Arrows and Dan Kelly and the Alpha Males for a national tour, Dan Does Dallas.

Dallas Crane started their own headline tour promoting No Through Road and finished the year at Melbourne's Big Day Out festival. Shortly after that performance, they gathered backstage to sign with Albert Productions, joining label mates AC/DC on a roster that had included the Easybeats and Rose Tattoo. "Ladybird" was released in November 2003 as the first official Alberts' release leading to more high-rotation on Triple J.

2004–2005: Self-titled album

Dallas Crane recorded its self-titled third album with Australian producer Wayne Connolly, (You Am I, Underground Lovers).<ref name="Archbold"/> Bourke described how "Wayne saw us play once and loved the show. He seemed to know what to do with us."<ref name="Archbold"/> Its lead single, "Dirty Hearts", was issued ahead of the album in June, which debuted in the ARIA Singles Charts Top 50.<ref name="AusCharts">Template:Cite web</ref>

The album reached the top 50 on the related ARIA Albums Chart in July 2004.<ref name="AusCharts"/> It was acclaimed as their best effort, Graeme Hammond of Sunday Herald Sun praised it as "an Australian classic."<ref name="Hammond">Template:Cite news</ref> The group received three nominations at the ARIA Music Awards of 2004, Best Breakthrough Artist – Album and Best Rock Album for Dallas Crane and Best Breakthrough Artist – Single for "Dirty Hearts".<ref name="ARIA2004">Template:Cite web</ref> In July they toured the Australian east coast under the pseudonym, Beige Visitors, alongside You Am I, which used the moniker, the Question Fruit.<ref name="Dwyer"/>

The singles "Dirty Hearts" and "Numb All Over" went on to achieve high-rotation on Triple J, setting up a string of sellout tours to follow. Both songs featured on the Triple J's Hottest 100 album for 2005. Also in that year they re-recorded "Sit on My Knee" as a duet with Jimmy Barnes for his album, Double Happiness (July 2005), which was issued as a single. It peaked at No. 14 on the ARIA Singles Chart.<ref name="AusCharts"/> According to Michael Tran of Oz Music Project, "It's always Template:Sic whether the world needs more well-written, competently played, blues rock... [this] is [Dallas Crane's] song, after all. Always one of the strongest in their catalogue, this recording offers simply a spit-and-buff job to the original. The production is cleaner and brighter than the more lo-fi original; radio will love the sound. And really, there's nothing at all wrong with it."<ref name="Tran">Template:Cite webTemplate:Cbignore</ref>

In August 2005 the group provided a cover version of "Dig It Up" for the Hoodoo Gurus tribute album, Stoneage Cameos, by various Australian artists.<ref name="Holmgren SC">Template:Cite web</ref> Bourke was also a member of a short-term super-group, The Wrights, which provided their rendition of "(Let's All) Turn On".<ref name="Holmgren SC"/><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

2006: Factory Girls

In early 2006 Dallas Crane released a single, "Lovers and Sinners", making it freely available via their website. The band's fourth album, Factory Girls, recorded with producers, Connolly and Jonathan Burnside, was released on 16 September 2006. It reached No. 30 in October – their highest charting album.<ref name="AusCharts"/> It first single, "Curiosity", was released physically on 26 August 2006, following a pre-release on the Australian iTunes Music Store. Rolling Stone Australia magazine rated it as four out of five. Craig Mathieson of The Age felt that "by dint of songwriting strength, ease of expression and a touch of studio sweat – Melbourne four-piece Dallas Crane stay on the right side of the great divide... between being timeless and out of time."<ref name="Mathieson 2">Template:Cite news</ref>

File:Stkfest.jpg
Dallas Crane, headlining St. Kilda Festival 2007

In August 2006 the band commenced an east coast tour of Australia to promote their new material. A performance at Brisbane's The Zoo received positive reviews in local independent media and reaffirmed the band's popularity as a rock act. They undertook a more extensive tour during September, and then travelled overseas for their second United Kingdom visit, following with an appearance at the SXSW Festival in Austin, Texas. They performed in Japan on the way home from the tour which saw them garner interest from offshore recording labels.

With close to 1500 acts from around the world performing gigs, Dallas Crane joined a local contingent of Australasian artists at SXSW 2007, alongside Beasts of Bourbon, You Am I, Hoodoo Gurus, Expatriate, Youth Group and Airbourne. Their United States visit saw them also perform at the Los Angeles venue The Troubadour, New York's Bowery Ballroom, and Boston's Middle East Club.<ref name="Cashmere">Template:Cite news</ref> On returning to Australia, in early 2007, they headlined a national tour with support from burgeoining rock act Airbourne, their last for what was to become a brief hiatus away from the touring circuit.

2007–2011: Taking a break

After performing for almost eleven years Dallas Crane finished their tour with a headline spot at Melbourne's St.Kilda Festival in February 2007. In 2009 they reunited briefly after being asked to join UK rock act, the Who, on six arena dates of their national tour, which included a spot at Melbourne's Grand Prix.<ref name="Cashmere"/><ref name="TheMusic">Template:Cite web</ref>

During the hiatus Dave Larkin released two albums with his three-piece act, Gun Street Girls.<ref name="Cashmere"/> Pete Satchell had his own solo moniker, Pete Sounds.<ref name="Cashmere"/> Dallas Crane reunited again in early 2010 to play a farewell gig for the family of the band's namesake, Dallas Crane (of the trucking company), who had died of cancer.

2012–present:Scoundrels

Dallas Crane resumed in 2012 with Larkin and Satchell writing new material. The line-up had changed, bassist Pat Bourke and drummer Shan Vanderwert were replaced by Chris Brodie and Steve Pinkerton, respectively.<ref name="Cashmere"/><ref name="TheMusic"/> The renewed group's first single, "I'm Sorry Darling", was released, digitally and on 7", in October 2013,<ref name="Cashmere"/> with the official music video issued in January 2014.

File:DC Corner sold.jpg
Dallas Crane salute a full house at Melbourne's Corner Hotel, February 2016

In November 2015 they provided their fifth studio album, Scoundrels, which was produced by Harnath. Andrew McMillen of The Australian rated it 4.5 stars claiming, "It's a towering achievement that sees Dallas Crane exhibiting that key-in-lock feel sought by every rock band. These four players are masters of their craft. The band's time off has been well-spent, as every idea here hits the mark. If anything, it's an embarrassment of riches."<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Rolling StoneTemplate:'s Jaymz Clements rated it as four out of five, and felt that "Dallas Crane have grown into a smarter, better band is no surprise. That they've given themselves a masterful Don Walker-ish overhaul certainly is. Scoundrels is intelligent, bluesy, mature and unpredictable..."<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref>

From late December 2015 and into April 2016 the group undertook a national headline tour promoting the album.<ref name="TheMusic"/><ref name="Warbie">Template:Cite web</ref>

In October 2016, the band released the single "Cheyenne" (digital only) also recorded by Jez Giddings and Craig Harnath at Melbourne's Hothouse Audio.

In August 2022, Dallas Crane opened for KISS at Melbourne's Rod Laver Arena.

Discography

Studio albums

Title Details Peak chart positions
AUS
<ref name=aus>Australian (ARIA) chart peaks: Template:Cite book</ref>
Lent
  • Released: 1998
  • Label: Dallas Crane
  • Format: CD
Twenty Four Seven
  • Released: October 2000
  • Label: Slant6 (DC-170689 2)
  • Format: CD
Dallas Crane 49
Factory Girls
  • Released: September 2006
  • Label: Albert Music Productions / Sony BMG (8869-701041-2)
  • Format: CD, LP, Digital
30
Scoundrels
  • Released: November 2015
  • Label: Nylon Sounds (NYLDCSC001)
  • Format: CD, LP, Digital

Extended plays

Title Details Peak chart positions
AUS
<ref name=aus/>
No Through Road

Singles

Year Title Peak chart positions Album
AUS
<ref name=aus/>
2003 "Ladybird"<ref name="AMO Lady">Template:Cite webTemplate:Cbignore</ref> 70 Dallas Crane
2004 "Dirty Hearts" 43
"Numb All Over"
2005 "Sit on My Knee"
(with Jimmy Barnes)
14 Double Happiness
2006 "Lovers and Sinners" Factory Girls
"Curiosity"
2007 "Tonight! (There's A Party Going Down)"
"God Damn Pride"
2013 "I'm Sorry Darlin'" Scoundrels
2014 "Get Off the Dope"
2016 "Cheyenne"

Awards and nominations

ARIA Music Awards

The ARIA Music Awards is an annual awards ceremony that recognises excellence, innovation, and achievement across all genres of Australian music. They commenced in 1987. Template:Awards table ! Template:Abbr |- |rowspan="3"| 2004 | "Dirty Hearts" | Breakthrough Artist – Single | Template:Nom |rowspan="3"| <ref>Template:Cite web</ref> |- |rowspan="2"| Dallas Crane | Breakthrough Artist – Album | Template:Nom |- | Best Rock Album | Template:Nom |-

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References

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