Picture by my former Townsville Bulletin colleague Glenn Campbell
Australian journalist,
author and musical satirist Andrew McMillan was buried in the rich red earth of
the Northern Territory last month. Along with him in this Outback resting place were buried at least eight of
his typewriters - some of which had been wired for sound, and become musical instruments.
McMillan, a former Rolling
Stone writer, was in 1991 a founding member of Darwin's Fourth Estate, a band
whose politically-tinged satirical lyrics were punctuated by a rhythm section
comprised of journalists tapping typewriters.
Darwin's Fourth Estate band
members; Chips Mackinolty, Murray McLaughlin, Andrew McMillan,
Kate Wild, and
Mary Anne Butler. Picture: Michael Franchid.
McMillan “played” a Consul
Supertyper - a typewriter that was modified by local electronics and sound
wizard Colin Simpson and equipped with a pick-up to amplify the sound that the
keys made. "The spacebar is to die for," McMillan once said.
Described as one of the
Territory's great eccentrics, McMillan was among the Top End's finest
contemporary writers.
McMillan was farewelled at
no fewer than four wakes, starting with one when he was still alive, in
December 2010, just after he had been diagnosed with bowel cancer. He died on
January 28, aged 54.
McMillan was buried outside
Larrimah, a tiny township 333 miles south of Darwin.
A friend said McMillan “Went
into great detail and research and really cared
about his subjects … I think he'll be remembered warmly for his dry wit
[and] his typewriting skills in the Fourth Estate."
McMillan was born on
December 29, 1957, in Kew in Melbourne. He was first published while still at
school, by Rock Australia Magazine (RAM) in 1975. In 1977, he joined RAM's
Sydney staff. The move coincided with the golden age of pub rock (1977-84), "a
sonic assault that McMillan helped define".
In 1986 he accompanied the
Midnight Oil-Warumpi Band Blackfella-Whitefella outback tour. Strict Rules, his
account of his adventures, was published in 1988. ''I remember him tapping on a
typewriter clogged with red desert dust,'' said the Oils' drummer, Rob Hirst.
''His work was incredibly well researched. Then his gonzo touch lifted it
beyond mere reportage.''
After seeing the Top End
with the tour, McMillan moved to Darwin in 1988, "joining a disparate and
reckless group of writers, artists, musicians and thespians who inspired the
creation of a unique Territory arts culture".
No comments:
Post a Comment
I do not accept anonymous comments.
I only allow comments under User IDs provided I know who that person is.
Do not ask me to evaluate typewriters.
Comments must be relevant to the post.
As the author of these posts, I make the decisions about what they contain - it is not open to discussion.