Singer/songwriter Guy
Blackman’s debut album is a musical exploration of his long-term gay
relationship, he tells Richard Watts.
“My sexuality is something I deliberately address in my
music,” says Guy Blackman, the softly-spoken, bespectacled Melburnian behind
local indie label, Chapter Music.
“Having spent a lot of time wondering what you can do or say
in music now that hasn’t been done a million times before; and thinking about
what I can offer as a songwriter that will add something to the canon, rather
than just repeating what’s gone before; for me it’s like realising that there
aren’t too many people who have written songs about their long-term committed
relationship with another man, you know? It’s not something that comes up in
song-writing very often.”
Blackman’s sexuality, and his relationship with his partner,
is referenced often throughout the songs that make up Adult Baby, his debut solo album.
“My songs explore the dynamic of being with a same-sex
partner for a long time. Like, my boyfriend and I have been together for 13
years now, so I guess it’s that, more so than the whole sexuality question
that’s [important]. It’s exploring my own relationship with one person,” he
explains.
Adult Baby is not Blackman’s
first ever album, however. He’s been involved with a number of other bands
previously, including Sulk and Sleepy
Township; while his love
for music has seen him writing regularly for The Age, on top of releasing other bands’ music through his
independent record label. As a consequence, Blackman is well established among Melbourne’s live music
scene – a fact that is reflected in the wide range of guest artists appearing
on the album.
Members of bands such as Art of Fighting, The Dirty Three
and The Crayon Fields – as well as honorary Melburnian Jens Lekman, a regular
visitor from Sweden – play
alongside Blackman, on songs which are noticeably more subdued than the
pop-oriented tunes he wrote while playing in Sleepy Township.
“In some ways it’s kind of like going back to what I used to
do; Sulk, for example, was me and a cellist and a violin player, and I was
playing acoustic guitar. There were a couple of pop songs but a lot of what we
did was very quiet and very quiet. So I’ve kind of gone full circle.”
Which isn’t to say that the album lacks a pop sensibility.
“I wanted there to still be a few up-tempo moments on the
record, but I don’t know, I guess it’s a chance, after the end of some of the
bands I’ve been in, to explore other atmospheres,” Blackman thoughtfully
concludes.
Guy Blackman launches
Adult Baby at The Toff in Town this Saturday
May 31, with support from Laura Jean & The Eden Land Band, and Always. See
p46 for details of how you can win a copy of Adult Baby thanks to Remote Control Records.
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