Monday, December 29, 2025

NEW ZEALAND ROCK FESTIVALS..Documenting/a half arsed history

A potted history of NZ Rock Festivals...these are the Outdoor things, not the 5/10 bands in a hall/bar somewhere

Apparently the first one ever was at Red Beach in the Auckland area. 1970 was the year.

In 1974 The Great Rock Festival had Black Sabbath, Fairport Convention The La De Das, Split Enz,  Corben Simpson and others. Black Sabbath had a massive flaming upside down cross on the hill opposite the stage as they started their set. This was in Ngaruawahia. . This one is well documented

Sweetwaters a number of years and has been well documented

Nambassa a number of years , again well documented

Hinuera In the Waikato late 1970s Toy Love, Sheerlux , Lip Service and more

Pakiri was another one. Organised by Gireesh. a Canadian band called Rymes With Orange
Shihad, Head Like A Hole, Sticky Filth then part two Chris Knox, Loves Ugly Children
some details here from Shihad site   https://www.shihadwiki.com/wiki/Gig_19951231

Meltdown Palmerston  North The Dammed, The Johnnies, The Remarkables, The Stranglers, Three Leaning Men,Peter Shepherd

Kickstart New Plymouth Bowl of Brooklands with  D4, Tadpole, Goodshirt a one time only thing.
This happened a year too early. Ten months later all of these bands were big news in NZ and in the D4's case the world. Being visionaries does not pay the bills.

BDO. well documented everywhere

The other one Auckland ..biker organised Exponents etc no people late 1970s/early 1980s?.

Nile River a number of years ..last one 1996???

Rippon..down south

New Plymouth Turi Street Reserve , a free event on a Sunday in the 1970s  Crystal Galleon etc.
Once only I think

Waitara.. Pukekohe Domain..wish I knew the name of this Festival. This would have been 1971/1972
witnessed 3 bands here before it was called off. 
One was called Gypsy, Quincy Conserve were stopped while on their 1st song. That was that, all over. I was one of about 10 people in the audience. Walked back to downtown Waitara and caught the bus back home to New Plymouth. I have a feeling that the Promoter in this case was the guy behind a wonderful run of gigs at St Josephs Hall in New Plymouth in the early 1970s

East End free event mid /late 1980s/early 1990s The Nod, etc

Okoki River Festival, the dreamers fest in North Taranaki and many more "I'm gonna start a festival type " projects that never got of the ground.  This planned Festival was a one man with a lot of pot project telling anyone who would listen about his plans. He promoted it with a drawing on a a6 flyer with a map of the Okoki area and a request that you buy tickets, that's it. He was part of the Taranaki Unemployed Workers Rights Group who had a base in Hookers Building on King Street, New Plymouth. These guys did some good things.
This is mid /late 1980s/early 1990s
You gotta love ambition.  

The Taranaki small festival things are there because I live here and remember them happening or not happening as the case may be.
They are not the be all and end all of anything but it's important that these things are documented

There have been a heap more all over the country including a lot of crash 'n' burn events also. 

National Library of New Zealand has some sort of page that covers this stuff now as somebody there realised it should be documented and there are clicks and likes to be had and $$$ to be made with books, docos etc.

That is actually all good and fine but I'm hoping the small,  under promoted, under attended events get documented for their ambition and commitment.  Not just the big shiny events that nostalgia buffs keep talking about.  

https://nzhistory.govt.nz/page/rock-music-festivals-1970-2010 is the place to go to overload them with names of events, dates, artists , bands, promoters etc. Preserve your local festival history before the memory fades

https://nzhistory.govt.nz/contact/feedback 
help them get it correct

updated today 30 Dec 2025


THEY ARE DEJA VOODOO

Deja Voodoo...not the Canadian one but the New Zealand one are a fine, smart arse, punk rock 'n' roll band who also make pretty funny tv shows.
Check out their myspace page for all the info you need on the band.
The second album which is called BACK IN BROWN is out on cd here in New Zealand right now.
Me, I'm waiting for the vinyl version.
Saw these guys play live twice in the last week, once at Brewers Bar in Mount Maunganui and once at The Basement Bar in New Plymouth. The New Plymouth show was one hell of a good show. The current tour (Oct 2006) is with Steriogram and a newer band called Shaky Hands.
Shaky Hands sorta sounded like an XTC type of thing...matching t shirts as well. Band uniforms are on the way back in as an entertainment fashion?????????.
Check it out if you have the chance.
You will be able to see these guys when they open for Shihad/The Datsuns on their 2006/2007 summer tour.
updated today Dec 30th 2025 to fix a typo

Human Adult Band Celluloid Santa 10 inch lathe cut

 Wonderful Noise from New Jersey unleased onto an a excited waiting world by someone in New Zealand.

Do not wonder why, just copy and paste the link further down the page to hear and maybe get a copy for yourself.

Other people can tell you how cool it is if you can't decide.

just check online, let your fingers do the walking

Go on, you can do it

https://polyhedronchoir.bandcamp.com/album/celluloid-santa



Read about Raw Beat For The Malcontents on Google AI

 This is what is said

"Raw Beat for the Malcontents was a printed publication, with a resurrection of the print version announced by its executive committee in July 2017. It appears to be associated with underground music or fanzine culture, likely focusing on punk, rock, or similar raw, independent music scenes. 

Key details regarding "Raw Beat for the Malcontents":
  • Resurrection: In July 2017, a decision was announced to bring back the print version of Raw Beat for the Malcontents after approximately 20 years.
  • Context: While specific content details are limited, the title suggests a focus on raw, underground music, potentially punk or rock, similar to the "raw fuzzed punk" described in Audio Culture's profile of Sticky Filth.
  • Association: The announcement was made via a Facebook group, indicating it functions as a community-driven fanzine or music publication. "

Tuesday, December 02, 2025

The Nairobi Hootenanny Always on a Thursday LP

 Constantly on the turntable here., no not ever yet. It will happen. Bought for $5 at a Record Fair in Woodville "Small Towns Rock".

That front cover dragged me in. UK folk singing types living in Kenya is what I assume from the back cover.  JAD (just another documentation)