TV Colours - "Purple Skies, Toxic River" | 028

lp - $17

TV Colours - Purple Skies Toxic River Cover

Track Listing:

    Side A:
  1. The Neighborhood
  2. Lost Highway
  3. The City
  4. Running with the Creeps
  5. The Kids Are All Grown Up
  6. Beverly
  7. Skyline Beach
    Side B:
  1. City Nights
  2. I Soon Found Out My Lonely Life Wasn't So Pretty
  3. Livin' After Midnight
  4. Bad Dreams
  5. The Lost Years
  6. Dark Days Against The Fade
  7. Losing Control
  8. Wastelands

I’ve had a deep appreciation for music that has found its way to New Jersey from Australia for about as long as I’ve known about punk rock, first discovering bands like The Eastern Dark, Exploding White Mice and The Celibate Rifles when I was in grade school.

Three decades later, contemporary albums by Ooga Boogas, Exhaustion and Native Catstraveled across continents to WPRB and were each highlights of my 2013 radio shows.

Which leads us to TV Colours, a band cut from a similarly tremendous cloth I likely would have never heard were it not for a throwaway comment I made on-line under a friend’s exhaustive “Best of 2013” list about how the year was yet another great one for groups from Oz.

“This is a really good album by TV Colours from Canberra, which is like our Washington DC,” a stranger added plainly.

I pressed play on the link provided and by two songs in I knew I was listening to something special.

“Purple Skies, Toxic River” is a record I would have loved when I first encountered Aussie punk and it is an album that still thrills me now. It is an LP for “the kids” and about “the kids,” capturing the electrifying, agonizing, alienating, turgid miasma of youth. I want to put it in the ears of every kid with tattered jeans and badges on their jackets to reassure them that it will take longer than they like but eventually it all will be fine.

Made by enigmatic perfectionist Bobby Kill, TV Colours‘ debut was six years in the making. It is full of teenage anthems, overdriven guitars, and unrelenting drum machines trying to outrun the sirens.

“Purple Skies, Toxic River” saw previous release in Australia by Dream Damage and was pressed by the French label XVIII, where it received rave reviews.

This issue courtesy Comedy Minus One is the first time it has been available in North America with any ease.

500 vinyl copies (including download code) and digital downloads through all popular providers.

My favorite record of 2013 is now your favorite album of this calendar year.

Let’s hit the freeway.

Jon Solomon
March 2015