Big Muffin Serious Band

The Big Muffin Serious Band (BMSB) is a ukulele-based music performance group from Hamilton, New Zealand. It was started in 1983 by Jim Fulton, Graeme Cairns and Ian Coldham-Fussell when all three were members of a Project Employment Program (PEP) scheme. These schemes were initiatives instigated by the then National Government to undertake public works and provide vocational experience for the unemployed.[1] This specific PEP scheme was run by the Hamilton City Council and involved creating performances and art in public spaces and schools.

See Monkey, Caldwell, Cairns and Fulton, 1987

The group has long been connected with the McGillicuddy Serious Party (McGSP),[2] of which Cairns was the leader[3] and a founding member, and some members of the BMSB have also stood as candidates in various elections under the McGSP banner.

The BMSB played instruments and incorporated musical styles which are found in the bush band and skiffle traditions, but the theatrical background of members contributed to a more visual and humorous street performance style than would normally be associated with these folk/blues music genres. The original line-up involved tea-chest bass, ukuleles, junk instruments and children's toys. The snare drum was added in 1986. This instrumental line-up has remained unchanged to the present. The music played was/is generally ironic or humorous, and the group employed tight vocal arrangements.

History

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During the mid-1980s, the BMSB was primarily a busking band.[4][5] The band had won the Battle of the Buskers in May 1986 at the Gluepot Tavern,[6][7] and toured New Zealand at irregular intervals during this period.[8][9][10] At this time, Peter Caldwell replaced the late Coldham-Fussell and with the addition of a 'bottler', who was employed solely to take the hat among the audience but whose role rapidly expanded to include clown-like interpretive go-go dancing, the BMSB achieved a high degree of proficiency and were among New Zealand's top earning buskers.[11] In 1986 and 1987, the band moved into mainstream performance venues with tours of New Zealand tertiary campuses and folk music clubs. The campus tours were organised under the auspices of the New Zealand Students' Arts Council.[12] At this time the band consisted of Fulton, Cairns, Caldwell and the Naughty See Monkey, and it was this line-up that recorded the band's first album, Jabberwocky Goes to Town in 1987. It was recorded over the period of a week at Aerial Railway Studios, on the Coromandel Peninsula. The resulting album was one of the last vinyl albums to be made in New Zealand at the Wellington EMI record pressing factory.[13]

In 1988, Caldwell and the Naughty See Monkey left the band, signalling the end of a performance era.[14] Cairns and Fulton continued to perform as a duo, with Van Wering and Kendall joining in late 1988. In 1989, Fulton and Cairns, joined by Galloway and Forbes, performed in London and Bath in the UK. Upon their return to New Zealand the band reformed as a five piece, with Howell and Matich joining as the other musicians, and Kendall continuing in the role of go-go dancer. The band once again undertook tours of New Zealand clubs[15][16] and music festivals[17][18] as main acts. In 1994, after the departure of Howell, the four remaining members undertook a year-long tour of New Zealand schools with their multimedia shadow puppet show, "The Eggplant that ate Otago".[19]

Galbraith joined the band in 1997, and the line-up stabilised in 2004 when Clothier joined as the dedicated singer. During the 2000s, the band explored various theatrical, musical and artistic projects. Cairns and Fulton were responsible for the iconic Te Pahu toothbrush fence,[20] which came to prominence when mentioned on the episode of Flight of the Concords Bret Gives Up the Dream, and the Helen Clark Celebrity Bus Shelter, named after former New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark who was also a Te Pahu[21] local. Performance initiatives included performing entire shows on stilts[22] and developing a variety of musical workshops,[23] including edible instruments, home-made instruments, and the most recent featuring band members dressed with ukulele chords[24] for the mass teaching of ukulele. In May 2008 Cairns and Fulton performed in Taupo with the Wellington International Ukulele Orchestra, and the following year the BMSB performed at the New Zealand Ukulele Festival with international acts such as Azo Bell and the Old Spice Boys, Uni and her Ukulele, and Sione Aleki.[25] The BMSB have organised several experimental performances in the Waikato to accommodate these international and local acts as they tour.[26][27] In 2009 Cairns, Fulton and Galbraith formed Goulash Archipelago, to play original Eastern European-style ukulele and dance music. The group and the performance concept is based around their fictitious trip to the imaginary State of Ukestan. In 2010 this group provided dance music for the Folk Dance New Zealand National Festival.[28] Also in this year the BMSB was involved in a highly successful collaboration[29] with robotic group The Trons and the legendary Hamilton County Bluegrass Band.

Since 2012, the band have almost exclusively performed live and on recordings using ukuleles and other stringed instruments made by Galbraith, who is a professional instrument maker in his own right who uses native New Zealand timbers in construction of his ukuleles and basses. He operates under the name of Captain Ukuleles.[30]

 
BMSB anniversary photo, 2013

Happening concurrently with the BMSB, from 1999 onwards, Fulton, Cairns and Galbraith created and ran the Serious Ukulele Ensemble, a group with fluid membership which records and performs ukulele instrumental music.[31] Cairns and Fulton, along with two long-term members of the Serious Ukulele Ensemble, Paula Hudson and Martin Dew, performed as invited guests at the Paris Ukulele Hui in September 2010.[32]

The BMSB featured on Bill Sevesi's Dream,[33] a TVNZ documentary about the ukulele in New Zealand, broadcast in January 2011.[34] Clothier left the band in early 2012, after they had a standout performance as guest performers at the Auckland Folk Festival. He was replaced by James Sutherland. This meant that coincidentally for the first time ever all four members and part-time drummer Paul Tregilgas, live in the same small rural community west of Hamilton, Te Pahu, within a 1.5 km radius. In February 2013, with Sutherland having assumed a lead vocal position, the band performed alongside Canadian ukulele virtuoso James Hill, and the Wellington International Ukulele Orchestra.[35] In March 2013, the band featured at the Melbourne Ukulele Festival,[36] performing shows incorporating Melbourne-based ex-Muffins Steve Matich, Naughty See Monkey, and Adam Fulton.

The year 2013 also saw the 30th anniversary of the first BMSB performance. This was marked primarily with an exhibition at the Waikato Museum, from August 2013 to January 2014, entitled 30 Years of the Big Muffin Serious Band.[37] The exhibition of BMSB memorabilia, images and audio-visual material was opened on 31 August with a performance by many ex-members of the band accompanying present members.[38] With the help of Arts Council funding (Creative Communities Scheme), the band also produced a music video, Mr T. Pot, celebrating 30 years of performance and featuring the majority of past band members in cameo roles.[39] The anniversary celebrations were capped by a retrospective performance in the Hamilton Fringe Festival in October, 2013.

From 2013 to 2019, the band remained unchanged in terms of personnel, playing predominantly at music and ukulele festivals and community events. Some such events were the Palmerston North Ukulele Festival (2014), the Te Kuiti Muster (2016), the Geraldine Ukulele Festival (2014 and 2016),[40] and headlining at the Gisborne (2018) and Opotiki Islandview (2019) Ukulele Festivals. The latter, in January 2019, heralded the final performance by James Sutherland as singer. He was replaced by Tony Wyeth, who played with the band in the early 2000s, on vocals and drums, and Nick Clothier rejoined after a lengthy hiatus. The band, minus Nick Clothier, performed at what would turn out to be the final ever Geraldine Uke Festival in 2021.[41] In early 2023, Tony Wyeth left the band to live in France.

Past and present BMSB musicians

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(in chronological order of first appearance)

  • Jim Fulton (present member)
  • Graeme Cairns (present member)
  • Ian Coldham-Fussell
  • Chris Allen
  • Mark Walles
  • Keith MacMillan
  • Peter Caldwell
  • Paul Van Wering
  • Steve Matich
  • Jeff Howell
  • Matthew Shirley
  • Bevan Galbraith (present member)
  • Tony Wyeth (present member)
  • Paul Tregilgas
  • Adam Fulton
  • Nick Clothier
  • James Sutherland

Past and present bottlers/dancers/guest musicians

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  • Naughty See Monkey
  • Trudy Kendall
  • Alec Forbes
  • Bryce Galloway
  • Adrian Holroyd
  • Adrienne Carthew
  • Craigie Beere
  • Donald Nicholls

Discography, BMSB

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  • Untitled Supreme Radio Studios Recording, 1985, 7" acetate record, monaural.
  • Jabberwocky Goes To Town, 1987, LP vinyl record.
  • Heavens to Murgatroyd, 2001, CD.
  • Jabberwocky Goes To Town, 2003, CD. Re-release.
  • Itsy Bitsy, December 2012, CD.

Discography, side projects: Serious Ukulele Ensemble, The Weatherspoons, Goulash Archipelago

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  • The Instrument of Love, 2000, CD.
  • Dead Serious, 2001, CD.
  • Mostly Harmless, 2009, CD.
  • The Music of Ukestan – Goulash Archipelago, December, 2011, CD.
  • Dark Tales – The Weatherspoons, December, 2011, CD.
  • Mr T Pot – Music video, funded by Creative Communities New Zealand, to celebrate 30 years of Big Muffin Serious Band performance.[39]

References

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  1. ^ Vanderpyl, J. (2004). "Aspiring for unity and equality: Dynamics of conflict and change in the "by women for women" feminist service groups, Aotearoa/New Zealand". Researchspace.auckland.ac.nz. Retrieved 4 September 2020.
  2. ^ "Webster's Online Dictionary, McGillicuddy Serious Party". Archived from the original on 28 September 2011. Retrieved 6 June 2011.
  3. ^ "McGillicuddys Thespian-arge Spectrum". Rnz.co.nz. Retrieved 4 September 2020.
  4. ^ Otago Daily Times. (30 July 1986). p. 12
  5. ^ Trought, K. (21 January 1988). Fire eating, mime and music entertain. Marlborough Express, n.p
  6. ^ Smith, L. (September, 1986). North & South Magazine. p. 81
  7. ^ Scott, G. (7 May 1986). New Zealand Herald. section 1, p. 3
  8. ^ Wellington Evening Post. (26 November 1986). Muffins serve up unusual earful, p. 3
  9. ^ Millar, C. (27 October 1986). Auckland Star. n.p
  10. ^ The Daily Telegraph (Napier), (4 July 1987). Madcap music in church, p. 9
  11. ^ "NZ Folk Song * Pretty Girl". Folksong.org.nz. Retrieved 4 September 2020.
  12. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 20 August 2011. Retrieved 23 May 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  13. ^ The National Library of New Zealand, The History of Recording in New Zealand n.d.[1] Archived 25 May 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ Floyd, K. (23 January 1988). Muffins musical era over. Waikato Times, p. 5
  15. ^ McKee, A. (9 January 1992). The Oamaru Mail. p 1
  16. ^ Hatch, A. (11 January 1992). Variety is band's spice of life. The Timaru Herald. p. 1
  17. ^ The (Christchurch) Press. (15 January 1991). Thousands enjoy music festival. n.p
  18. ^ McClatchy, V. (13 January 1992). Weather and Whitecliffs warm up over weekend. p.9
  19. ^ Katikati Advertiser. (21 June 1994). Antics of theatrical band terrorise school audience. p. 9
  20. ^ "A toothbrush fence! what next? | Monkeyland Primate Sanctuary, Plettenberg Bay, South Africa". Monkeyland.co.za. Retrieved 4 September 2020.
  21. ^ "Te Pahu Net - Home". 24 July 2011. Archived from the original on 24 July 2011. Retrieved 4 September 2020.
  22. ^ Mercer, B. (27 January 2003). Pulling strings. Waikato Times. p. 8
  23. ^ Slattery, E. (10 June 1991). Listen to the rhythm of the falling things. Waikato Times. p. 1
  24. ^ "Underneath the bunker. (2011) Video". Retrieved 4 September 2020 – via YouTube.
  25. ^ "Counting down to UKESTOCK ! | Scoop News". Scoop.co.nz. Retrieved 4 September 2020.
  26. ^ Lewis, G. (12 November 2008). Hamilton hosts ukuleles. Hamilton Press.p. 4
  27. ^ Taylor, D. (27 November 2008). Experiment a success. Te Awamutu Courier. p. 7
  28. ^ "Programme - FDNZ National Camp 2010". Folkdance.org.nz. Retrieved 4 September 2020.
  29. ^ Taylor, D. (15 June 2010 ). Come to the HamilTron bluegrass Muffin show. Te Awamutu Courier. p. 21
  30. ^ "home". 28 June 2014. Archived from the original on 28 June 2014. Retrieved 4 September 2020.
  31. ^ Blaazer, D. (Dec., 2002) New Zealand Musician Magazine. Reviews: The Serious Ukulele Ensemble [2] Archived 20 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  32. ^ "UOGBfrogsfans.(13 September 2010). Ukulele hui et kiwis a Paris". Archived from the original on 25 March 2012. Retrieved 7 June 2011.
  33. ^ "3rd Party Productions » Bill Sevesi's Dream". 10 August 2011. Archived from the original on 10 August 2011. Retrieved 4 September 2020.
  34. ^ "Not just a little guitar". Stuff.co.nz. 18 January 2011. Retrieved 4 September 2020.
  35. ^ "Here come the ukulele stars". Stuff.co.nz. 18 February 2013. Retrieved 4 September 2020.
  36. ^ "Performers". 19 April 2013. Archived from the original on 19 April 2013. Retrieved 4 September 2020.
  37. ^ "Big Muffin Serious - Waikato Museum". 12 August 2014. Archived from the original on 12 August 2014. Retrieved 4 September 2020.
  38. ^ "Madcap ukulele-based skiffle band going strong". Stuff.co.nz. 31 August 2013. Retrieved 4 September 2020.
  39. ^ a b "Mr T. Pot". 7 June 2013. Retrieved 24 March 2019 – via YouTube.
  40. ^ Edie, James. "Laird Graeme lords it on the bass". Ashburtoncourier.co.nz. Retrieved 4 September 2020.
  41. ^ MacDuff, K. 'Ukefest brings music an laughter to Geraldine'. https://www.stuff.co.nz/timaru-herald/news/125857517/ukefest-brings-music-and-laughter-to-geraldine
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