Superette

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Saskatchewan 05:31 Tools
Touch Me 00:00 Tools
Waves 00:00 Tools
Killer Clown 00:00 Tools
Kiss Someone 00:00 Tools
Ugly Things 00:00 Tools
Bye Bye 00:00 Tools
Felo de se 00:00 Tools
Cannibal 00:00 Tools
Funny Weather 00:00 Tools
Taiwan 00:00 Tools
Knowing Me Knowing You 00:00 Tools
I Got It Clean 00:00 Tools
The Horse 00:00 Tools
Slide 00:00 Tools
Beetle 00:00 Tools
Disappear 00:00 Tools
Catacombs 00:00 Tools
Anything 00:00 Tools
Cheezel 00:00 Tools
Pretty Picture 00:00 Tools
Saskatchewan (Demo) 00:00 Tools
Don't Really Matter 00:00 Tools
Honey Bee 00:00 Tools
Blue Hair 00:00 Tools
Flow Chart 00:00 Tools
Play On 00:00 Tools
Dissapear 00:00 Tools
Saskatchewan - Demo 00:00 Tools
Oyster 00:00 Tools
I Fall to Pieces 00:00 Tools
June 00:00 Tools
I Didn't Wanna Like You 00:00 Tools
Saskatchewan (Album Version) 00:00 Tools
Mr. Quilty 00:00 Tools
Saskatchewan [Album Version] 00:00 Tools
Mean Spirited 00:00 Tools
Superette - Slide 00:00 Tools
Vicious Ways 00:00 Tools
SASKATCHEVAN 00:00 Tools
Saskatchawan (Demo) 00:00 Tools
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Dave Mulcahy's first post-Jean Paul Sartre Experience band was the unfortunately short-lived Superette, who sprung up in Auckland in 1993. With Mulcahy taking guitar and vocal duties, he pulled together Ben Howe (bass) and Greta Anderson (drums/backing vox) to record the rough, thematically scary, but thoroughly charming Rosepig EP. From here the band became known as one of the better live pop-rock acts around New Zealand, and were a defining sound (along with the artists like 3Ds) in mid-1990s New Zealand music. Superette expanded the tracks on their earlier release to the fully-fledge debut Tiger in 1995. Over the twelve stellar tracks, not a single song drags. Over the common theme of murder, and the psycho-analysis of well-known murderers, the album retains a dynamic pop hook. Tiger carefully flows between the more up-beat earlier numbers (such as "Touch Me" and album highlight, the Anderson-penned "Saskatchewan"), through to the album-closing slower numbers (notably "Funny Weather" and the charismatic "Waves," which made a big impact on the Topless Woman Talk About Their Lives movie score), without ever missing a beat. Sadly, after touring the album for the best part of a year Mulcahy decided to move on to his own pressing solo career, leaving Ben & Greta (the moniker they took from that point on) to soldier on for themselves. Since Mulcahy left, Ben & Greta released the charming single "Creep Around the House" (with Howe on vocal duties), but the duo seems to be more interested in other pursuits. Ben Howe has gone on to form the Arch Hill record label (which released "Creep Around the House"), Mulcahy's solo debut Oddy Knocky, and the debut from Ben's new band Fang, entitled The Origin of the Species. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.