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Savage Garden – Savage Garden

Discussion in 'Article Discussion' started by Melody Bot, Mar 8, 2022.

  1. Melody Bot

    Your friendly little forum bot. Staff Member

    This article has been imported from chorus.fm for discussion. All of the forum rules still apply.

    A lot has changed since Savage Garden released their eponymous debut album in 1997. Not that it’s surprising — everything from technology to politics has rapidly transformed in just 25 years, so why shouldn’t music also follow that trend? Pop music today is closer to Savage Garden than pop music of ten years ago, strangely enough. I love seeing The Weeknd, Paramore, and Dua Lipa inspired by the glitz of 80s synth-pop and improving on pop-punk with empowerment and new stories. In a way, I suppose the music that multi-instrumentalist Daniel Jones and vocalist Darren Hayes have released, both from their time as a duo and Hayes’ solo career, hasn’t truly left us.

    As a kid growing up in Australia in the late 90s and early 2000s, Savage Garden were inescapable. They were making music when there was more funding for showcasing Australian music. You’d hear “Truly Madly Deeply” on the radio (which I heard on the radio days ago, coincidentally, so that you know how omnipresent the singles are in this country). They performed on weekend television, we played their albums in my house, people still argue about misheard lyrics to “I Want You,” and they sold a shit ton of records. They performed at the 2000 Sydney Olympic Games Closing Ceremony. Delta Goodrem reworked her classic “Lost Without You” with Hayes. They played to huge audiences in their home city of Brisbane, Australia, a rousing response, to be sure, following mammoth tours around the country. Hell, Hayes even sang by Luciano Pavarotti’s side in a 2000 concert for Cambodia and Tibet. Savage Garden were massive, and rightfully so.

    I have loved Savage Garden for my entire life. As a child, I couldn’t articulate why they resonated with me. Hayes and Jones look like cool adventurers in the “To the Moon and Back” music video (video three, the most played of the three versions released), galavanting around New York on a subway and rescuing a young woman from her dreary life. “To the Moon and “Back” is all bombast. Jones plays a ringing guitar riff, backed by a commanding bassline and drums that go hard. The song’s lyrical content proves that Hayes is a virtuoso songwriter. While “I would fly you to the moon and back/if you’ll be, if you’ll be my baby” reads like a million lines you’ve heard before, the stanzas that precede and come after are the actual bones of the story. Identifying with the mother who didn’t love their child that much or the father that never kept in touch, what does a neglected childhood lead to in adulthood?

    While Savage Garden were larger than life, they never forgot to touch down to earth again. That’s why “Break Me Shake Me” rules so much. Pulling from Hayes’ Michael Jackson and Madonna influence, the track’s bass guitar, finger clicks, and smooth vocals are dominant. How can you not dance along? Speaking of dancing, the crucial but overlooked “Carry on Dancing” is a self-proclaimed soundtrack to a vampire’s ball. I mean, at this point, could Savage Garden cater any more to teenage Mary’s interests? Vampires, enthralling melodies, and a gothic string section? You could tell me that “Carry on Dancing” was manufactured in a laboratory specifically for me, and I might believe you.

    Of course, there are glaring products of their time scattered on Savage Garden, too, like the very cheesy 90s keyboard on “Universe,” a song about second-guessing yourself; “A Thousand Words” recalls Kim Wilde’s 1986 hit, “You Keep Me Hangin’ On”. Meanwhile, “Promises” replaced “Mine” on the second track listing as the duo’s US label was concerned about “Mine” making a mention of crucifixes. “Promises” and the controversy around “Mine” feel exceedingly dated. However, the haircuts during this era are the most obsolete of all.

    A charmingly sad thing about looking back on Savage Garden is that we have moved so far forward; today’s stars and up-and-comers — Lil Nas X, Rina Sawayama, Janelle Monae — are out and proud. Hayes pondered with Billboard upon the 20th anniversary of Savage Garden in 2017 whether or not his solo music would have received more airplay if he hadn’t publicly come out as gay or if he released the music today. While Hayes was never explicitly blacklisted from the music industry, Columbia Records banned Hayes from making live television performances during the promotion of his first solo record, Spin, and made him look “less gay” for the “Insatiable” music video shoot in 2002; whatever that means. In that respect, we’ve come a very long way in 25 years when Orville Peck is campy and writes queer songs to great success. Savage Garden paved the way for homegrown talents Troye Sivan and Cub Sport. With Hayes’ dreams about kissing boys (“I Want You”) and “Affirmation,” among others, he inspires us all to express our dreams and desires freely, just like Pet Shop Boys and Bronski Beat did for British LGBTQIA+ artists in the 1980s.

    When I listened to Savage Garden as a child and listen to them now, the feelings are the same. They mirror what my friend Rowan recently wrote about the new Gang of Youths album, angel in realtime. As he said about Australia’s best current band, Savage Garden fills me with pride that we somehow produced a band this good, so pure in their honesty and musical influences. I looked at Darren and Daniel and saw what was possible for me: I could live a life in music, and I wouldn’t let anybody stop me. I didn’t look at them and grieve for what could have been; I didn’t have to wish that they were born overseas to be successful because they made it. They also called it quits when it was time, no matter how badly we wanted a third album. Savage Garden proved to every Australian kid that they could do anything. Savage Garden remains an all-time classic for dreamers like me.

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    anonimito likes this.
  2. Mr. Serotonin

    I'm still staring down the sun Prestigious

    :musical:I knew I loved you before I met you
    I think I dreamed you into life
    I knew I loved you before I met you
    I have been waiting all my life :musical:

    Hahah one of the first memories of singing is along to this song on the radio when I was little. It was this one, 3eb Deep Inside of you/Losing a Whole Year/Semi Charmed, Semi-Sonic Closing Time, Cher-Believe, Matchbox 3am, Aerosmith Jaded, Sugar Ray and maybe Shania Twain? :crylaugh:

    Good times, f*ck i'm old
     
  3. jackyjackyjack

    Regular

    Banger of an album. I also really liked the Darren Hayes solo stuff that came out just after Savage Garden
     
  4. anonimito

    Abelian Supporter

    Fantastic review, Mary! "Carry on Dancing" and "Mine" will always be among my all-time SG favorites.

    It's wonderful to see how happy Darren is now, though it's heartbreaking to keep learning about how the label treated him. :swear:
     
  5. theasteriskera

    Trusted Supporter

    Plz keep these old ass reviews coming
     
    Orla, R.J. Carlos, Mary V and 4 others like this.
  6. paythetab

    Chorus.FM Album Reviewer (Adam Grundy) Supporter

    Great stuff, Mary! Loved this album ever since I first heard it.
     
  7. I knew I loved it before I heard it
     
  8. Sorry
     
  9. paythetab

    Chorus.FM Album Reviewer (Adam Grundy) Supporter

  10. satellitexyears

    Death Touches Us, From the Moment we Begin to Love Supporter

    A timeless classic front to back! I was in grade ten when this album was dominating the airwaves. Got plenty of Savage Garden on my "forever favs" playlist on Spotify.

    I do love Affirmation more though. That whole damn album still hits me in the feels!

    I have the Singles vinyl but wish they would press both full lengths!
     
    anonimito, Mr. Serotonin and Mary V like this.
  11. surgerone

    Regular Supporter

    A friend showed me Truly Madly Deeply on the bus one day around when it first came out and that song changed me. Also fun fact: I used to put on "concerts" for my family where I would just sing along to the CD and awkwardly sway side to side :crylaugh:
     
  12. KyleK

    Let's get these people moving faster!

    As others have alluded to, they may have received a lot of domestic funding in Australia, but they were inescapable in North American then too. I'd kinda forgotten how gigantic those singles were here until seeing this review, and then it all came rushing back. I'm sure if I still had to suffer through workplace radio stations, I'd likely still hear the hits from this (do I ever resent how much I had to hear Train songs back in the days of my high school job).
     
  13. fbrrocks

    Trusted

    I’m old there’s a 90’s con in ct this weekend and I’m going to it to meet some of my fav 90’s celebs
    Plus I remember loving to sing along to savage garden whenever then came on the radio
     
    Mr. Serotonin likes this.
  14. shatteredfx21

    Follow your passion.

    Such a classic for its time and still a classic to this day.
     
    Mr. Serotonin and anonimito like this.