The Chills review – Martin Phillipps' triumph and tragedy told with extraordinary candour

While shooting the documentary, the frontman was told he had a 31% chance of dying within a year. He allows the film-makers in every step of the way

The independent scene that emerged from Dunedin, New Zealand, in the early 1980s had all the strange qualities musical trainspotters around the world associate with isolation. Hamish Kilgour from the Clean describes the city as a cauldron, with the low-hanging sky its lid. It’s a creative pressure cooker from which artists must escape.

In the decades since, the bands that steamed from the top of that cauldron have gone global. Next to the Clean, the biggest name is Martin Phillipps, the legendary leader – of 21 different lineups – of the Chills. They were the definitive Dunedin band, with a strange, light, airy, eerie, breezy magic that both matched the city’s geography and transcended it.

Continue reading...

from The Guardian http://bit.ly/31yoWnm
via
0 Comments