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At CHCMC
an Australian experimental
aesthetic emerged ...

Terminal Moraine (1980)

Whether it was a coincidence or shared circumstances, the Clifton Hill Community Music Centre (CHCMC) emerged just as punk’s ‘just do it’ attitude melded with emerging postmodern sensibilities, which, among other things, led art-makers to coalesce in new spaces that ignored even the mainstream’s alternative venues. Although CHCMC began as a community-oriented music venue, it soon gave way to new creative, political, and philosophical pathways that artists developed and explored during its five or so years of activity. I hope that this site will be used by both researchers and casual listeners to unpack specific works, potentially revealing their significance to experimental art practice in Australia.

In the late 1970s and early 1980s, a notable shift occurred as institutionalised culture began to lose its dominant grip while universities underwent corporatisation and became less relevant. Concurrently, popular culture, once looked down upon within the arts, gained new legitimacy and was recognized as a rich and entangled field to explore. For some of us, unskilled in traditional art-making and disillusioned with mainstream music practices, a creative gap opened that we could fill by exploring music-making, sound, and performance; uncovering novel concepts; and experimenting with new methods that embraced our varying levels of competence.

Melbourne is a big music town, and back in the late ’70s and early ’80s, CHCMC emerged as a space on the margins of the mainstream where experiments and shifts in cultural discourse played out, both performatively and audibly, to a small but growing audience. The Centre provided a supportive space for emerging artists and their temporal art-making that didn’t fit commercial and academic expectations.

Artworks performed at CHCMC were wide ranging in scope, primarily involving music, but also performance, film, video and installation. These works de-emphasised traditional ideals of craft, expression and musicianship; moreover the artworks were often critical of the dominant channels of music and art production and their cultural framings that were pervasive in mainstream culture.

At CHCMC, a fresh Australian experimental aesthetic emerged—one that ceased to replicate American and European ideas and trends. Instead, expressive forms reflected local experiences and themes, and had room for different approaches that included, for some artists, modernist counter-culture methods, and for others the creation of works that deconstructed what some saw as pervasive modernist tropes.

Explorations of broader topics were primarily explored, articulated, and expressed through music, sound, and moving images, rather than through written texts or curatorial frameworks. This included political and Indigenous themes—albeit from colonial-settler perspectives—as seen in the works of Ron Nagorcka and IDA. Curiously, listening back to the archive today, it is noticeable how the Australian accent became very prominent. Exemplified by figures like Chris Mann, Ernie Althoff, Ralph Traviato, Adrian Martin, and others, it is a though it signaled a fresh, personal voice of liberation and expression. Spoken word still had a role to play: Warren Burt, Ernie Althoff, and Chris Mann often spoke at length about their works, prior to, or as part of their performances, and Tsk Tsk Tsk often presented short writings to accompany their performances. But the music always came first. Inbetween performances, appraisals and critiques would take place around the large silver tea urn.

As I now see it, CHCMC was a site where postmodernism 1 emerged in Australian art practice, although none of us were familiar with the term at that time. Initially evident among younger performers, including my own generation, this emergence involved both intuitive and deliberate deconstructions of modernist artistic and cultural methods and aesthetics, occasionally challenging the approaches of older CHCMC artists who’s creative pathways were informed by a counter-culture practice that still drew on modernist methods. Revisiting all the works within this archive today, I find them all equally intriguing, making it challenging now for the visitor to distinguish between these two creative ontologies. Listening back, I recognise influences in my own music from older composers like Warren Burt. But it is still worth acknowledging that as these different creative approaches rubbed up against each other at CHCMC it created a creative friction that was ultimately productive for all.

My memories of this time also include non-sonic aspects of CHCMC’s creative milieu, which were still important: what we spoke about, how different people dressed (according to their sub-cultural milieu), and all the range of styles, methods and interests we all brought to CHCMC.

And so, for the keen listener, these recordings capture a dialectic of aesthetics, derived through modern and postmodern creative methods and through framings that were variously expressed through the music, performance, film and video. For example, the slightly older composers tended to experiment with inner musical structures and processes, while us younger composers concerned themselves with external structures, such musical context and the spectacle of performance.

It was a busy time. New works were being created each week, often in response to what other artists had presented the week before. Themes and ideas were explored directly through the act of making and presenting music, films and performance, with discourses that reflected certain philosophical precedents at the time – Marxism, the French New Wave, semiotics, structuralism. Some artists referenced contemporary American thinkers or experimented with novel musical and sonic concepts and structures, uncovering new aesthetic outcomes. For example, there was the use of multiple cassette recorders by some artists to layer up sounds in a process that gradually transformed simple recorded utterances into dense, distorted and evocative soundscape (Graeme Davis, Plastic Platypus, Ernie Althoff), or the deployment of novel tunings and pitch sets (Warren Burt). Some performers applied film theory that, at the time, was being being taught at La Trobe University and at Melbourne State College (Phillip Brophy, Adrian Martin, Robert Goodge Goodge, David Chesworth, Rolando Caputo). Other performer were influenced directly by the artists who performing before them at CHCMC.

All this was taking place within a world that was still very analogue; where tapes took time to rewind and musical works and performances often emerged slowly over long timescales, and where cheap super-8 film’s grainy images evoked a visual aesthetic that now appears quaint and old in comparison with digital images. Sound Art hadn’t yet emerged as a distinct discipline or even as a term. There was no internet, no mobile phones, nor social media to disseminate what was taking place at CHCMC. Instead, the mainstream and alternative press had full control, while public radio stations were just starting to get a foothold. Some journalists harboured suspicions about CHCMC’s ‘off the grid’ activities: its motives and critical attitudes, often calling us arrogant for our dismissal of mainstream culture.

Amongst all this, I remember that we were being told that we would all soon be swamped by an incoming tidal wave of digital technology. It was difficult then to picture how this would affect us and how it would forever transform the fidelity of the mediascape, our methods, and our creative pathways, which it has certainly done.

This rare archive of a nascent experimental music scene was recorded binaurally on cassette by Ernie Althoff – himself a regular performer at CHCMC. It is not a complete record, rather, it reflects Ernie’s personal choices, after all, no one asked him to make these recordings; he simply took it upon himself to attend performances and make them. Ernie’s own creative work is therefore well represented in these tapes.

The cassettes Ernie recorded had been resting on a shelf, silently for over 40 years until 2020/21 when they were transferred and organised into a digital archive for this site The cassette transfers were made by John Campbell, who was also a performer at CHCMC (and who initially uncovered the availability of the Organ Factory and its potential as a community space). I have done some restoration work on the recordings including compiling recordings of single events that Ernie spread across several cassettes in order to fill up any available space.

Some artists who were prolific at this time are not well represented in the archive, as they mainly performed electronic music that was considered to be already documented on tape. Warren Burt, a hugely significant artist during this time has relatively few recordings made at Clifton Hill. His prolific output was at the time mainly video and film-based. We have included a separate archive of some of Warren’s work with Plaistic Platypus from the 70s that also includes undated CHCMC performances that he recorded. This can be found under the ‘Other Recordings’ link.

In the Ephemera section you will find distinctive performance season posters designed by Philip Brophy and Ernie Althoff and copies of the New Music magazine (1978–81) edited and published by Philip Brophy and myself that contain reviews of performances followed by discussions with the artists who respond to the reviews. Also included are three earlier publications of The New Music Newspaper (1976–77) edited and published by Warren Burt and Les Gilbert (clicking on the cover images of the publication will reveal their content). You will also find photos and ephemera associated with CHCMC. There weren’t many photographs taken at CHCMC, as it was considered indulgent by some of us to think that one’s contribution should be preserved beyond the performance, plus taking photos back then was expensive and we were not rich. In retrospect we are thankful that some photos were taken and recording were made. We are fortunate that photographer and CHCMC performer Jane Joyce took a range of shots that appear throughout the site, as did members of →↑→ and myself. Other photographs are being be added as they come to light.

CHCMC Performers are encouraged to send in information and clarifications and to flesh out their own biogs. If any of you have recordings of CHCMC performances that we have missed then please us know.

David Chesworth


  1. Postmodernism as I define it here, was an intellectual stance or mode of discourse defined by a skepticism toward the grand narratives and ideologies of modernism, as well as opposition to epistemic certainty and the stability of meaning. 

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00:00/
–83)

Clifton Hill
Community Music Centre

This is an archive of music performances with associated recordings, posters and publications that took place regularly at the Clifton Hill Community Music Centre (CHCMC) between 1976 and 1983. Based in an old organ factory in Melbourne, it became a space for experimentation in music, sound and other temporal art forms. Play the binaural recordings below while you investigate the site. (This archive is incomplete)

Audio only
Filter by:
synthesizerprocess musicvoiceImprovisationFilm (super 8 or 16 mm)Video'performance'tape playbackcassettes as performance toolsminimalism/repetitionbands/groups
IndexArtist/sTitleDurationDate
001The Clifton Hill Community Music Centre opening Concert18.06.76
Anecdote

The opening performance at Clifton Hill featuring ‘a special short program of low budget technology/music by Warren Burt & Ron Nagorcka’

002Redbird15.09.76
003Music for flutes, guitars and cassette recorders20.09.76
004Rubbish band and junk electronic workshop 126.09.76
005Environmental sound installation28.09.76
006Bob & Mal show: songs, jokes and performance art02.10.76
007Rubbish band and junk electronic workshop 210.10.76
008New compositions & improvisations01.05.77
009PLAYPAUSESalon music with Atom Bomb61:1403.05.77
Anecdote

Atom Bomb, a work by Ron Nagorcka employs voice, toy instruments, and cassette recorders. The work uses iterative process of live recording and playing back between two or more cassette players, slowly incorporating previously recorded performance elements, while also gradually layering up the distortions inherent in the equipment and the accumulating ambience of the room.

Also see here.

Greame Davis and Ernie Althoff were other CHCMC artists who often used this process.

010Melbourne autumn festival of organ and harpsichord04.05.77
Anecdote

Through to May 15. Ron Nagorcka had some connection to festival. More information to come.

011Spinning Speakers29.05.77
Anecdote

Some or all of Bill’s performances took place in the large downstairs space, which may have been what took place in this case, although I don’t remember. It could have happened outside, in front the building. The space needed to be big enough to swing small speakers attached to cables.

012Music by Ron Nagorcka & Warren Burt07.06.77
013PLAYPAUSENew pieces for reeds & piano77:4513.06.77
Anecdote

This recording came from Les’s personal collection and we’re pretty certain it was from this evening’s concert and probably recorded by Les. The cassette has a note which states: ‘Divertivements for a pianist. CHCMC. ’77.’

014Music by themselves, LaMonte Young, John Cage, John White20.06.77
015PLAYPAUSECoathanger Event17:0212.11.77
Anecdote

An installation exhibited over the weekend of November 12-13 1977.
The work appears to have been split into several areas and offered the visitor different engagements that are discussed in a review by Robin Teese in New Music Newspaper Issue 3 p.7 (see a copy in Ephemera)
One of the works Winds and Circuits used audio derived from handheld metal coat hangers to derive television signals to create electronic visual patterns.
Ros tells us that this recording was derived from an arrangement of metal coat hangers to which thin cables are attached and held in the ears of each user.

016PLAYPAUSEMinimalism84:4105.04.78
Anecdote
  • Poster says: “Tsk Tsk Tsk instruct the unhip squares with an enlightening historical retrospective of their works and sex lives”
  • “one of the most severely minimal performances I’ve ever heard. Merciless. Quite a fine thing, that I can only approve” Warren Burt, New Music Newspaper issue 1 page 14.
017Nice Noise. Our all new format of modern teen music will nuetralize you02.08.78
018Kaboom -our pop play explodes with all the bangs of wartime Hollywood09.08.78
019PLAYPAUSESolo; real time73:5316.08.78
Anecdote

David Tolley was a well-known and highly regarded jazz musician who played acoustic bass and had recently discovered a love for synthesizer - especially its sequencer!
On the cassette recording this work is titled ‘A Certain Survivalism’.

020Salad Music21.08.78
Anecdote

‘and others’

021Presents her electronic music23.08.78
022Solo 2; real time30.08.78
023Plays it againagainagain04.09.78
024Constructed cinema11.09.78
Anecdote

‘Constructed cinema - we drop our music and shine with movie-buff disease’

025Games of chance and other music04.10.78
Anecdote

‘Malcom Tattersall and friends’

026Presents his music, live!11.10.78
Anecdote

A performance on a Saturday afternoon that didn’t appear on the regular poster. Ernie Althoff remembers that it occurred in relation to an Organ Factory clean-up working bee.

028IN18.10.78
Anecdote

Dura Dara and David Tolley

029Three Tape Pieces25.10.78
Anecdote

‘Three tape pieces featuring flute and voice, Chinese gong, computer music.’

030OUT01.11.78
031Pure M.O.R. music. The ultimate synthesis of a. garde and 3AK06.11.78
032Airs itself. 3rd-year composition students go public08.11.78
033Uses up yet more Eveready batteries15.11.78
034Present an evening of wonderful entertainment29.11.78
Anecdote

The Fab Four - John Crawford, Jane Joyce, David Chesworth, Philip Brophy

035More new (& sterile) films from the kids who brought you ‘Contracted Cinema’04.12.78
036PLAYPAUSEA mixed nite13:0806.12.78
Anecdote

Ernie’s contribution to the mixed night

037PLAYPAUSEMexican Divorce51:0128.03.79
038PLAYPAUSEMr Inadequate discovers static in his underpants22:0704.04.79
039PLAYPAUSEFive Duets for Prepared and Treated Guitars22:4304.04.79
Anecdote

Robert and David not yet performing as Essendon Airport.

040The Dave and Phil Duo11.04.79
041Familiar Females Return18.04.79
042no title25.04.79
Anecdote

Two separate performances. It would be great to hear what they presented, but alas…

043With no idea02.05.79
044PLAYPAUSEMr Inadequate and Binary Digit62:5230.05.79
045PLAYPAUSEErnie Althoff & Mr Inadequate20:2730.05.79
Anecdote

Graeme Davis performed the first half (as Mr Inadequate). This recording is of two pieces in the second half by Ernie Althoff who tells us: “The first piece, ‘A whirlwind tour of the great organs of Europe’ is two fingers pressed down on the FF keys of two cassette players loaded with identical cassettes made from the LP record ‘The great organs of Europe’. The second piece at 4:40, ‘March of the Metronomes’ is made with a slanted metronome and two vari-speed cassette players recording and replaying in ways fairly typical of that exploratory time.”

046PLAYPAUSEPlastic Platypus; triumphant return31:3506.06.79
Anecdote

This concert appears to be Ron playing solo rather than the duo with Warren Burt. Warren may have been overseas at the time.

047PLAYPAUSESelf distortion/self destruction46:4413.06.79
048PLAYPAUSESo, You Want To Be a Drummer? & 4 Organ Pieces38:0820.06.79
Anecdote

The night began with a mimed performance by David Chesworth, Rainer Linz and Robert Goodge of Chesworth’s record, Fifty Synthesizer Greats. Listen HERE on Bandcamp. This performance was mimed in the style of TV pop appearances in the day…Countdown etc). This was followed by ‘So You Want To Be a Drummer?’ for live drum machine and tape delay, which begins this recording, followed by a performance of Chesworth’s Four Organ Pieces (found at 17:00 on the recording)

049Nice noise. New & streamlined27.06.79
050PLAYPAUSEAnn Shirley, Robin Teese, Malcolm Tattersall30:5004.07.79
051Presents ‘The Microtones’11.07.79
052PLAYPAUSEA Sonic Investigation of the Trivial70:1018.07.79
Anecdote

This was the first performance of the group Essendon Airport although the group was yet to have a name for this performance.

053John Crawford performance08.08.79
054What I’m doing with your tax dollars this year15.08.79
055PLAYPAUSEMore tedious structuralism70:1122.08.79
056Even more tedious structuralism05.09.79
057PLAYPAUSEWhy I spent my holidays in Germany47:2012.09.79
Anecdote
  1. metapiece - sine tone and slide whistle
  2. three piano dances - electric piano
  3. percussion piece - tabletop percussion quartet
  4. five gas songs - CO2, N, H, He, O
  5. untitled piece for sine and pulse generators.
058PLAYPAUSEAn evening of pleasing sensual music31:4819.09.79
Anecdote

recorded at CHCMC by Ad Hoc. Designer’s title.

059Why my job at a slick/shit Carlton café has affected my perspective on electronic music26.09.79
Anecdote

The viewer should bear-in-mind that some of the titles of performances that appear on the posters (and in this archive) were not those of the artist’s choosing. Performers that had agreed to do a performance on a particular night often didn’t have a title ready, which left the door open for some creative titling from a certain poster designer.

060PLAYPAUSEShort Bright Ditties and Long Arduous Masterpieces62:4603.10.79
Anecdote

Duo comprising David Chesworth and Philip Brophy playing electric pianos. The first song is an arrangement of a Brian Eno song and the rest are originals by the duo.

061PLAYPAUSESonata for industrial deafness16:5810.10.79
062A Night At The Theatre (A Night of Carlton-esque ideals)24.10.79
Anecdote

I don’t remember who was in the group at the time. Parenthesis text in heading was added by the poster designer.

063PLAYPAUSEAccentuate the positive…36:5124.10.79
Anecdote

Other voices provided by Ron Nagocka and Graeme Davis? All three would soon form the group I.D.A. that would go on to create many new performance works.

064PLAYPAUSEFour pieces25:5631.10.79
Anecdote

same evening as Graeme Davis

065PLAYPAUSECassettes Are Driving Me Crazy46:4631.10.79
066Returning With More Synthesizer Goodies14.11.79
067PLAYPAUSEI. D. A.87:0021.11.79
Anecdote

First performance of group comprising Ron Nagorcka, Ernie Althoff and Graham Davis. Instrumentation varies but includes cassette players, spoken voice, modified saxophone, didgeridoo (played by Ron) and small instruments made out of found household and industrial objects.

068Texts28.11.79
069PLAYPAUSEThe Gang’s All Here28:3705.12.79
070PLAYPAUSEFortunes Ready Made70:0012.12.79
Anecdote

Group comprising David Chesworth, Mark Pollard, Jon Campbell, Rainer Linz, John Crawford. What is most notable today is hearing how unskilled as musicians we all sounded. It didn’t seem to matter and I think adds a certain endearing quality to the simple music we made, although others might not agree with that assessment.

Anecdote

Many artists, each doing their own thing

072PLAYPAUSEImprovising with Ernie 147:0816.01.80
Anecdote

Poster says: ‘Join in or just listen - it’s your choice. Bring an instrument - low budget, of course.’

073PLAYPAUSEImprovising with Ernie 240.2823.01.80
Anecdote

Improv featuring Ernie Althoff, Robert Goodge, David Chesworth and others.

074More of the same by Chris40:2827.01.80
075Maybe Graeme can throw more light on the subject30.01.80
076Previously Unfinished Bits and Pieces06.02.80
077“Their Way”13.02.80
Anecdote

Featuring Chis Knowles, David Wadleton, James Clayden. Probably the designer’s title.

078Question Mark20.02.80
Anecdote

written as ‘?’ on the poster

079PLAYPAUSEIf they annoy you, carry on talking67:0727.02.80
Anecdote

Separate performances from David and Chris on Serg synthesizers (Chris is probably playing Serg modular copies made by Julien Driscoll)

080PLAYPAUSELaughing Hands35:3312.03.80
081PLAYPAUSEPromotional concert for 3rd E.P.91:4119.03.80
082PLAYPAUSEFly by night (it’s cheaper)57:4426.03.80
083Two performances - untitled02.04.80
Anecdote

Two artists presenting separate programs. Bruno made performance works and Chris created music on serge modular synthesizers.

084Untitled09.04.80
085PLAYPAUSEI.D.A. give 2/3rds of what they’ve got128:2216.04.80
086Films & things like that23.04.80
087Video work for 2, 3, & 4 monitors30.04.80
Anecdote

including ‘Figures in a Landscape’

088The Threo + Bryce/Phillip/Melissa21.05.80
089PLAYPAUSEMinimalism, Serialism, Music Theatre. A mixed bag.44:0128.05.80
Anecdote

Starts with a group performance on classical instruments by Pollard, Parish, Sample and Gerrard and then is followed by a performance work by Rainer Linz (at 33.27) who, as part of his work, discusses the history of the piano while, with the help of others, the piano is noisily and chaotically moved around the small upstairs performance space.

090Ad Hoc04.06.80
091No cassettes whatsoever11.06.80
Anecdote

I.D.A. often used portable cassette players to record and play back material in their performances, so it was obviously notable that there were actually no cassettes used in this performance.

092Laughing Hands performance18.06.80
093Alone and together. 5 improvisations for familiar and non-familiar instruments25.06.80
Anecdote

Group comprising Ros Bandt, Julie Doyle, Gavin McCarthy, Carolyn Robb

094PLAYPAUSEPaul Schütze with Chris Wyatt45:5202.07.80
Anecdote

I would like to find out more about this performance. It appears that both played together, which was an unusual pairing, but very interesting. Paul is an improvising percussionist who percussively explores a wide variety of instruments and objects, while Chris played live modular synthesisers based on the architecture of the Serge synthesizer.

096PLAYPAUSEDoes Quite a Few Things - Themes & Variations41:1616.07.80
Anecdote

The performance work is titled Themes and Variations and is a rigorous minimalist solo performance based around early plainsong and the solfege system with its seven basic syllables - do, re, mi, fa, sol, la, ti.

097Students from Melbourne State College13.08.80
Anecdote

Melbourne State College trained teachers and is now part Melbourne University. It had some progressive aspects to it in the 70s. Ron Nagorcka taught music there and there was an influential film studies course run by Arthur Cantrill with teachers that included a very young Adrian Martin (film critic and performer at CHCMC). There are no records about what was presented at CHCMC on the night.

098PLAYPAUSENarrative Music + Formula Disco87:4720.08.80
099PLAYPAUSESeven Rare Dreamings58:3627.08.80
100John Crawford03.09.80
101So you thought you knew me!10.09.80
102The Lunatic Fringe17.09.80
103PLAYPAUSE41 aspects of the leisure setting46:5024.09.80
Anecdote

A performance of tape pieces by Paul Schütze from Laughing Hands.

104A short piece24.09.80
105PLAYPAUSEThe Dave & Phil Duo32:5001.10.80
Anecdote

Performing music that was released on their E.P. ‘Dave & Phil Present Themselves’ for the first 10 minutes, then a series of curious vocal pieces.

106Rainer Linz, John Campbell, Music 408.10.80
Anecdote

Rainer Linz performed with his group Splinter Faction in this concert

107New and Recent Films15.10.80
108Epic-Monumental-Project; (1) Moods for videotape and stereo sound03.11.80
Anecdote

Following his extensive trip to the USA Warren presented work in a series of Monday evening performances collectively called Epic-Monumental-Project (5 pieces for video, film, voice & electronics)

109PLAYPAUSEWell, why not?36:2405.11.80
110(2) Der Yiddisher Cowboy10.11.80
Anecdote

2] Der Yiddisher cowboy - a film in English in collaboration with Ronald Al Robboy

111performance12.11.80
112(3) If structure is an empty glass17.11.80
113Erotica vs Exotica19.11.80
Anecdote

Percussion work by Paul Schütze.
I’m guessing this is Philip Brophy’s title

114The Strange Effect19.11.80
115(4) Penguins; for film, slides, tape and reader24.11.80
116Herbie Jercher, Chris Babinskas26.11.80
Anecdote

Herbie was initially an accomplished jazz guitarist but has many more interesting strings to pull. His performance had a ‘performative’ aspect to them. I remember an air rifle being fired at a bird cage in one performance.
I think this was the only time Chris performed, as a movement artist.

117(5) 8-8s; 4 pairs in the shape of a piece for computer and electronics01.12.80
118Denise Holmes, Martin Lewis, Nick Stamopoulos + Chris Wyatt03.12.80
Anecdote

Denise Holmes, Martin Lewis, Nick Stamopoulos played music to three films by Robert Vincs. This is discussed in New Music #4 1980

120untitled08.12.80
Anecdote

Two well-known jazz performers who pushed boundaries in different ways. The Barry Veith Big Band was well known in jazz circles. CHCMC performer Herbie Jercher played guitar in the band.

121improvisations15.12.80
Anecdote

Two performances: K.G.B. then Chris, Robert and Ian

122Les Gilbert17.12.80
123Spontaneous consumption; Dream focus; colourless green dreams22.12.80
124Wartime Art24.12.80
Anecdote

A Christmas eve performance!

125Punkline and Contracted Cinema I & II21.01.81
Anecdote

The first season of 1981 was a season of mainly super-8 films made by CHCMC artists and other local makers.

Two separate presentations.
Poster says
Punkline (5 min. 1980 16mm. color. sound)

Contracted Cinema I & II (2 hrs. 1978 super 8. color. silent)
multiple projection

126Gravel pits and other works28.01.81
Anecdote

Two presentations:
Ian Sinclair - Gravel pits; Semi-autobiographical portrait; In his own image.
Warren Burt, Eva Karczag - Intercut; Slow moving in the big city; Computer Dance Video; Requiem; Tide pool Piece.

127Feyers; Zoomfilm & Some films with no titles04.02.81
Anecdote

1981 brought about an increased exploration of film for many artists who also worked in music, painting and drawing.

129Hoddle St suite; Cityscape series18.02.81
Anecdote

Films

130Skin of your eye25.02.81
Anecdote

Film

Anecdote

This recording is of I.D.A.’s contribution to the night.
Occasional benefit concerts were held to raise money for such things as the New Music publication. Other performers on the night were K.G.B., Tsk Tsk Tsk, Laughing Hands, Essendon Airport.

132A non-space & Suddenly I moved18.03.81
133Films …
134Music Video01.04.81
135PLAYPAUSESevered Heads, Ralph Traviato48:1308.04.81
Anecdote

Tom Ellard from Severed Heads (Sydney) sent me a tape of cut-ups to be played on the evening. NB: Ralph Traviati presented too. Les Gilbert also performed on this night.

136PLAYPAUSELes Gilbert performance11:0608.04.81
Anecdote

Les is playing soprano sax here although I’m pretty sure he was not a trained player. This performance occurred the same night at Severed Heads and Ralph Traviati

137Music15.04.81
Anecdote

Signals included Chris Knowles, David Wadelton (from Ad Hoc) and Dave Brown

139The Rock Criticism Show29.04.81
Anecdote

Two performances: The Connotations & Peter and Roxanne

140Landscapes of China & Film: Play Loud06.05.81
Anecdote

Two seperate presentations. Laughing Hands (improvising group); Daniel Scharf (film)

141PLAYPAUSEHigh Altitude Grabs56:0603.06.81
Anecdote

Performance was recorded by L.I.M.E. principle performer Ros Bandt on her own Sony cassette and mic system

142PLAYPAUSEChis Mann94:1310.06.81
Anecdote

Epic spoken word performance by Chris Mann. Chris reads from prepared poetic texts and also improvises. There are also interjections and responses from the audience.

143Videos & Performance17.06.81
Anecdote

Two separate presentations.

144Ros Bandt & Les Gilbert24.06.81
Anecdote

Seperate performances

145Films by Paul Fletcher and Viv Caroll01.07.81
146PLAYPAUSEHaving Fun with Burt and Ernie08.07.81
Anecdote

Title is a play on a famous puppet duo from American children’s TV show Sesame Street.

147The Connotations & Lisa Dethridge15.07.81
Anecdote

Two seperate performances

148Ian Cox & David Chesworth22.07.81
Anecdote

It is uncertain what was performed in this concert. Content may have been based around an installation artwork exhibited at the Ewing and George Paton Gallery around this time. The Ewing installation incorporated texts and sound/music based around pop song titles. More info if it comes to hand!

149John Dunkley Smith12.08.81
150International Music & Technology Conference26.08.81
Anecdote

For just one evening CHCMC became a venue for the International Music & Technology Conference, which was considered by some as something of a coup. Participants listed on the night include Graham Hair, David Dunn, Herb Jercher, Diane Thome, Peter Tahourdin. See the details listed on the poster

151George Huxley, Paul Schutze02.09.81
Anecdote

Three seperate performances occurred on the night. Slave Guitars presented by Peter Tyndall is listed separately

152PLAYPAUSESlave Guitars45:1202.09.81
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The recording is of Peter Tyndall’s cassette release of Slave Guitars performances. The cassette contains two pieces or versions of the Slave Guitars. The performance on side two begins a 21:50 and is a live version with applause at the end. Probably not from the CHCMC concert, but possibly similar.

153Science is in the galleries, so why isn’t art in the laboratories?07.09.81
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The Lunatic Fringe were one of the Little Bands - The Little Bands was a parallel music scene that existed in Fitzroy and then St Kilda at the same time as CHCMC.
Kate Buck was one of the members of Lunatic Fringe. Peter Tyndall (Slave Guitars) was also a member of many Little Band groups.

Click this link for a discussion of the Little Bands by its one time convener, the late Alan Bamford.

There might be a recording of this evening out there somewhere.

154Palimpsest09.09.81
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The duo of David Chesworth and Robert Goodge had expanded to include Ian Cox on sax and Paul Fletcher on drums. Although the performance was untitled this music was later released on the album Palimpsest.

155Untitled14.09.81
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I am assuming two seperate performances. Adrian and Ruth together and then Adrian with his group The Connotations

157Untitled21.09.81
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Also listed on the poster is the single name Debra. I’m not sure who she was or if she presented.

160Noises vs muzaks + vice versa30.09.81
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“Plus new and recent films”

Anecdote

Film screenings

162untitled07.10.81
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Suignals is a variation of the group Ad Hoc minus James Clayden. Signals included David Wadleton, Chris Knowles and Dave Brown who performed on prepared guitar and other things. The performance possibly also included Philip Thomson on percussion.

Anecdote

An evening of artist films

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Title refers to the IDA performance. Miles’ performance was untitled

165Makin’ Whoopee18.11.81
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currently there is no information about this performance

166Experiments25.11.81
167Films: incl Floterian; Pan Separations; Wilpana; Time/colour separations02.12.81
168This year’s synthesizer music07.12.81
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Not yet known what works were presented at this concert

169Logic of Fiction 109.12.81
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This was Adrian Martin’s first contribution at CHCMC.

170Industry & Leisure09.12.81
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This was a performance work involving David sorting, writing and performing lists of texts as well as some limited physical activities. The performance incorporatred super 8 film and a slides. The work was subsequently selected for the POPISM exhibition curated by Paul Taylor at the National Gallery of Victoria.

171Tape piece by Ernie & Mike Chapman09.12.81
172PLAYPAUSENew Line-up21:0014.12.81
173Videos & Films16.12.81
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Videos: Hello Australia; ADS
Films: Suspense/play; The celluloid self

174PLAYPAUSEParty Music45:2223.12.81
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This is possibly the only available recording of the Connotations performing. The opening song is poignant reflection on a coming 1982 where he calls on members of the audience to consider a future that is well passed.

(close)
(close) Interrogating the CHCMC acronymDavid Chesworth

Clifton Hill Community Music Centre is often written as the unpronounceable acronym C.H.C.M.C. Here I’ll explore the centre by interrogating each word in its title, in reverse order.

… Centre

Although it was was called a centre, it was in fact run anarchically with very little structure. Concerts were always free and performers weren’t paid, an arrangement that was unusual back then.

Setup in 1976 by Ron Nagorcka and Warren Burt with the assistance of John Campbell, the Clifton Hill Community Music Centre had its roots in a US experimental music space known as The Atomic Cafe, which had its origins in the early 1970s at the University of California, San Diego. It was here that Australian composer Ron Nagorcka, during his studies performed and crossed paths with fellow composition student Warren Burt. Notably, Australian composer Keith Humble was also teaching at the university and played a significant role in the Atomic Cafe.1

In the mid-1970s, Keith was offered the Foundation Professorship of La Trobe University’s Music Department, prompting his return to Australia. Alongside him came several young American composers from San Diego, including Ted Grove and Warren Burt. Concurrently, Ron Nagorcka also returned to Australia to take up a teaching position in composition at Melbourne State College, a prominant teacher’s college affiliated with Melbourne University. This kick-started a significant development in Melbourne’s new music landscape, as it saw the emergence of two contemporary music teaching programs led by two experimental composers, both under the age of 30. Separately, and simultaneously, they introduced fresh creative methods and philosophies that lay outside the grip of European academic modernism prevalent in Australian art music at that time.

Ron Nagorcka performing with Plastic Platypus, 1979

According to Burt, it was on the trip back to Australia that he and Ron discussed setting up a similar performance venue to the Atomic Cafe, in Melbourne. Ron suggested implementing a basic structure that didn’t rely on money changing hands; rather, it would be free for audiences to attend, and performers would therefore not expect be paid. Thus, there would be no financial contract that implied artists needed to produce works of a certain ‘value’ for audiences. Ron wanted a place that was just for research – for trying things out, “not for career builders or critics”, as he put it. He and Warren wanted CHCMC to be “community oriented” to encourage as wide a community as possible - which, if you think about it, is opposite to the notion of a centre.

Warren Burt performing with Plastic Platypus, 1979

… Music …

While much of the work presented at CHCMC was music-based, artists also experimented with film, video, performance and text-based works. Composers and artists moved readily between different idioms, discovering what might be possible, and trying out ideas.

CHCMC’s time-based artworks covered a wide variety of subject matter, but it was always with the intent of exploring expanded musical and performance paradigms. Themes and subject-matter included art, philosophy, politics, semiotics, structuralism, Indigenous themes and even explorations of the law. This was all before the emergence of Sound Art as a new artform in the mid 80s.2

Many CHCMC performers never thought of themselves as composers or artists as these titles were considered at the time to be archaic and pretentious and implied privileged positions that didn’t properly reflect what it was we were doing. Many of us didn’t have the traditional musical training that might have qualified us to use these titles. Many of us were quite young (around twenty or so) and had little prior experience of music or art-making, and of the wider world. As film critic and CHCMC artist Adrian Martin puts it “we were cultural dilettantes”.

While CHCMC was creatively centred on music, there was less emphasis on personal expression and skill and more on ideas and the tropes that informed how music sounded and how it was received by audiences. It was felt by many of us that musical expression had become over-codified and stale. Personal expressivity was considered to have become somewhat indulgent and pretentious, to be ‘referenced’ only when drawing attention to the banalities of contemporary performance clichés. Instead, a different kind of expressivity revealed itself: through our choices of performance materials, our framings, and through the structural patterns inherent in the novel music compositions, as they played out before us.

Although never openly stated, I remember improvisation was a problematic tool for some of us, and while there were artists who predominantly improvised (L.I.M.E., Laughing Hands), it was felt that improvisation drew too heavily on personal emotive tropes and skills that implied that the performer possessed special musical abilities and powers. However, listening back to this archive today, it appears clear that we all used improvisation techniques in different ways within our performances. I think it was rather that, at the time, we no longer wanted to emphasise its creative significance.

… Community …

Ron wanted CHCMC to be accessible to everyone. He, and many of us wanted to find ways to break down the invisible, yet powerful, institutional and cultural delineations prevalent in the musical community, and to work against the pervasive commodification of music, which, then was generally understood as being in two camps: either popular (considered unsophisticated, simple, appealing to many) or as high art (considered clever, complex and appealing to just a few).

Ron was originally keen to provide an opportunity for community groups from different cultural and ethnic backgrounds to perform at CHCMC. In practice though, CHCMC’s ‘no payment’ model didn’t attract these performers, who were used to earning income from performing within their communities, and so they didn’t stick around. So, as multicultural and community aspirations failed to materialise, the opportunity to perform at CHCMC fell to experimental performers, nascent and experienced, who could explore their practices free of the pressures of audience expectations. In this way, the Clifton Hill Community Music Centre came to provide a supportive space for developing artists and their growing audiences, which gradually coalesced into a kind of community.

Although it didn’t seem like it at the time, it was a very young scene at Clifton Hill. There were two distinct generations of performers: a generation that was around 30 years of age. This included Warren and Ron, John Campbell, Ernie Althoff, Herb Jecher, Ros Bandt, Robin Teese; and a younger generation of performers that were around 20 years old, including Adrian Martin, Maria Kozic, Philip Brophy, Paul Schutz, Jayne Stevenson, Robert Goodge and myself. Between these two generations there emerged subtle differences in approaches to aesthetics, compositional methods, and presentation. For example, Ron Nagorcka, Ernie Althoff and Graham Davis often performed on the floor within the surrounding audience, whereas →↑→ , The Connotations, Laughing Hands and Essendon Airport reinstated the idea of the stage, deliberately revisiting the idea of the audience/performer divide with the idea of unpacking and highlighting performance conventions.

The term ‘community’ was at the time, a loaded term for younger artists. Its social connotations suggested a music-making practice in which creativity and risk took a back seat to community building processes that relied heavily on sharing established and easily understood expressive tropes. Philip Brophy and I actually removed the term ‘community’ from the title of one of the season posters (Aug-Oct 1982), but this didn’t go unnoticed and caused some controversy, and the word was reinstated in later posters.

And so, at CHCMC, creative practice emerged and resonated through two contrasting ontologies: one that reflected an experimental modernist counterculture, practiced by the (slightly) older generation artists, and another ontology that employed a form of deconstruction and revisionism. The first ontology embraced audiences and performers inclusively within a wholistic artistic community, while practitioners within the second ontology – who might now be described as proto-postmodernists - were intuitively skeptical of modernism and what was increasingly seen as its pursuit of its exhausted utopian aspirations. Many of the younger performers engaged with this issue through processes of decentring audiences with slightly antagonistic reframings of structural and performative conventions, and experimenting with novel aesthetics. Both ontologies were looking towards alternatives to the modernist mainstream, but went about it in quite different ways. And it is these differences that made CHCMC resonate in ways that resulted in so much creativity.

(Post-modern practice also took on board new sensibilities arising from French New Wave cinema and post-structuralist writing, resulting in works that critiqued the pervasive commodification of experience.)

There were certainly many artists who didn’t readily fit into either of my reflective categorisations, such as Rainer Linz, who applied a wry, minimalist German conceptual aesthetic, and say, Laughing Hands whose performances were orchestrated with colourful percussive beats and tonal riffs and drones that utilised a wide range of musical styles with improvisational dexterity.

Many performers, including myself, were influenced by the progressive music course that had recently been established at La Trobe University. Other performers had been students at Melbourne Conservatorium and were influenced by European avant-garde musical styles that still dominated that institution: here I’m thinking of Malcolm Tattersall, Ann Shirley, Robin Teese, Roger Smith, Paul Turner and ‘The Carrington Group’ who heralded from the Dorian le Gallienne music Society. These classically trained artists brought an aesthetic that while progressive, always hinted at mid-century modernism. Instrumentation included violin, classical guitar, recorders. These works are certainly worth listening to today, but at the time they flagged a kind of music that I and others at CHCMC were trying to get away from.

Clifton Hill …

In 1975, John Campbell was enrolled in the new music course at La Trobe University and was also connected with the grassroots community radio station 3CR. John had noticed that an old run-down building in Clifton Hill, where he lived, had recently been acquired by the education department, mainly thanks to the efforts of a community lobbying campaign. The two-storey building was originally a boot-making factory, and then in 1927 became home to the organ builders Hill Norman and Beard, who used the space to assemble church organs, including Melbourne Town Hall’s massive organ.

The space, known as The Organ Factory, was administered by Clifton Hill Primary School, who were quite socially progressive, and who made the space available to other progressive users. John Campbell and Ron Nagorcka were able to successfully make a case to the school committee for a community music venue.

Most CHCMC performances took place in a rather gloomy room upstairs room that was accessible via an internal wooden staircase. The size of a small classroom, the space had a couple of high windows protected by metal bars and contained an assortment of old metal school chairs, a couple of small tables and an ok-sounding upright piano, on wheels. A old carpet covered the centre of the rough wooden floor. The lack of a stage or designated performance area had the effect of breaking down the audience /performer divide, which suited some performers. The New Theatre, a Marxist inspired theatre group had also become tenants at the same time as CHCMC in 1976. They occupied the much larger space that was also upstairs. Within a year or so, they had built a stage with second-hand theatre seating for an audience of 80 or so. They were happy for us to use the space, which then meant we could pit stage-based performances against non-stage presentations. We ended up doing more performances in the theatre as our audiences grew in size. Downstairs, there was also a much larger space that was occasionally used for performances and installation artworks such as those, I recall, by Les Gilbert, Ros Bandt and Ernie Althoff.

How Did the Centre Operate?

Clifton Hill Community Music Centre was a place that allowed many of us to perform to audiences for the first time. It also became a venue for artists who had a history of performing experimental music, like Warren, Ron and Chris Mann. Performers might vary their creative outputs, exploring new mediums: composers became film-makers (Warren Burt, →↑→), visual artists became be musicians (Peter Tyndall, John Nixon). It was one the few places in australia where a cross-artform practice could germinate and develop.

Performers usually had to scrounge gear, including borrowing it from university music departments like La Trobe University, which was easy to do in those days. CHCMC had been given a pile of broken recording equipment from the fledgling Australia Council (possibly arranged by Ron Nagorcka prior to my time), including a dismantled 24-track tape recorder, all which were pretty useless to us. However, a couple of old speakers in large boxes were pressed into use. Cheap gear was an important resource. Cassette recorders, toy instruments and more available instruments like guitars and drums and occasionally small synthesisers were the instruments of choice. Warren Burt, David Tolley and few others sometimes performed using higher-end electronic gear that they owned.

There were four performance seasons a year, these took place every Wednesday, and then when it got really busy, on Mondays as well. There were around one to four performers per evening depending on length. Performances could be quite long, by today’s expectations. A single piece could easily last for 30 to 45 minutes or an hour.

As there was no fiscal ‘contract’ between performer and audience that needed to be honored, performers could do whatever they wanted without having to satisfy the audience. Also, as far as Ron Nagorcka was concerned ‘no critics were to be invited’. While music critics are almost non-existent today, critics and music reviewers then were often connected to the big morning and evening newspapers, to various magazines, and to the underground music press. They held a lot of sway in the late 70s and early 80s. Their opinions influenced how a performer was perceived and positioned within the wider arts community. Some conservative reviewers might criticise venues and artists whose work they didn’t really understand or relate to, including those at CHCMC. Gradually, however one or two members of the press began to recognise CHCMC’s value, and became supportive.

It’s a small detail, but audiences at CHCMC didn’t always applaud after a performance – it really depended on the style of a particualr performance and its vibe. This is often the case today in performances, but at the time, this trivial fact was sometimes used by the public and the media to deride the centre, as they didn’t understand CHCMC’s challenge to the performer/audience divide. In a sense, it was felt at CHCMC that there was no longer the great need for performers to be rewarded by others with applause, for many in the audience were performers themselves and would be performing the following week. The CHCMC scene was also accused of being arrogant, puritanical or academic by those who never went. However, CHCMC was actually a relaxed and easy-going place, as I remember it.

Performer, Adrian Martin remembers it as being a very friendly place, where audience members gathered around the tea and coffee urn between acts to critically discuss the performance and related themes around what had just taken place. Martin suggests that for young, shy, often isolated, proto-creatives, like himself, CHCMC became a very supportive and upbeat place to hang out. Ernie Althoff mentioned often chatting well into the night in conversations that sprang from what had been heard and seen that evening.


  1. Humble, an important figure in Melbourne’s contemporary music scene, had previously founded the Electronic Music Centre at the University of Melbourne that for a time was housed in the Percy Grainger Museum building which was part of the Conservatorium. Despite its establishment, Humble noted that the center’s endeavors weren’t fully embraced by many of the Conservatorium composers of the time. Consequently, he sought refuge from the conservatism of the Australian music scene by relocating to Paris, where he collaborated with composer Jean-Charles Francois in the more experimental end of the music community. Eventually, both Humble and Francois moved to the University of California, San Diego, where they played pivotal roles in establishing The Atomic Cafe. 

  2. when sound art emerged in the mid 80s it initially created some agitation amongst some experimental music composers, as music luminaries like John Cage and Alvin Lucier were suddenly being claimed as sound art forerunners. (link) 

David Chesworth was coordinator of CHCMC between 1978 and 1982. This essay is based on a lecture presented as pert of Defining Moments, a lecture series at the Australian Centre for Contemporary Art in Melbourne in 2019.