Tijuana Cartel new album and tour

Fans of Tijuana Cartel won’t be surprised to hear the lads have gone Gonzo. It was only a matter of time. Tijuana Cartel’s influences are so broad that a new album release that digs deep into the Australian counter-culture was bound to happen sooner or later. It’s called Pyschedelicatessen.
You might say the album’s been in the making for roughly forty years.
The seed for Psychedelicatessen was planted way back in ’78 when Double J broadcast a psychedelic road trip from Brisbane to Sydney called What’s Rangoon to You is Grafton to Me. What was then a ‘quintessentially Australian gonzo rant’ is now a cult classic radio play that intrigued TC’s singer/songwriter/guitarist, Paul George, for years. Psychedelicatessen is Tijuana Cartel’s tribute to the play and to its author, Russell Guy.
“I was strangely nervous about approaching Russell to ask him to use his material,” says Paul. “He was this edgy, gonzo hippie from my adolescent imagination so I didn’t know quite what to expect or what approach to take.” He needn’t have stressed over it too much. Psychedelicatessen does it for Russell Guy who still lays on the gonzo rant: “Songs like Kelly’s Existential Dilemma, Leaving London, Lost My Head, Spend Your Money and Black Magic Superstar chart a course to a place we’ve yet to imagine,” says the author. “This new album pings on cruise control as it translates, engages and navigates the worldwide plague of earthquakes, terrorism, crime, corruption, scoffers, mockers, volcanic eruptions and psycho-babble, while segueing into a groove that the Gobble-up Machine can’t follow.”
“It’s a new direction for Carey (Sullivan) and me,” says Paul, “but our audience knows us pretty well by now and they’re used to sudden changes of direction. It keeps us fresh and keeps the music fresh, too.
“It’s heavy on vocals which is unusual for us. It very nearly didn’t happen at all - it’s been bubbling away in the background for a couple of years, sometimes inspiring us and sometimes seeming just too hard.”
Says Carey: “We set out to make every Tijuana Cartel album completely different from the last, we like to take in new inspirations and push ourselves as songwriters and producers. It's just how we've always done it.”
The last word goes to Russell Guy and his play What's Rangoon to You is Grafton to Me:
“Where was I and when was it? Where have all the dingos gone? One-Adam-Twelve, We have an herbal freak in progress”.
“I drove off the page and never saw myself again”.
Fri 21st Aug - Maroochydore, Sol Bar - tickets from Oztix and Tijuana Cartel
Sat 22nd Aug - Byron Bay, The Northern - tickets from Moshtix
Sat 12th Sept - Gosford, Rhythm Hut - tickets from Moshtix
Thu 17th Sept - Hobart, Republic Bar, tickets from Moshtix
Fri 18th Sept - Melbourne, Max Watts - tickets from Max Watts
Sat 19th Sept - Brisbane, Woolly Mammoth Alehouse - tickets from the Woolly Mammoth
Fri 25th Sept - Cairns, the Union Jack - tickets from the Jack
Sat 26th Sept - Rossville, Wallaby Creek Festival - tickets from the Wallaby Creek Festival
Mon 5th Oct - Caloundra, Caloundra Music Festival - tickets from the Caloundra Music Festival
Fri 9th Oct - Sydney, Metro Theatre - tickets from Ticketek
Sat 10th Oct - Newcastle, Cambridge Hotel - tickets from Bit Tix
Thu 22nd Oct - Fremantle, Mojos - tickets from Oztix
Fri 23rd Oct - Dunsborough, Clancy’s Fish Pub - tickets from Oztix
Sat 24th Oct - Perth, Rosemount Hotel - tickets from Oztix
You might say the album’s been in the making for roughly forty years.
The seed for Psychedelicatessen was planted way back in ’78 when Double J broadcast a psychedelic road trip from Brisbane to Sydney called What’s Rangoon to You is Grafton to Me. What was then a ‘quintessentially Australian gonzo rant’ is now a cult classic radio play that intrigued TC’s singer/songwriter/guitarist, Paul George, for years. Psychedelicatessen is Tijuana Cartel’s tribute to the play and to its author, Russell Guy.
“I was strangely nervous about approaching Russell to ask him to use his material,” says Paul. “He was this edgy, gonzo hippie from my adolescent imagination so I didn’t know quite what to expect or what approach to take.” He needn’t have stressed over it too much. Psychedelicatessen does it for Russell Guy who still lays on the gonzo rant: “Songs like Kelly’s Existential Dilemma, Leaving London, Lost My Head, Spend Your Money and Black Magic Superstar chart a course to a place we’ve yet to imagine,” says the author. “This new album pings on cruise control as it translates, engages and navigates the worldwide plague of earthquakes, terrorism, crime, corruption, scoffers, mockers, volcanic eruptions and psycho-babble, while segueing into a groove that the Gobble-up Machine can’t follow.”
“It’s a new direction for Carey (Sullivan) and me,” says Paul, “but our audience knows us pretty well by now and they’re used to sudden changes of direction. It keeps us fresh and keeps the music fresh, too.
“It’s heavy on vocals which is unusual for us. It very nearly didn’t happen at all - it’s been bubbling away in the background for a couple of years, sometimes inspiring us and sometimes seeming just too hard.”
Says Carey: “We set out to make every Tijuana Cartel album completely different from the last, we like to take in new inspirations and push ourselves as songwriters and producers. It's just how we've always done it.”
The last word goes to Russell Guy and his play What's Rangoon to You is Grafton to Me:
“Where was I and when was it? Where have all the dingos gone? One-Adam-Twelve, We have an herbal freak in progress”.
“I drove off the page and never saw myself again”.
Fri 21st Aug - Maroochydore, Sol Bar - tickets from Oztix and Tijuana Cartel
Sat 22nd Aug - Byron Bay, The Northern - tickets from Moshtix
Sat 12th Sept - Gosford, Rhythm Hut - tickets from Moshtix
Thu 17th Sept - Hobart, Republic Bar, tickets from Moshtix
Fri 18th Sept - Melbourne, Max Watts - tickets from Max Watts
Sat 19th Sept - Brisbane, Woolly Mammoth Alehouse - tickets from the Woolly Mammoth
Fri 25th Sept - Cairns, the Union Jack - tickets from the Jack
Sat 26th Sept - Rossville, Wallaby Creek Festival - tickets from the Wallaby Creek Festival
Mon 5th Oct - Caloundra, Caloundra Music Festival - tickets from the Caloundra Music Festival
Fri 9th Oct - Sydney, Metro Theatre - tickets from Ticketek
Sat 10th Oct - Newcastle, Cambridge Hotel - tickets from Bit Tix
Thu 22nd Oct - Fremantle, Mojos - tickets from Oztix
Fri 23rd Oct - Dunsborough, Clancy’s Fish Pub - tickets from Oztix
Sat 24th Oct - Perth, Rosemount Hotel - tickets from Oztix