Goanna - Solid Rock (Sacred Ground) Reaction

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  • Опубликовано: 26 авг 2024

Комментарии • 98

  • @babyboomer6372
    @babyboomer6372 Год назад +24

    you have to read the lyrics and listen to the song to get the message. It hits where it hurts when you understand everything he is singing.

  • @peterdubois65
    @peterdubois65 Год назад +15

    Brilliant album. Still played regularly 41 years later

  • @lbd-po7cl
    @lbd-po7cl Год назад +14

    This was probably the very first song addressing the issue of First Nations people’s dispossession to make the airwaves, and was a huge hit in the day. Shane Howard (lead vocals) is an outstanding songwriter, and a man of genuine convictions. His songs have been covered by singers like Mary Black (Ireland) and John Farnham.

    • @mightyV444
      @mightyV444 Год назад +1

      I can't believe I'd never heard this song before today! Despite having lived in NZ for 20 years now!

    • @liveitup67
      @liveitup67 Год назад +1

      The Dugites expressed empathy to First Nations people's disposession in their song ''Part Of Me'' - though not as hard hitting as this.

  • @bodybalanceU2
    @bodybalanceU2 11 месяцев назад +8

    you have to listen to the words - this group was the first aussie group to tell the story of the plight of the indigenous australians - when this first came out in 1982 no one had sung about the invasion and genocide of the first nation people by the british

  • @wilks6
    @wilks6 Год назад +12

    Australian musos who dived deeper into First Nation's cultures came to make remarkable music & contributions to raising awareness of dispossession and inequality. Think Midnight Oil, Paul Kelly, Goanna, Hilltop Hoods who are all of Anglo/Euro descent yet tapped into Aboriginal sounds and consciousness to send a message to their fans and people in power. It is a rich vein. Midnight Oil's "Truganini," "Gadigal Land" etc, Paul Kelly's "From Little Things..." are great ways to get some insight into white Aussie's awareness. That's before you even start scratching the surface of genuine Indigenous music from artists like Archie Roach, the incredible Gurrumul, Yothu Yindi, (band) Tiddas, Briggs, Warumpi Band, so many others crossing so many genres. It'd be great for non-Aussies to learn more about Aboriginal culture, because Australia is gradually becoming a better place for us celebrating it.

    • @Sandy-dd4le
      @Sandy-dd4le Год назад +1

      Hilltop Hoods are great, well worth a look.

    • @lyssa-mareetaylor741
      @lyssa-mareetaylor741 Год назад

      Paul Kelly is I digenous and Greek

    • @rosiekickett2617
      @rosiekickett2617 7 месяцев назад

      ♥️♥️🖤🖤💛💛 I'm a proud Aboriginal woman from Perth Western Australia and ur comments are literally by bringing tears 2 my eyes so thx for ur respect & love for my people the First Nations people of Australia ❤❤

  • @jaccilowe3842
    @jaccilowe3842 Год назад +10

    This was sooo big back in the day. A very Australian sound and important issue of course.

  • @OnceWasRStrathfield
    @OnceWasRStrathfield Год назад +11

    Great to see a reaction for this one. In an interview, Shane Howard recounted being at Uluru (aka Ayers Rock), and having this sudden epiphany that he wasn't living in a country that belonged to him. He described it as some kind of rude awakening that all his life he has been living in a country that was not his own. From that time on, he took first nation's people and their land a lot more seriously, and wrote this song. He is still an advocate to this day.

    • @rosiekickett2617
      @rosiekickett2617 7 месяцев назад +2

      Never heard the explanation behind this song before & I'm a Aboriginal woman from Perth Western Australia and my people are the Noongah people of the South West region of Western Australia ♥️🖤💛..& this song means so much to many of my people so thx for reacting to this to great song...❤❤❤ Much love from Perth Western Australia ♥️🖤💛🦘🦘

    • @OnceWasRStrathfield
      @OnceWasRStrathfield 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@rosiekickett2617 The backstory makes the song compelling. Great band.

    • @rosiekickett2617
      @rosiekickett2617 7 месяцев назад

      @@OnceWasRStrathfield yeah it certainly does so thank u for telling the back story, as a Noongah woman those lyrics have even more special meaning to my people ♥️🖤💛....thx mate for informing me of the back story ♥️🖤💛

  • @bluecent
    @bluecent 6 месяцев назад +2

    This is a song of pain and betrayal. I feel strong emotions every time I hear it.
    It was released at a time when Australia was prepared to look at its dark colonial past.
    Shane Howard is supported by two of the most beautiful voices in Australia, Rose Bygrave and his sister Marcia Howard.

  • @liveitup67
    @liveitup67 Год назад +4

    Shane Howard is the leadsinger. He had been running The Goanna Band since the mid 70's. They were a country rock band from Geelong. Although he was dubious about having his little sister join the group, I think it was great that Marcia Howard (the girl not playing an instrument) was part of the band. Her accompanying vocals lifted them. I used to see them play in the 70's when I spent holidays with relatives in Geelong. They didn't quite sound like this in the 70's. It was kinda unexpected to see them suddenly pop up on Countdown. I literally yelled out ''Mummy, Daddy, mummy, daddy.... Goanna Band are on Countdown! I swear! It's The Goanna Band!''. Very rare time that I watched Countdown with my parents without any of us saying a word.

  • @sean---the-other-one
    @sean---the-other-one Год назад +6

    Goanna didn’t go very far, but this song stood the test of time. It was important lyrically, it had an infectious rhythm, and a great hook.
    Incidentally, talking of guitars, the bass player used a Maton JB-IV bass which was Australian made and this video helped put Maton basses on the map for a while. Maton had been going for decades with electric and acoustic guitars, and had been used by lots of famous players such as George Harrison, but this showed off the unique look and some of the tones you could get from them.
    Not many were made back then, and Maton re-released them again a few years back, but they’re not currently in production.
    The main Australian guitar company producing basses is Cole Clark and their Long Lady bass series is fantastic. Beautiful looks and tones.

  • @ChuckyLad
    @ChuckyLad Год назад +3

    a goanna is a lace monitor that grows quite large in australia. it is related to the kimodo dragon from indonesia. Aboriginals (first people) ate them as a staple. thrown straight on a fire without gutting and pick the pieces off like chicken of course.. Goanna is an entirely apt naame for an indigenous flavoured band

  • @horsefootrot5654
    @horsefootrot5654 9 месяцев назад +3

    Shane Howard the main vocal actually has a tremendous range his solo work...so understated and under rated!! Goanna great OZ rock!!

  • @kazz3956
    @kazz3956 Год назад +7

    Another great tune from them is Razor’s Edge.. Shane Howard on lead vocals and I think it’s his sister Marcia on backup vocals. Someone may be able to confirm that….

    • @paulharrold7277
      @paulharrold7277 14 дней назад +1

      @@kazz3956 the whole album was awesome I have the original album and cd. Spirit of place

    • @paulharrold7277
      @paulharrold7277 14 дней назад +1

      Yes his sister is Marcia and back up vocals

  • @wrrsean_alt
    @wrrsean_alt 9 месяцев назад +2

    The lyrics are important in this song!! It is one of my favourite songs and its message is very strong and truthful. You need to replay and listen to the lyrics. No they do realise it is the promised land - its what happens to their promised land when the newcomers arrive!

  • @The_Resistance_1961
    @The_Resistance_1961 Год назад +2

    And here are the lyrics.
    Out here nothin’ changes
    Not in a hurry anyway
    You can feel the endlessness
    With the comin’ of the light ‘o day
    You’re talkin’ bout a chosen place
    You wanna sell it in a marketplace
    Well
    Well just a minute now
    You’re standin’ on
    Solid rock
    Standin’ on sacred ground
    Livin’ on borrowed time
    And the winds of change
    Are blowin’ down the line
    Right down the line
    Well round about the dawn of time
    The Dreaming all began
    A crowd of people came
    Well they were lookin’ for their promised land
    We’re runnin’ from the heart of darkness
    Searchin’ for the heart of light
    It was their paradise
    Well they were standin’ on
    Solid rock
    Standin’ on sacred ground
    Livin’ on borrowed time
    And the winds of change
    Were blowin’ cold that night
    Well they were standin’ on the shore one day
    Saw the white sails in the sun
    Wasn’t long before they felt the sting
    White man, white law, white gun
    Don’t tell me that it’s justified
    Cause somewhere
    Someone lied
    Yeah, well someone lied
    Someone lied
    Genocide
    Well someone lied
    And now you’re standin’ on
    Solid rock
    Standin’ on sacred ground
    Livin’ on borrowed time
    And the winds of change
    Are blowin’ down the line
    Solid rock
    Standin’ on sacred ground
    Livin’ on borrowed time
    And the winds of change
    Are blowin’ down the line
    Solid rock
    Standin’ on sacred ground
    Livin’ on borrowed time
    And the winds of change
    Are blowin’ down the line
    No
    40 years later I still have this song on the cds in my car.

  • @SacredGroundJiuJitsu
    @SacredGroundJiuJitsu 8 месяцев назад +3

    Defenatly was not the first song addressing the atrocities that happened to our people. But this song was articulated very well! Amazing band and song.
    Should check out took the children away by uncle Archie roach.
    Bring tissues! ❤️💛🖤

  • @BostonAndProud
    @BostonAndProud Год назад +4

    Thank you so much! I still love this song, even forty years after first hearing it on KROQ-FM, in 1982.
    I knew this song was about white invasion of some kind, but I assumed this was some American band singing about the plight of Native Americans.
    Then I saw the video on MTV and kinda worked out that this was an Australian band. The singer sort of looked like Rick Springfield, one of the girls looked like a nice Aussie girl I was friends with in college, the didgeridoo present in song kinda gave it away, Martha Quinn sayng on MTV something like ''and from Australia, that was Goanna..''
    I only knew Australia for the wild life and musical exports (Rick Springfield, Olivia, Helen Reddy, Air Supply, Little River Band, AC/DC, Men At Work, INXS, Divinyls, Midnight Oil, etc)... I was so peed off that this song didn't get any higher than 60 on the Billboard chart. I thought Little River Band and Air Supply were boring, and here's a band with a really good song and that's how it performed?
    It deserved so much more than that!

    • @OnceWasRStrathfield
      @OnceWasRStrathfield Год назад +2

      out of curiosity, do you remember a band called Angel City? They used to tour the US and were pushing to make it over there. You seem to know a bit about Australian music.. I'm curious to know if you ever heard of them.

    • @BostonAndProud
      @BostonAndProud Год назад +2

      @@OnceWasRStrathfield I do remember Angel City (I also remember Cold Chisel - believe it or not)!!!, but they were never my thing. I was strictly New Wave, and Angel City were too close to AC/DC for my liking. No Secrets and I Don't Want To Face The Day were fine heavy rock songs, but that just isn't my wheelhouse.

    • @OnceWasRStrathfield
      @OnceWasRStrathfield Год назад +2

      @@BostonAndProud Great! They were called The Angels in Australia, but Angel City in the US. It's always interesting to hear from people that remember some of our bands that made an attempt to cross over.

    • @lyssa-mareetaylor741
      @lyssa-mareetaylor741 Год назад +1

      The band is called Goanna! The song is called Solid Rock....and there's the didgeridoo! What tripped you up

    • @BostonAndProud
      @BostonAndProud Год назад +2

      @@lyssa-mareetaylor741 What tripped me up? Probably being a stupid American living in LA in the early 80's might have helped? Sorry, but when somebody is driving along Sunset Strip and hearing unfamiliar didgeridoo sounds for the first time, one may ignore it until the familiar sounds of rock music start coming in. Goanna isn't going to scream Australian to me, and knowing that some of our DJ's were notorious mispronouncing 10CC as ''i ock'', I wouldn't be surprised if the DJ announced the band as "Joanna''. The song being called ''Solid Rock'' isn't going to scream ''Australia'' either. This song was a very minor hit in the US, and the record was almost impossible to purchase in a record store. MTV played the video, and I got a hunch by the way they looked that they were Aussie and Martha Quinn confirmed it. My impression of Australia was that it was a big British California with surfers and kangaroos and a lot of good music (with the exception of Little River Band, Air Supply and Helen Reddy).
      Other countries are still a bit of a vague thing to a lot of Americans. A friend of mine was surprised that Bryan Adams was from Canada because Bryan Adams wore t-shirt and jeans and was thin. He thought all Canadians were big burly lumbajacks, and I kid you not, he even said to me ''you sure Bryan Adams isn't an Aussie? He looks like an Aussie''. That's how dumb people can be over in the US.
      Have a nice day.

  • @isebmazo2140
    @isebmazo2140 Год назад +3

    Shane Howard the lead singer has a solo library as well. Walk on Fire, Come On Make Me

  • @antipodean_antonette
    @antipodean_antonette Год назад +2

    Probably one of the first songs (in the mainstream) to address this issue in Australia

  • @I_was_a_Countdown_Kid-75-83
    @I_was_a_Countdown_Kid-75-83 Год назад +3

    My sister and I used to see Goanna Band live in Geelong back in the 70's. They weren't ''people heavy'' in those days. They were more a country-folk band that you could line dance to. They'd do covers of old Australian folk songs. They were part of this new generation of Australian country bands which included Redgum, Brucelanders (aka The Reels), Paul Kelly Band, The Cobbers, Bushwackers, The Whittle Family, and others. We didn't even think they'd get anywhere outside of Geelong, so it was quite a shock to hear their name announced on Countdown and see them as a ''people heavy'' band with a commercial rock song. The whole ''Spirit Of Place'' album is worth a listen. I recommend trying ''Cheatin Man'' and ''Razor's Edge''. Their other stuff isn't deserving of a reaction.
    Marcia Howard also has some good solo work.
    Cheers,
    Hayley

    • @hanierfamily
      @hanierfamily  Год назад +1

      We've noticed that a number of pop acts from Australia have come from Country. Very interesting.

    • @I_was_a_Countdown_Kid-75-83
      @I_was_a_Countdown_Kid-75-83 Год назад +2

      @@hanierfamily Some (not many) Country bands would expand their sound for a wider audience and accessibility. The Goanna Band and Redgum were Country bands that lost their country flavour by the mid 80's, and would only have a slight pastoral thing in their music. The Reels ditched Country when they got out of Dubbo and into Sydney. However, real Country bands like The Cobbers, Bushwackers (who had featured English bassplayer, Pete Farndon, prior to joining The Pretenders), The Whittle Family and some others would stick to being just Country acts. The Paul Kelly Band were more a folk act than a Country act, much the same way hardrock group, The Angels, began as an acoustic skiffle band called the Moonshine Jug and String Band and New Zealand group, Split Enz, began as a folk group. As a Melbourne girl with rural roots, I feel I have to make these distinctions from time to time.

    • @mightyV444
      @mightyV444 Год назад +1

      @@I_was_a_Countdown_Kid-75-83 - When I hear "Country" in connection with Australia, I somehow have to think of 'McLeod's Daughters' 😄🤠 And speaking of Australian TV shows, I remember watching some like 'Hey Dad', 'Haydaze' and 'The Flying Doctors' when I was still living in Germany 😀 All dubbed with German dialogue, too! 😅 🙈

    • @I_was_a_Countdown_Kid-75-83
      @I_was_a_Countdown_Kid-75-83 Год назад +2

      @@mightyV444 I remember Hey Dad. The bloke (Robert Hughes) that played ''Dad'' was a horrible child abuser. You can read up on it. I was so sad because he played a main character in the movie ''ABBA: The Movie'', which had been one of my favourite movies in the 70's. ABBA were a phenomenon in Australia, and I hate how that guy was connected to them.
      I remember The Flying Doctors and McLeod's Daughters, but these type of TV shows I avoid. Did you ever get a TV show called ''Secret Valley'' or ''Skippy''? Gill and I used to watch those shows as kids, but naturally you get older and try to stay as far from anything rural as possible. We were city raised with a Country heritage.

  • @Robbo766
    @Robbo766 Год назад +3

    it was a pretty solid song in its day though i admit i didn't listen to their album until 1992, when I had nothing else in the car but a copy of spirt of place on tape
    great album... a quality band

  • @trufflehund
    @trufflehund Год назад +3

    If I may suggest a song written by Missy Higgins while she was sitting on Cable Beach (Broome, WA) called "Steer". Saw her live 2 Saturdays ago along with Paul Kelly, Bernard Fanning etc and she was excellent as always. Not sure if you have reacted to her, but "Ten Days" and "Special Two" had the crowd singing and very happy. She may be the most genuine and talented female artist you have never heard.

    • @lyssa-mareetaylor741
      @lyssa-mareetaylor741 Год назад

      @trufflehund Big call, and I don't agree. But I absolutely love Missy Higgins and also saw her and Paul Kelly recently. Mind blowingly mesmerising, both of them. Amazing storytellers. Makes me proud to be Australian.

  • @johnchrysostomon6284
    @johnchrysostomon6284 Год назад +4

    It's very Aussie when the drummer wears his favourite footy jersey - the Aussie Rules team the Bombers (Essendon Football Club)
    Goanna did a follow up album where they tried to sound more international> I have it too but it wasn't as successful. I like "Oceania" and it has a more radio friendly song Common Ground
    Shane Howard, singer/songwriter had a solo career after that
    I have a vinyl single of his Back to the Track

  • @Evie170
    @Evie170 2 месяца назад +1

    This is all about the unfair history of colonisation of Indigenous peoples. It is focused on Australia, but it can be applied to any nation that has a history of brutal colonisation and the dispossession and genocide of the Indigenous peoples. This was huge hit in the eighties. It was played in my primary school for a history lesson. Definitely changed generations' views about the history of Australia and other countries and inspired people's demand for social justice for Indigenous people currently, who still suffer from intergenerational trauma and discrimination in society.

  • @Grummash
    @Grummash Год назад +2

    The most important song of 1982

  • @jayweb51
    @jayweb51 8 месяцев назад +3

    You should check out Midnight Oil singing Our Beds Are Burning, and Yothu Yindi singing Treaty.

    • @hanierfamily
      @hanierfamily  8 месяцев назад

      We know Beds Are Burning extremely well. I added the other song to our list.

  • @wrrsean_alt
    @wrrsean_alt 9 месяцев назад +2

    Tou got it in the end!

  • @paulharrold7277
    @paulharrold7277 14 дней назад +1

    Let the Franklin flow

  • @johnblackhawk2951
    @johnblackhawk2951 Год назад +1

    This is about the invasion of Australia by the British ! It’s told from the native perspective. Look up the lyrics.

  • @ghichens3418
    @ghichens3418 Год назад +2

    Yes ! Brill ,havent heard this for yonks ! I was in Aus when this came out !There was a definate questioning of History narrative and often guilt about the way Australia was started as a penal Colony ! And the way it treated the Aboriginal race ! Most of it was not very nice reading ! But this tune is great ! I can hear Mick Fleetwood on drums ! and if you give the track "White Man "
    by Queen off the fantastic "A Day At The Races " 1976 ! Written by Brian May ! its about the American Indians !
    and White Man ! A must Listen to gem !Later! Cheers !

  • @babyboomer6372
    @babyboomer6372 Год назад +2

    Goanna - Cheatin' Man

  • @brettbridger362
    @brettbridger362 Год назад +1

    For the pronunciation, think of it as 'go anna'. Well done for picking this classic. A goanna is a large, Australian lizard.

  • @colrhodes377
    @colrhodes377 Год назад +2

    This works for me. I'd sooner listen to Paul Rodgers and Joe Bonamassa performing Walk in my shadow,

  • @isebmazo2140
    @isebmazo2140 Год назад +2

    Pronounced Go Anna.. an aussie lizard

  • @paulharrold7277
    @paulharrold7277 14 дней назад

    Common ground. Great song as well

  • @sean---the-other-one
    @sean---the-other-one Год назад +2

    Telecasters are just a workhorse. They’re simple and they get the job done.

    • @mightyV444
      @mightyV444 Год назад +1

      And they are fun! 😀 A friend of mine owns about a dozen electric guitars of all kinds, but it was his Telecaster which I wasn't able to put down 😁 I love them. Especially the 'Deluxe' version 😊

    • @sean---the-other-one
      @sean---the-other-one Год назад +1

      @@mightyV444
      Yeah, I like a Thinline, and also the Cabronita Telecaster.

    • @mightyV444
      @mightyV444 Год назад

      @@sean---the-other-one - Also very cool, yes! 😊👍

  • @mightyV444
    @mightyV444 Год назад +1

    'Butterscotch Blonde' is THE classic Telecaster finish! 😀 That's what the very first ones in the early 50's had looked like, and other colour options were available only later on 🙂 I love Teles, but my 14-year-old Son thinks they're ugly and likes other guitars like Stratocasters much better, especially shell-pink ones 😁

  • @antheabrouwer3258
    @antheabrouwer3258 5 месяцев назад +1

    Um!! You said you weren't paying attention to the lyrics. You Should! They are describing the pain of the Indigenous people when the white sails appeared! However, it's a complicated issue these days..

  • @mitchellbeston1033
    @mitchellbeston1033 11 месяцев назад +1

    Love the music but the lyrics leave me a bit flat now that i understand history better.

  • @dianneking3616
    @dianneking3616 8 месяцев назад +2

    😅what the point of listening to the music but not the lyrics. Yes you do need to listen a bit harder.

  • @johnchrysostomon6284
    @johnchrysostomon6284 Год назад +3

    How you butcher the pronunciation of Goanna is the best part

    • @hanierfamily
      @hanierfamily  Год назад

      how is it pronounced?

    • @ghichens3418
      @ghichens3418 Год назад +1

      Ha ha ! Thats hilarious !I was born in Aus !But What have Australia done to the English Language is more than Butchery !LOL ! I can still remember a rather heated debate about how the pronunciation of the town name " Launceston " is said ! he said Laun cest on As it is a Cornish place name I think we had it a bit longer than Aus ! So if you ever Go to either place ! The correct way to say it is " Lansenn"

    • @johnchrysostomon6284
      @johnchrysostomon6284 Год назад +1

      @@hanierfamily like telling someone named Anna to go
      Goanna
      Your one sounds like Guarna

    • @johnchrysostomon6284
      @johnchrysostomon6284 Год назад +1

      @@ghichens3418 It is a Cornish place name and is now also an Australian place name.
      If you want to really get down to going back to origins we say German not Deutschland

    • @ghichens3418
      @ghichens3418 Год назад +1

      @@johnchrysostomon6284 Cornish is a Celtic language ! much like Welsh ! Sorry has no German connections what so ever ! Place names in Britain do have a dividing line ! Dane law {Viking } the other side is Anglo Saxon {Germanic } The other areas Cornwall ! Wales ! Ireland , Some parts of Scotland {Hebrides } Are Celtic !

  • @jamiesaunders1819
    @jamiesaunders1819 2 месяца назад

    You snooze you lose...truth can't be put too the side..Progress stops for no one not even a first nations...look at the indigenous english being replaced by others..