Fresh Reads, PLAY, Music Michele Griffin Fresh Reads, PLAY, Music Michele Griffin

Acoustic spirit

Whiskey SoHo is the Bay’s top-shelf blend of musical talent.

Whiskey SoHo is the Bay’s top-shelf blend of musical talent.

Words Shiree Schumacher

Singer-songwriter Waylon McPherson has been steeped in music since childhood – strumming his way through various bands and playing to crowds over the years with some memorable success. But a voice injury, and the pandemic, forced a hiatus. After time to recalibrate and heal his voice, Waylon re-emerged as Whiskey SoHo – a multi-genre percussive solo-acoustic act that’s as interesting as it sounds. Singing, playing and percussing on his guitar using effect pedals manufactured by McPherson Stompboxes, his own Papamoa-based family business, he produces a full band-like experience. His sound is funky, soulful – and just like a great whiskey, hits all the right notes. 

What led you to become a musician?
I can always remember being drawn to music. When I was three or four years old, and my dad put on a Dire Straits Live Concert VHS, and that's when the penny dropped: “Wow, so this is how music is made!” I began to learn guitar at 10 years old and was totally into it, but it wasn't until I was around 18 and I played my first live show that I knew music was something that I wanted to be a large part of life.

How did you end up creating Whiskey Soho?
I’d been playing the cover circuit for quite a few years but during lockdown, all my gigs were cancelled. This coincided with a vocal injury, and I was advised not to sing until it was addressed. After quite a bit of vocal therapy, I was able to heal my voice back to a point where I could perform, and in late 2022,  I started working on Whiskey SoHo. 

What do you love about what you do?
The biggest thing I love about playing music live is how it brings people from all different walks of life together in a positive way. It's an addictive feeling when you are playing in front of a crowd that's really engaged. I love my day job, which is a company my wife Shelley and I started in 2008, McPherson Stompboxes NZ Ltd. We work with musicians all over New Zealand and around the Bay, building, servicing, repairing and modifying musicians’ instruments and gear. We are a musical household 24/7 around here.

What are your music career highlights so far?
Being managed by Ray Columbus and having a single on the NZ Charts. Being nominated for best new artist in the Juice TV Music Awards. Performing on Top of the Pops with Chefu and Opshop. Performing live on the Good Morning Show. Rotorua Sound Shell performance to a crowd of over 30,000 people. Supporting Midwave Breaks on the Mount Maunganui leg of their tour. I have played many memorable gigs, and they all make up epic lifetime experiences.

What inspires your music?
Life experiences, random thoughts and ideas. My style of writing is all about the vibe. Songs can have several storylines that are all intertwined. Even though my songs have meaning to me, I would rather the listener have their own idea of what it might mean to them. When I was six or seven, I remember really liking a song, and watching an interview where the artist was describing what the song was about, and I felt like knowing the backstory took away some of the magic of what the song meant for me.

How is it being part of Papamoa's music community?
Papamoa and the wider Bay of Plenty is such an incredible musical community, supportive, encouraging and helpful. The quality of the musicians in the Bay is world-class. There is so much inspiration every time someone releases new music, or you get the opportunity to catch a live show.

What is your favourite instrument to play?
Guitar! I'm totally obsessed with the guitar and have been since I was 10! The entire Whiskey SoHo act is built around pushing the boundaries of what you can do with just one acoustic guitar.

Who is your favourite band or musician right now?
I love so many styles and types of music, hence the  range of genres I write and play. I love that there is something for everyone and more amazing music is being written, recorded and released every day. When I connect with a song, I can enjoy it, regardless of the artist who wrote it, or who performs it. Every style or mix of music has its place and has the opportunity to connect with people, and the big thing is how to give people the opportunity to hear your music.   

whiskey.soho

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Katchafire: burning hotter than ever

If you like reggae then you’ll love Katchafire, if you weren’t sure if you like reggae, you’ll still love Katchafire.

WORDS Nicky Adams PHOTOS Joel McDowell

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If you like reggae then you’ll love Katchafire, if you weren’t sure if you like reggae, you’ll still love Katchafire. These guys are the musical Moro bar, the experience is universally uplifting and leaves you feeling better than you thought you could feel. With their chilled-out vibes and harmonies that ease the soul, one minute you can feel so relaxed that you can’t even form the word stress, the next an upbeat tempo will hit, and you just want to dance till you drop. And when you look around you know that it’s not just you, but the world is dancing with you.

Katchafire has been around for over 20 years and is one of New Zealand’s hardest working and most well-known reggae bands, with a cool factor that spans audiences and age groups. A multi-award winning, platinum record-selling formation, they have made it big internationally, rubbing shoulders and performing with musical icons, yet when I sat down to speak to founding member Jordan Bell, there wasn’t a bit of trumpet blowing or whiff of name dropping. Reggae is a musical genre that has exploded worldwide, and Katchafire has been at the center of the big bang. Each strain is taking on its own identity and these guys are 100% South Pacific roots reggae.  Their unique formula blends different instruments and sounds until classical reggae morphs into mixed genre music that can be considered ‘an artform’, and amid it all the positive vibes just keep on coming.

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Brothers in arms

The band is made up of founding brothers Jordan and Logan, plus ‘lifers’ Tere Ngarua, brother-in-law Leon Davey and Roy Kaiki. Jordan explained that at the end of last year they finished off their latest single, Circle Back. “Definitely a love song, it’s about circling back on anything you love – it was a real summer banger.” The timing of its release was perfect “It came out just before the summer tours so it was great to get it out there live; the support for it has been amazing, as we speak it’s on a million streams and climbing.” Circle Back was worked on during lockdown, it’s a silver lining to a period where, in normal circumstances, the band would have been touring overseas. The other upside of lockdown was the extra time at home. The importance and influence of family is at the core of this band, and pulses through the lyrics of their tunes, from the purity of Addicted to the adoration of family and Aotearoa in Fyah in the Trenches. It’s easy to see how these tunes have been written on the road, when home has felt far away.

Katchafire creates what Jordan calls “good message music. It’s about stripping back, about not worrying – about family and having a bit of consciousness.” You can’t help but wonder about the dynamic of such a tight-knit group, but Jordan laughingly verifies that harmony on the tour bus is kept by rules and a fining system. The bond is clearly strong, and creatively the energy flows. Songwriting is helped by their synergy - they’re even on the same page with musical influences, “between us we listen to everything from Tupac to Lenny Kravitz to anything in between; R&B, Metallica, it’s all on the same playlist.”

From league to the bright lights

Jordan and Logan didn’t start life as muso’s – in fact up until teenage years life was all about Rugby League. Even when music came into their lives, it wasn’t an immediate switch.  As pre-teens he and Logan stumbled across a stash of their dads prized musical instruments hidden in his closet. Their father, a talented musician, had hung up his guitar, and embraced a life filled with church and family. He encouraged the boys to start with the basics, and a passion ensued. Around 1997/9 when the boys were in their late teens a choice had to be made – Rugby was subbed out and they ran with music. In what Jordan considers a defining moment for their future, their father, Grenville, rented a loft in central Hamilton where the boys could jam to all hours with friends. They began to score gigs and before long they were playing from Raglan to South Auckland. Initially a cover band, from the outset their love was of old school Reggae - in fact Bob Marley is still to this day one of Jordan’s key musical influences (Katchafire is derived from a Marley song). Growing up, Jordan says, reggae was “a forbidden genre – linked with dope smoking, it was a different religion from what we were doing. But at the same time, it was all around us.” 

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After winning a competition run by NZ record label Dawn Raid the group had the confidence to write their own songs. Hits Giddy Up and Bounce were the result, and led in 2003 to the release of Revival, the first of (to date) five albums. Transitioning to original music was nerve wracking, but the audience loved it, and the fan base followed them and grew. The success of the band has spread well beyond New Zealand, with the band garnering a huge international following – playing Glastonbury in the UK was “next level”. Of course, home is home, and the One Love festival here in the Bay is one of the favourites “it allows us to catch up with the reggae community and see how well the tree has flourished and grown. Not just here but through the Pacific. It’s good to get together and see how strong the support is and how the next generation has come through, for the musicians and audience.”

Overseas success has not blunted Katchafire’s love for this home audience: “New Zealand has a diverse palette when it comes to music, so we get a mixing of styles... it’s really interesting and works really well. It rings in our music, which as Pacific Reggae has more harmonies and messaging.” Talent, positivity, uplifting music and cool beats – this is why muso’s of all ages go mad for Katchafire. 

 
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The rise of the local rock star with his feet firmly on the ground

At the start, the band sat down and wrote on the back of a pizza box a list of things they wanted to achieve. Hit songs and house purchases were included on it – not exactly drugs, groupies and throwing TVs out of hotel windows. As Joel points out, though: “It’d be different if we were a group of 29-year-olds, but we’re not.”

Joel Shadbolt LAB Joel McDowell

WORDS Nicky Adams PHOTOS JOEL MCDOWELL

Like any self-respecting frontman, L.A.B vocalist/guitarist Joel Shadbolt has that certain something you can’t quite put your finger on, the upshot of pure talent mixed with a palpable drive. Add the edge that makes his vehicle of choice a Harley-Davidson, and it’s a heady mix. But Joel’s also a man with a firm grip on reality, so although he may perform to sold-out stadiums, he’s also happy to mow his mum’s lawn.

L.A.B is riding high on a wave of success. After a year of chart-topping brilliance, November’s Aotearoa Music Awards saw them pick up two prestigious gongs for Best Roots Artist and People’s Choice. They’re currently working on their latest album, L.A.B IIII, due for release in January. It’ll be their fourth, with the previous three making waves in the industry and gathering the band a following that (on social media, at least) increases by the minute. 

It was the 2020 summer single In the Air that created the seismic shift that took the band from successful to household name. It’s one of those tunes people just can’t get enough of, crossing genres and leapfrogging age groups to get everyone tapping their feet and singing along. It’s nothing short of musical gold.

Despite L.A.B standing on mixed-genre musical terrain (soul, reggae, blues, R&B, funk…), the latest album sees them really grow into their groove. Reflecting on this, Joel says, “There’s always a common thread between the albums, and like any band, the sound evolves over time. This album has more strings, which we only dabbled with a little bit on the last album, and we’re using a horn section for a couple of songs. We’re experimenting with different instruments, which in turn makes you try out different styles. We’re not a band that’s stuck in one place – we’ve got reggae, funk, blues and electronic influences in there.” 

I wonder if the pressure of trying to follow one chart-topper with another leads to a less natural or experimental creative process. Joel thinks not. “In the past, we’ve tried to write in a way that’d suit a certain market, going in with the mentality ‘Let’s write a hit’, and that’s never worked for us,” he says. “We figured out quickly that to write well, we just need all the instruments set up in the room and to jam as a band. That’s when the best stuff comes out. It’s interesting that as one song out of 40-odd, In the Air is what people gravitated towards. It’s not a ‘pop’ song as such. It was an organic, jam-an-idea-then-press-the-record-button type of song.” 

The thing about this kind of out-of-the-box success is that the follow-up is going to be hotly anticipated and expectations sky high. You’d imagine this would make releasing the new album a bit nerve-wracking. “Definitely,” says Joel. “But our approach has always been the long game – to be a band that writes albums, tours a lot and builds a solid fan base from the ground up. We’re doing what we love. Yes, all eyes are on us, and there’s the ‘Can they do it again?’ question, but we felt that pressure with the first album, which put us into the vortex. Although the second album didn’t do so well, with the third – boom! We’ve taken that same concept and I think the songwriting is stronger. We’ve been playing together for five years now, so there’s a very strong chemistry and that’s a key ingredient in good songs – a band that’s cohesive and works together. I think our fans are going to love this next album. It feels really cool.”

When Joel got the call from founding member Brad Kora in 2015 to see if he was interested in joining L.A.B as its lead singer, he knew it was a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. Never mind that he believed his main strength was as a guitarist rather than a vocalist – he jumped at the chance. Brad and his brother Stuart were already big names in their own right with their band Kora, and Joel himself had grown up a fan of their music, so he couldn’t sign on the dotted line fast enough. “Preparation met opportunity, and I was prepared to sacrifice everything for that moment,” he says. With Joel, Brad, Stuart, ex-Katchafire member Ara Adams-Tamatea and Miharo Gregory in the mix, the chemistry took hold, and the first album proved it was a winning formula. 

“Preparation met opportunity, and I was prepared to sacrifice everything for that moment.”

In many ways, Joel seems too grounded to be the New Zealand rock idol he’s become, although music has been his world from the start. Growing up in Papamoa, he went to the local primary school then onto Mount College, staying for three years before the decision was made to move him to Bay of Plenty Polytechnic (now called Toi Ohomai Institute of Technology), where he’d been offered a scholarship to study a two-year diploma in performance and production. On completing this, he studied jazz for three years.

“While I was at polytech, I went to a summer music academy in LA,” says Joel. “That was a moment where I realised that if I wanted to take my music seriously, I had to study on a higher level. At that time, you could either study classical or jazz at a tertiary level, and if you wanted to get good at understanding the harmony of contemporary music, that was the way to go.” 

The Shadbolt household was a musical one. His dad is professional country singer/guitarist and his mother is also a music enthusiast, boasting a collection that would make anyone with an ear for a tune weep. With songs by Jerry Coker, Van Morrison, The Doors and The Doobie Brothers the soundtrack to Joel’s early years, he still loves those ’70s beats today. Busking and playing in cover bands and other groups at local pubs was his rite of passage, as was the usual OE, which he spent in Cornwall.

Joel returned to New Zealand when his father fell ill, and felt a shift once his dad passed away. It was time to get serious about his life goals. He joined L.A.B the following year; five years later, they’re one of New Zealand’s hottest bands. 

The celebrity part of fame is hard to get your head around, says Joel. “You’re never ready for the attention that can be thrown at you – no one teaches you how to deal with that. The energy it requires to have your game face on every day just isn’t natural.” 

We talk about fellow Kiwi band Six60’s upcoming documentary, Till the Lights Go Out, in which its members discuss their vulnerabilities and struggle to cope with the level of success they’ve achieved. Joel can identify with how they sometimes find themselves in a dark place. “Your world gets noisy,” he says. “I used to sit and play guitar all day, but it’s like your reality gets flipped. I’m doing what I love, but now there are other things that are a part of that.”

“You’re never ready for the attention that can be thrown at you – no one teaches you how to deal with that. The energy it requires to have your game face on every day just isn’t natural.” 

Being a musician is, after all, not the same as being a performer. In a sense, the two go hand in hand, but the performance aspect is notoriously daunting for many talented musicians. Joel agrees that talent doesn’t guarantee the X-factor needed to front a band. “In the early days, I struggled with stage presence and confidence,” he says. “I worked on being more outward with my personality and learned a lot just by playing and being in a band with musicians who had toured on that level and played the bigger stages, just how to work the energy of the crowd a bit better, as well as my energy as a performer. That’s something I’ve crafted over the last four or five years. I’m constantly refining and analysing.” 

As seasoned musicians, Brad, Stuart and Ara have been generous with their guidance, and not just in a musical sense. At the start, the band sat down and wrote on the back of a pizza box a list of things they wanted to achieve. Hit songs and house purchases were included on it – not exactly drugs, groupies and throwing TVs out of hotel windows. As Joel points out, though: “It’d be different if we were a group of 29-year-olds, but we’re not.” 

Having been on the circuit for some time, the older band members were all too aware that fame is transient, and so is the influx of cash. To ensure financial harmony, the group set themselves up equally, in a similar way to bands such as U2 and the Rolling Stones. “It doesn’t matter who writes the songs – up the guts, it’s an equal spread through the whole band. The person who writes the hit song doesn’t get the credit, the band gets the credit, and everyone gets an equal share of that pie, which is key to everyone feeling ownership of the band and working hard because you’re getting paid properly. It keeps you accountable. We want to be a band that has depth; we want to be here for 30 or 40 years. The success is amazing, but we’ll carry on regardless.”

It’s this focus and work ethic that sees the band tour relentlessly. They don’t take their fans or success for granted, and continue to play at everything from small venues to stadiums and arenas. Covid-19 has obviously changed the dynamic, with the international side of things stalled for the time being. However, Joel doesn’t seem too fazed by this and social media means L.A.B’s still getting its name out there. Pre-pandemic, the group had been making inroads into the Australian market, largely via the ex-pats over there, and there are still a few opportunities coming up. They’ve got their feelers out in the US and Europe too. 

Joel has his head screwed on in some areas, yet he’s still a loose cannon in others. He had a minor mishap on his motorbike earlier this year, but it’s part of his rockstar DNA (and possibly his actual DNA – his mum is also a biker). His accident couldn’t have happened at a worse time, just a day before the band was due to open for Fat Freddy’s Drop in front of a massive crowd. Things weren’t looking too peachy for a guitarist with a dislocated shoulder, but despite being told he needed to stay in hospital, in true frontman style, Joel topped up on painkillers and whisky and played on. 

The ability to temper success with reality is in part what makes Joel and the rest of L.A.B such an awesome combination. Fame’s not the incentive – bringing beautiful music to life is what drives them. They don’t take themselves too seriously, and if this wasn’t obvious before, Brad’s acceptance speech for their Best Roots Artist Award well and truly captures their spirit. He told the audience: “Five years ago, I met Joel, I was writing this song and we had about two fans. I was looking for a singer and I heard this guy on the Good Morning show, and he sounded like a black man, so I looked at the TV and it was this ginga...”  As Joel basked in Brad’s humour, it was clear that a prouder, fair-skinned redhead could not be found in all of Aotearoa.

@LAB_MUSIC


FUN FACTS ABOUT JOEL

  • Joel’s 29, an only child and with the world at his feet, would still rather live right here. Town, country or beach? “I’m not fussed,” he says. “As long as I’m in the Bay, I don’t really care.”

  • If he could play with anyone, he’d play with Eric Clapton. “I’ve listened to him across his whole career,” says Joel. “His voice, his songwriting, his career has been massive.” 

  • What’s one gig he wishes he could have been at? “I’d have loved to be a person in the crowd at Wembley watching Queen, with Freddy Mercury singing and Brian May on guitar.”

  • He still teaches beginner guitar lessons. “There are parts of my old reality I don’t want to change and I love teaching,” he says. “So on a Saturday night, I’m rocking out to 1000 people, but on a Tuesday, I’m teaching a kid how to play a G.”


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