As the cult of
Cave grows, more and more non-Australian music fans may discover
the Boys Next Door and their lone album, 1979's Door, Door. Singer
Nick Cave, guitarist/multi-instrumentalist
Mick Harvey, bassist
Tracy Pew, and drummer Phil Calvert were disaffected, dissatisfied teenagers growing up in a middle-class section of Melbourne, listening to hard rockin' glam acts like the Sensational Alex Harvey Band and
Alice Cooper. (It won't surprise anyone to find out that
Cave was also informed by country luminaries
Johnny Cash and Hank Williams.) They uprooted themselves from the "right" side of the tracks and settled down comfortably with the junkies and prostitutes in an appropriately run-down area. As the rising tide of punk began to crash on Australia's shores,
the Boys' realized that this was the proper direction for their chaotic, anarchic energies, and homegrown punk heroes like
the Saints and
Radio Birdman greatly influenced their musical direction.
They started working their way towards the top of the musical heap, their live shows quickly becoming notorious as chaotic, noisy, and nasty affairs -- characteristics the musicians would later push to the breaking point as
the Boys Next Door. This sheer recklessness garnered them a following, the buzz eventually leading to a deal with Mushroom, a successful Australian independent record label. The band recorded six songs before having the good fortune of stumbling upon Rowland S. Howard, who became the band's second guitarist and author of their most popular composition, "Shivers." That song, along with three others, was recorded in later sessions that featured the revamped lineup. "Shivers" became something of an anthem among the Australian punks and was the musical centerpiece in the bleak film Dogs in Space, concerning the sordid lives of a handful of young people in a Melbourne slum. The album that appeared, Door, Door, combined the two recording sessions but was not well-loved by the musicians, as they felt the results were too poppy (comparing it to any of their later releases, especially the albums
Prayers on Fire and
Junkyard, one can't help but agree).
They were rapidly changing their style, anyway, as well as their name: in 1980 they released their first album as the
Birthday Party, and soon hightailed it from Australia to London.
–
Will Lerner, Rovi