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bio

Tunisia. An unexpectedly
cohesive mix of charming acoustic songs, rock riffs, and big crashing
‘70’s progressive rock orchestral flourishes, all wrapped
around lyrics presented in an intimate fashion. It really could be called
‘cinematic rock’.
So who’s behind the camera then? Enter Australia's Ben Craven.
How, one asks, did someone, on the debut album Two False
Idols, come to have such influences that obviously include
1970’s progressive rock music, a la Yes and Pink Floyd? Just blame
the parents. Ben grew up in an environment of liberalism and was immersed
as a toddler in the era of big, prog rock. His earliest musical memory
is of Dark Side of the Moon. A second early memory was that
the roll-up tobacco enjoyed by grown-ups listening to this music smelt
remarkably different from regular tobacco.
Armed with a musical memory different from most kids his age, Ben taught
himself guitar and keyboards and joined a series of bands, none of which
made it and none of which remotely played the kind of music that had
been burned into his mainframe as a kid. Nonetheless, the songs he wrote
accumulated steadily and finally, in 2004 at the ripe age of 26 he quit
yet another band and decided to write and record his own music, all
of which became Two False Idols. Highlights
include the pastoral majesty of Great Divide, “Mexicana”-flavoured
Captain Caper, the wry country rocker, Enough About You,
and the prog epic Golden Band, all infused with Ben's sweeping
production style.
Tunisia is Ben's realisation of the necessarily independent
approach to writing and recording this sort of thing - music to please
himself, leaving it to faith that it would find its audience, dispensing
entirely with the band approach. The result is a work of incredible
maturity from one so young. Influences range from obvious stalwarts
like Pink Floyd and Brian Wilson, to the likes of Bernard Herrmann,
John Barry and George Gershwin. Not to mention some less-fashionable
progressive rock hipsters. So we won’t.
After enjoying moderate success in Europe, where the album was released
simultaneously in stereo and 5.1 surround, Ben has commenced recording
his sophomore effort. Delivering on the cinematic promise of Two
False Idols, Tunisia is now going widescreen
- literally - as Ben blurs the boundaries between conventional songs
and orchestral soundtracks. The new album is sounding exactly like what
it is: someone revelling in the creative freedom that only comes from
not caring what you think others want and delivering what you feel instead.
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download!
New Tunisia EP
Under
Deconstruction

Debut Tunisia
album
Two False Idols
available in our Store
and iTunes

".. Catchy hook laden melodies,
brilliant songwriting, and richly orchestrated arrangements."
Prognaut.com
".. Anyone who can sound like Pink Floyd or Porcupine Tree one
minute and The Jayhawks or The Humblebums the next has to be worth a listen."
Classic Rock Society
"Craven really has come up with something very different and
ingenious here and, as such, ‘cinematic rock’ is pretty much
a perfect description." HardRockHouse.com
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