Todd Hunter's recall
is not rose-coloured. "I didn’t think I'd ever come
back to Dragon," says the band's founder, bassist,
sometime songwriter and sole survivor. "There are
such mixed memories for me. There were incredible
highs but too many people died. I've spent the last
10 years ignoring the whole thing, it was a lot
simpler to get on with film and TV scoring and leave
Dragon as a distant memory."
History, of course,
cherishes a very different view of New Zealand's
beleaguered but brilliant pop chart journeymen. A
glance down the track list of Sunshine to Rain
recalls one of the most astonishing and emotional
legacies in Australasian pop history.
Elegantly recast in
classic Liberation Blue Acoustic style, it's a trove
of criminally rare nuggets sifted from certified
radio gold; 16 indelible strokes of pop genius
handled with exceptional care and affection by a new
acoustic line-up fronted by the superb voice of NZ
rock veteran, Mark Williams.
"In mid 2005 I played
bass for a concert at my sons' school and it was
such an incredibly enjoyable experience," Todd says.
"It really brought it home to me, This is what you
do, you big idiot! But, when one decides that it
might be fun to play again, the big question is,
Well, play what? Then I thought, Hmmm, I know a
bunch of songs…"
Funnily enough, a few
million other people know the same ones. Are You Old
Enough. Still In Love With You. April Sun in Cuba.
Sunshine. Rain. Magic. Speak No Evil. Celebrate. The
titles are a travelogue of teenage dreams. Each
chorus is seared like an iconic photo into the
collective unconscious of a generation.
The travesty is that
much of Dragon's music had vanished from CD racks
even before the passing of Todd's brother, singer
Marc Hunter, in '98. The fresh ears and obvious
talents of Canadian guitarist Bruce Reid were
crucial in rearranging a revered back catalogue with
an ear for timeless magic. Drummer Pete Drummond
completed an unexpectedly joyful exercise in musical
archaeology.
"What is the essence
of the song? That was the starting point," says
Todd. "Some things came together in surprising ways.
Get That Jive, the chords are back to front, but it
works. Are You Old Enough? is one live take." It's
also one take that proves Mark Williams a worthy
heir to some very large shoes.
Speaking of which… it
was John Farnham who asked Todd and Johanna Pigott
to write him a song in '86, but it was Marc Hunter
who sang the demo for Age Of Reason in Bondi that
year. Here, for the first time, is his version, a
posthumous duet with his gifted 17-year-old
daughter, Isabella. To say the least, it's a
mesmerising moment of musical and emotional closure.
" This record
resolves a lot of things. It gathers everything
together in a way that feels right," says Todd.
"Everything was so dissolute, out in the ether. It
was also about doing all the songs in a unified way,
without all the pomp and weird production quirks of
former decades.
"There's just
something that’s so enjoyable about getting each
song into a shape where you can just play it through
and sing your heart out, with an acoustic guitar.
It's been working the same way live," he adds. "The
audience, roaring the songs as loud as the band.
It’s sort of like coming home."