Flame Trees Explained

Flame Trees
Cover:Cold Chisel Flame Trees.jpg
Type:single
Artist:Cold Chisel
Album:Twentieth Century
B-Side:"River Deep Mountain High" (Live)
Released:August 1984
Recorded:1983
Genre:Pub rock
Length:4:24
Label:WEA
Prev Title:Twentieth Century
Prev Year:1984
Next Title:Misfits
Next Year:1991

"Flame Trees" is a song by Australian pub rock band Cold Chisel from their 1984 album Twentieth Century. One of their best known songs, it was written by drummer Steve Prestwich and keyboardist Don Walker. On its release it reached No. 26 on the Kent Music Report Singles Chart.[1] It resurfaced in August 2011 due to download sales, peaking at No. 54 on the ARIA chart.

In January 2018, as part of Triple M's "Ozzest 100" of the 'most Australian' songs of all time, "Flame Trees" was ranked number 12.[2]

Background

According to the band's official website, Walker's inspiration for the lyrics was a combination of his memories of Grafton where he had lived as a youth, and of his romantic dreams. The music had already been written, on a bass, by Prestwich. The song was then played to Walker, "in assorted back rooms" with Prestwich asking, "Got any words for this?"[3] Walker noted, "When I received it with no words, I could tell it had an emotional profile – it gathers up the threads; there's a big key change if you can fire a cannon ball through the park on the key change you have a winner."[4] Ian Moss said, "The next day, after having like an hour's sleep, Don came in with this fantastic story. Don's one of those uni student dudes who's like, 'This project's got to be in, so I'll get it done by hook or by crook.'"[5] Prestwich said, "When I heard Don's lyrics, I told him, 'Mate, I don't know if they're right for the music.' I've grown used to them now."[6] Walker later said, "I don't think it was the story he was expecting. He wasn't overjoyed when he heard the lyrics."[7]

Walker later said, "In my mind, it’s a northern New South Wales song. But there’s a lot of people who love that song and in their minds, it’s set in their home towns. A lot of people finish up away from where they come from." Elsewhere, Walker noted that the song was "not fiction",[8] and about, "returning home after some success in the big city".[9]

The phrase that appears in the chorus, "nothing else could set fire to this town", refers back to the Cold Chisel song "Merry Go Round". Walker said, "it's got this phrase in it 'I'm going to set fire to the town'. We played that every night as we went from clubs to stadiums and every town around the place. "Flame Trees" was a song that was written at the end of our career, pretty much as we were breaking up. It only appears in two songs, once at the beginning of our ascent and once when the band was in a death dive."[10]

The reference to flame trees instead of the jacarandas for which Grafton is famous, due to its annual Jacaranda Festival, is partly because of a TV miniseries, the BBC's The Flame Trees of Thika (1981), starring Hayley Mills, "an old flame of the lyricist's dreams".[11] Elsewhere, Walker claimed the use was because one of his bandmates was "very sexually attracted to Hayley Mills". However, Grafton is well known for its many specimens of the Australian native rainforest tree Brachychiton acerifolius, commonly known as the Illawarra Flame Tree, which along with the more pervasive, introduced poincianas and the town's famous (also introduced) jacarandas, set its streets ablaze every spring.

Moss's then-girlfriend, Megan Williams, provides backing vocals. Prestwich had been replaced by Ray Arnott for the album Twentieth Century, but "Flame Trees" was one of three songs to feature Prestwich, based on a demo he had recorded before his departure.[12] Prestwich was asked to come into the studio for the recording and made many of the production decisions, including flying Venetta Fields in for backing vocals.

Music video

The video of the song (directed by Kimble Rendall)[13] was filmed in Oberon, New South Wales. It portrays a young man returning to his home town, meeting old friends, and remembering a past lover. The members of Cold Chisel have bit parts, except for Jimmy Barnes, who only appears courtesy of some footage from The Last Stand. Barnes said, "The band was arguing so much that "Flame Trees" and the making of the clip, well, they never even told me, that's why I wasn't in it - the band weren't even talking to me at that point."[14]

Reception

The Sydney Morning Herald asked, "Is it a love song? If so, to what? It's undoubtedly one of the great Australian rock songs, but what is it? It's equally nostalgia, longing and love. A man goes back to the Australian bush town where he was raised and feels nostalgia at what he recalls, but distaste at how little things have changed."[15]

Recording credits

Cover versions

Flame Trees
Cover:Flametreesblasko.jpg
Type:single
Artist:Sarah Blasko
Released:18 March 2006
Genre:Indie pop, Soft rock
Length:5:23
Label:Dew Process
Producer:Jim Moginie & Wayne Connolly
Prev Title:Don't U Eva
Prev Year:2004

Notes and References

  1. Book: David Kent . Australian Chart Book 1970-1992. 1993. 72. Australian Chart Book . St Ives, New South Wales . 0-646-11917-6.
  2. News: Musicfeeds. Here Are The Songs That Made Triple M's 'Ozzest 100'. 4 January 2020. 27 January 2018.
  3. Web site: 50-years on Cold Chisel hit the road . abc.net.au.
  4. News: Echo Daily . Interview with Don Walker .
  5. Book: Mark Opitz . Luke Wallis . Jeff Jensen . Sophisto-Punk. 2012. 186 . Ebury Press . North Sydney . 9781742757933.
  6. Book: Anthony O'Grady . Cold Chisel: The Pure Stuff. 2001. Allen & Unwin. 265 . . 1-86508-196-5.
  7. Web site: ABC . Don Walker on the Cold Chisel classic, Flame Trees . 11 November 2019 .
  8. Web site: Neighbourhood Paper . Here's As Good As Anywhere. Colin Gore. 19 July 2017.
  9. Web site: texdonandcharlie.com. Bio. 8 September 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170908220255/http://texdonandcharlie.com/bio/.
  10. News: Canberra Times . Don Walker: the man behind some of Cold Chisel's (and Australia's) best songs. Glen Humphries .
  11. Web site: https://web.archive.org/web/20080829152708/http://www.coldchisel.com.au/petrolheads.html . Cold Chisel – Petrolheads . Creswell . Toby . Toby Creswell . 29 August 2008 . 9 September 2014 . Cold Chisel Official Website . Note: The wording of the source indicates that Walker had previously fantasised about a romance with Ms Mills: not that there was actual romantic involvement between the two. The source contains spelling errors: instead of "Thika", it calls the work The Flame Trees of Thaw; its author, given as "Tony" Creswell, is Toby Creswell. He is named in another part of the site (see History).
  12. Book: Jimmy Barnes . Working Class Man . 2017 . HarperCollins. 978-1460752142. 244.
  13. Web site: Music Video Database entry on Kimble Rendall . mvdbase.com . 2008-01-10 . 22 October 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121022185442/http://www.mvdbase.com/tech.php?last=Rendall&first=Kimble . dead .
  14. Book: Jimmy Barnes. Icons of Australian Music: Jimmy Barnes. 2008. 59. roving eye . Springwood, New South Wales . 978-0-9804495-0-1.
  15. News: . Heart of the nation. Chris Johnston.
  16. Book: Kent, David. David Kent (historian)

    . David Kent (historian). Australian Chart Book 1970–1992. Illustrated. Australian Chart Book. St Ives, N.S.W.. 1993. 68. 0-646-11917-6.