The Dissociatives' founders, Daniel Johns of Silverchair and Paul Mac of Itch-E and Scratch-E met in 1997 when Mac remixed Silverchair's track, "Freak". Later that year Mac appeared on-stage with Johns' group in Sydney as a guest DJ. In the following year Mac contributed keyboards to Silverchair's album Neon Ballroom. In 2000, during their respective bands' hiatus, Johns and Mac recorded a track at Mac's home studio in Blue Mountains.[1] Later Mac travelled to Merewether to help Johns install an eight-track home studio, where they recorded more tracks.[1]
I Can't Believe It's not Rock is the self-titled debut extended play of Johns and Mac's experimental project of the same name. It was released on 1 December 2000 and contains five tracks written and recorded by Johns and Mac for their own amusement. After the tracks were completed, the duo decided to issue the work.[2] Mac later explained, "When we were making this music we never thought anybody else would ever hear it. It was just stuff we were doing for ourselves. Once it was done though we liked how it had turned out so we started talking about releasing it even though, as the name suggests, it probably isn't what people expect from either of us."
Both Johns and Mac were signed to Eleven: A Music Company, which issued, I Can't Believe It's not Rock online. It is the first release by the new label and was co-produced by Johns and Mac.[3] The five tracks were streamed for free from their website, icantbelieveitsnotrock.com and were available for paid download. A limited number of CDs were available through Silverchair's fan club, the LAS.[4] The group appeared in ABC-TV's drama series, Love Is a Four Letter Word (2001), as a pub band in "Episode 13" and performed material from the EP.[5]
2003–2005: The making of The Dissociatives album and hiatus
In mid-2003, Johns and Mac formed the Dissociatives as an alternative rock duo,[1] and they issued a self-titled album on 5 April 2004.[6] They recorded basic tracks in London, finishing them off in Sydney and Newcastle. The pair produced all the instrumental tracks and vocals themselves with Johns writing lyrics and recording them in Newcastle. Johns described its music and lyrics in the Australian edition of Rolling Stone (April 2004): "The music is, for me, a combination of excitement, happiness, rambunctiousness and viciousness, done to whimsy." "I'd add with a hint of melancholy, but it's more outweighed by joy," added Mac.
The pair, in an interview on Rove Live in 2004, described the musical journey of the Dissociatives, as "definitely not a side project" and that they plan to release more music in the future. However, the band have been on hiatus since 2005 due to focussing on their main projects (Silverchair, the Presets, Johns' solo work), and they have not provided plans for future recordings or performances.
Discography and appearances
Studio albums
List of studio albums, with selected chart positions and certifications
Spicks and Specks (2005); performed and produced the title music for this Australian TV show, which is a cover version of the Bee Gees' single of the same name.
The APRA Music Awards are several award ceremonies run in Australia by Australasian Performing Right Association to recognise songwriting skills, sales and airplay performance by its members annually. Songwriter of the Year is voted by APRA's Board of Writer and Publisher Directors rewarding the songwriter who has recorded the most impressive body of work in the previous year.