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Rolling Stone AU/NZ's Greatest Australian Electronic Acts of All Time

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The Avalanches
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The Avalanches

When Since I Left You arrived in 2000, there was nothing else like it. A quarter century later, there’s still nothing else like it. The debut album from the Melbourne collective is both art and science. The art, a meticulous sewing of samples into a music quilt of timeless, original music. The process can be copied, but results, which can be heard with the title track, “Frontier Psychiatrist”, and others, not so much. The science? Open the album credits and study the source of its samples, and the attribution. 

Released by Steve “Pav” Pavlovic’s Modular Recordings, the release was delayed by six months to clear each sample — estimated to tally up to 3,500 in total. This album is legit, in every way.

Backstage before a 2001 sold-out UK show at Electric Ballroom in Camden, Robbie Chater recounted how a chain-smoking American publishing executive hit the phones and cleared those samples. Without her work, the album would’ve been sunk. 

“The scene at home is healthy and organic and has a momentum of its own. It feels like it’s on the verge of something really big,” Chater said. He wasn’t wrong. And The Avalanches played their part in tipping it over.

In the room that night was Pav, and Seymour Stein, the late Sire Records founder who would sign Avalanches. Stein had previously signed Madonna and the Ramones. What’s the worst that could happen? Sadly, a merger of Sire with the US division of London Records, a partnership that was later dissolved, was a disruption that hurt Avalanches’ US plans.

The album managed to insert itself into the top 10 in Australia (No. 5) the UK (at No. 8) and on the US Top Dance/Electronic Albums chart (at No. 10), and it was the only Aussie album to make the NME’s Top 100 Greatest Albums of the Decade list, coming in at No. 45. When Pitchfork published its 200 Best Albums of the 2000s, Since I Left You dropped in at Number 10. 

It was 16 years before a new album saw the light of day. An entire album of material was scrapped. Then, teases. The Avalanches contributed to the score of a 2013 King Kong musical, and in that year issued a remix of Hunters & Collectors’ “Talking to a Stranger” (renamed “Stalking to a Stranger”).

In 2016, the long-awaited second album, Wildflower, immediately flew to Number One on the ARIA Chart and Number 10 on the Official UK Albums Chart. By then, the original lineup, which included Darren Seltmann and DJ Dexter, had been whittled down to just Chater and Tony Di Blasi.

An acclaimed third album, We Will Always Love You, dropped in 2020 and won the Australian Music Prize. 

The 20th anniversary “deluxe edition” of their groundbreaking debut album arrived in 2021, featuring numerous bonus tracks, including fresh mixes from the late MF Doom, Black Dice, Leon Vynehall, Sinkane and Carl Craig.

Since then, The Avalanches have been toiling away on new material, with a recent social media post promising new music soon. Whether long-suffering fans will be treated to a precious fourth album, only time will tell. —L.B.