Song to the Siren

| Bendigo Weekly | 13-May-2011 3.12

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NEW DOORS OPEN: Aimee Volkofsky – from the airwaves to the stage. Photo: ANDREW PERRYMAN at the Gold Dust Lounge Bendigo
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ABC presenter Aimee Volkofsky has stepped out of the studio and into the stage spotlight.

Recently I went to a fundraiser gig at the Newmarket Hotel, for Bendigo’s local Roller Derby League, the Dragon City Derby Dolls.
Billed as an Undead Dress-Up Party, there were roughly 30 undead-types milling about the crowd in various states of decay.
Several local bands played, but one artist in particular stood out.  
A newbie to town as it turns out: Aimee Volkofsky.
You might know her name – indeed her voice – from ABC Local Radio.
For the past few months Aimee has been presenting Weekend Breakfast, getting up at sparrow’s to fill Central Victoria in on what’s happening weekend-wise.
Only that night – amid the atrophying flesh and car accident brides – Aimee used her voice to sing up a storm on stage.
Cool, calm and siren-like, she sang with the confidence of a veteran – not someone marking her first time on stage with a band.
Aimee tamed those undead spirits and conjured up those of PJ Harvey, Pattie Smith and Cat Power, such was the power of her voice and the comparisons which flew her way.
There’s nothing quite like seeing someone great perfom for the first time. How lucky am I?
In my own backyard too.
Growing up in the mining towns of western NSW, Aimee comes to Bendigo from Dubbo where she worked for two years at ABC Radio.
Needing a change, and with friends and family this way, Aimee decided to migrate south in early 2011.
“Bendigo resonated with me – the beautiful buildings and big wide streets felt familiar – plus it’s so close to Melbourne!”, she said when we met for a coffee.
She also revealed she hadn’t done much live performing.
Bendigo had been a bit of a launching pad.
“I’ve been writing songs for five to six years, recording in my bedroom and posting stuff on MySpace,” she said.
“You don’t get much opportunity to perform original music in Dubbo – only covers.
“It’s been liberating to play originals,” Aimee said of her experience at open mic nights at Bendigo’s Golden Vine Hotel (Tuesdays) and Basement Bar (Sundays).
Which is where she met her band members.
Drummer AJ ambushed her post-gig, insisting they jam after a great perfomance she gave at the Vine.
Aimee’s band – AJ, Ash French (bass) and Josh DeAraugo (lead guitar) – came together after only three rehearsals.
They sounded tight; moody, atmospheric. Perfect.
While fronting a band is a very different performance experience for Aimee – previously solo – she said: “It frees me up to perform songs in a way I haven’t before”.
Aimee describes herself as “lyrically creepy!” (one of her songs is about cutting off the legs of former lovers).
 “I love writing lyrics and telling stories and doing music to go with it – it’s good fun.”
And perfoming on stage is pushing Aimee to a new level.
“It’s a risk to take yourself seriously enough to get gigs and invest time in your music that way,” she said, getting quiet for a moment.
“And I’ve only recently decided to do that. Doing that in Bendigo – it’s not an intimidating environment.
“And there’s a good group of creative people here trying to make live music happen.
“There are so many people here eager to collaborate.”
And what does she have to say about her debut with a band at the Undead Fundraiser?
“It was definitely exhilarating perfoming to a room full of people in crazy outfits,” she said with a smile.
It was just as exhilarating for the rest of us, discovering a great new talent.
b.Entertained
aidan V commented on 25-May-2011 11:47 PM5 out of 5 stars
yeaaaaah!

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