Something sad happened last week. The Checks, one of New Zealand's best bands, called it quits after 10 years. It's a crying shame, man. For starters, I never felt the five lads from the North Shore got the attention and that all-important break they deserved.
So they were never a big-name local band like Six60 or Shihad. Their hooting, howling, smouldering and trippy, The Who and Rolling Stones by way of Howlin' Wolf and the Stone Roses-influenced music was never going to be big in New Zealand because, in general, we prefer our rock 'n' roll bands a little more straightforward.
But they should have been bigger. They made some of the best, arse-shaking, interesting rock around. And Ed Knowles' snarling, soulful yowl is a devilish piece of work.
Live they were wild, cocky, and riveting. In their time they supported R.E.M, Muse, Oasis, the Killers and AC/DC, among others. And over the course of three albums they just kept getting better. After wearing their influences on their sleeves - but giving them a bluesy dance rock shake-up - on debut Hunting Whales, they released their second and most accessible album, Alice By the Moon. By last year's third album, Deadly Summer Sway, they had started experimenting more and their music had taken on a newfound depth - yet oddly they sounded more like the Checks than ever.
The excellent Candyman Shimmer transports me back to a blissfully irresponsible time, when I used to mooch around in baggy jeans to the Stone Roses and Happy Mondays, whereas the dark, dirgy soul rock of Black Frog is a cool, swaggering beauty.