Nocturnal Projections
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Nocturnal Projections were a post-punk band from Stratford, near
New Plymouth New Plymouth ( mi, Ngāmotu) is the major city of the Taranaki region on the west coast of the North Island of New Zealand. It is named after the English city of Plymouth, Devon from where the first English settlers to New Plymouth migrated. ...
, New Zealand that began recording in 1981 and split up in 1983. Often compared to British bands, especially Joy Division, with whom they shared a moody, bass-driven sound, although the Projections' guitar was less metallic and more ebullient than Joy Division’s. They also never underwent the exacting production of many such British bands.


History

Nocturnal Projections were
Peter Jefferies Peter Jefferies is a musician from New Zealand. He is known for his involvement with Nocturnal Projections and This Kind of Punishment as well as his extensive solo and collaborative work. History In 1981 Peter and his brother Graeme Jeffer ...
(vocals), his brother
Graeme Jefferies Graeme Jefferies is a musician from New Zealand. In 1981 Graeme and his brother Peter Jefferies formed the post-punk band Nocturnal Projections. The band released a few records and cassettes, and played regularly around their hometown of New Plym ...
(guitar), Brett Jones (bass), and Gordon Rutherford (drums). Peter and Graeme subsequently formed This Kind of Punishment, which played together through the late 1980s. Graeme would then launch Cakekitchen, while Peter would go on to release several solo albums. The brothers played in a series of punk bands (such as the Plastic Bags) before forming Nocturnal Projections; though none of those early efforts have been released, some of the songs (including "Walk in a Straight Line") would be recorded by Nocturnal Projections. The band’s first release was the 1981 ''Things That Go Bunt in the Night'' tape, which was recorded direct to cassette and released in extremely limited quantities, perhaps as few as 100 copies. Within the year they followed up with a second cassette, ''November 1981,'' which seems to have been recorded on at least a four-track deck. The band released its first records in 1982, a 7" ("Nerve Ends in Power Lines", backed with "In Purgatory") and the ''Another Year'' 12" EP. Nocturnal Projections' final record was a three-song 12" in 1983 (Understanding, Another Year, In Darkness). Peter Jefferies later despaired of the over-produced sound the band achieved in its only work with a proper studio. Two live tracks from this time would also make it to record: the expansive "Words Fail Me" (eventually reworked into a This Kind of Punishment song) on the 1986 ''Biding Our Time'' compilation, and the anthemic "Walk in a Straight Line" on the 1990 ''Xpressway Pile=Up'' compilation. In 1995 Raffmond, a European label, released the ''Nerve Ends in Powerlines'' CD of eleven Nocturnal Projections tracks, some of which had been unreleased. Buried at the end of the CD were four unlisted songs taken from the two cassettes. Songs from the first tape have appeared on the ''Hate Your Neighbours'' CD (1997), the ''Worldview'' 7" (1998), and the ''Move to Riot'' CD compilation (2002).


Discography

*§ recorded direct to cassette and released in extremely limited quantities.


Featured appearances

The group have appeared on a few compilations since the 1980s. The following is a list of these albums that have featured tracks by the Nocturnal Projections. * (1986) - ''Biding Our Time'' ('' Failsafe Records'') - ''Words Fail Me'' * (1990) - ''Xpressway Pile-Up'' (''
Xpressway Xpressway was a record label founded by New Zealand musician Bruce Russell (musician), Bruce Russell in Dunedin in 1988. Until it ceased in 1993, Xpressway released a variety of New Zealand musicians, primarily on cassette, but its catalogue incl ...
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- ''Walk in a Straight Line'' * (1997) - ''Hate Your Neighbours'' (''Zerox Records'') * (1997) - ''Move to Riot'' (''Raw Power Records'') -


References

{{Authority control New Zealand post-punk music groups Stratford, New Zealand Musical groups established in 1981 Musical groups disestablished in 1983 1981 establishments in New Zealand 1983 disestablishments in New Zealand