
Still Rockin' It - Cheryl Lee
Still Rockin' It - Cheryl Lee
What have AudioReign been up to lately? OR From navigating The Perfect Sea to sailing another galaxy with Rocket Man
Join Cheryl Lee - That Radio Chick on STILL ROCKIN' IT for news, reviews, music and interviews with some of our favourite Australian musicians.
Join me for a chat with three members of hard rock band, local legends AudioReign.
Ever wondered how a band keeps rocking through a decade of changes and challenges?
Jake, Alek, and Dieter spill the secrets behind their enduring success, from their hits like "Relentless" to iconic performances at festivals such as Big Day Out with Pearl Jam. Through lineup shifts and the setback of canceled tours due to COVID-19, their story of grit and resilience is sure to inspire. And you’ll hear how their debut EP “Find Your Way” set them on a path to musical prominence and how they've managed to crack the ARIA charts.
In an episode filled with laughter and insight, get ready for a journey through AudioReign’s eclectic musical influences, quirky backstage must-haves, and their rock-and-roll dreams. From the prog and death metal vibes of Opeth and Whiplash to jazz, discover how these diverse inspirations fuel their creativity and shape their unique sound.
They share the backstory of their newest release, their take on Elton John’s "Rocket Man."
Looking ahead, the band teases exciting plans for new albums and international tours, particularly in Europe, leaving fans eager for what's next.
Stay tuned for a conversation that mixes humor, gratitude, and a whole lot of rock spirit.
What have AudioReign been up to lately? Let's find out!!
Get out when you can, support local music and I'll see you down the front!!
Visit: ThatRadioChick.com.au
So we're ready, ready, ready as we'll ever be, we're rolling on this one, so I'll give you a clap.
Speaker 2:You know what to do.
Speaker 1:All right. You ready, yep, ready. Welcome to Writer TV. You're with Cheryl Lee, that radio chick, and I'm really pleased to finally get these guys into the interview room. In fact, we're at the hallowed halls of the Gov at the moment, and we're at the hallowed halls of the Gov at the moment and I'd like to introduce you to Three Quarters of Audio Rain. Thank you for coming in, gentlemen.
Speaker 2:Nice to see you.
Speaker 1:Lovely to meet you, you too, I think the first time we spoke about this was when I saw you performing at the Bridgeway I don't know how many years ago and I gave you my card. Wow, it won't happen overnight, but it will happen. And here we are.
Speaker 4:Yeah, I remember. Now that was several days ago. Ring a bell.
Speaker 1:So you guys formed in 2011,. So that's 13 years ago. That's more than a lot of marriages, so congratulations for that.
Speaker 5:For starters, We've been for like an old married couple.
Speaker 1:Thanks, yeah like most bands, I reckon yeah, perhaps you could introduce yourself and let us know your instrument of choice.
Speaker 4:My name's Jake.
Speaker 2:I'm lead vocals and rhythm guitarist Alec lead guitar and a bit of kazoo Dieter, I play drums and sing a lot.
Speaker 1:And then we've got Ashley Lovett, who is on bass. Who's not here today?
Speaker 4:That's right. Yeah, you got quite a bit of work.
Speaker 1:Yep no-transcript.
Speaker 4:these guys actually weren't in it, it was just Audio. Rain had begun with three other guys Actually, my cousin was the original drummer and he was with us for a little while and then Dita came in really early after that, you know, we heard about Dita. I'd asked around the traps for you know where's a good drummer and he came with a great set of pipes on him too. He was a good drummer and he came with a great set of pipes on him too, so it was a no-brainer and yeah, so Dita joined the band. We put out our first EP in about 2015,. Was it Alec 2014,? 2015. We had a line-up change just to make the band the band it needed to be. That's when Alec came in and Ash.
Speaker 1:We just advertised for some auditions and yeah, these guys Alec and Ash came through and they fit the bill and had the chops and the rest is history. Off we go. Oh, well done. As you said, 2014,. Debut EP Find your Way. And that coincided with your first festival debut at the Big Day Out. Relatively short space of time, really, from 2011 to 2014,. Playing Big Day Out with Pearl Jam.
Speaker 4:That's right. Yes, no, what a?
Speaker 1:What were you like?
Speaker 4:It was pretty awesome. What a day, wow. And I remember that day because it was like about 40 degrees, I reckon, and so hot wasn't it. But it doesn't matter, any amount of heat wasn't going to dampen our spirits. So I'm playing the big day out, and especially with Pearl Jam headlining Wow.
Speaker 1:And the deltones were there and ghost, and I think you played them for round of. I think it was the deltones, deltones.
Speaker 5:The deltones Damn.
Speaker 1:I think they've been dead for quite some time Cut and I think the deftones were there and Ghost and in front of the crowd of 15,000. Yeah, that's right.
Speaker 4:Yeah, it was awesome it was. It was a nice start to getting things rolling, for you know the rest of what happened and what is to come.
Speaker 1:Exactly, and in three short years. That's pretty amazing. Congratulations, well done, thank you. And then the full length album came out, which led to you supporting Skillet and Pop Evil.
Speaker 4:We recently played Amaranth, but that was after the new one. The new album dropped as well, kip.
Speaker 5:Winger show at one stage as well. Yeah, supported Kip.
Speaker 4:Winger.
Speaker 1:The whole Australian tour, wasn't it?
Speaker 4:It was here, here actually, it was, uh, adelaide one. Yeah, we got asked to do an acoustic set and we said, absolutely so awesome um and then skill it again.
Speaker 2:Well, actually we did score the the full australian support for threshold, but then covid hit and it got cancelled covid cancelled damage and there's a couple other things on the line and covid sort of ruined a lot.
Speaker 4:So yeah, covid's ruined a lot for a lot of people. But you know what, you take that and you go. Am I going to let it crush me? Am I going to let it destroy us?
Speaker 1:No, that's right, make the most of it, and then had to film the video.
Speaker 4:Relentless was actually came back because of COVID. That was us, our sort of message to ourselves, saying you know, this is it. We're not going to fold like a lot of bands, we're going to go harder. And so that's a reference to Relentless, because that's what it was about.
Speaker 1:It's all about overcoming the devastation that you know came to the music industry because pretty much overnight, not just artists but roadies and sound techs and lighting guys and everybody you know 18 months worth of future bookings gone.
Speaker 5:Yeah that's right, so well done, made a minor work. We had a list of about 15, 20 acts that we had all lined up with board tickets and then, just the days leading up to the full lockdown, it's just like oh, they're cancelled, oh they're cancelled. Ah, there goes the whole lot yeah.
Speaker 1:Yeah, I know it was devastating for everybody, but I think it's um. It shows you metal.
Speaker 4:You can either fold or, you know, get stronger, that's right so well done guys yeah, no, thank you, you're definitely getting stronger and stronger, that's for sure.
Speaker 1:What doesn't kill us makes us stronger, makes you stronger exactly Such a cold one.
Speaker 3:You are listening to Still Rocking it. The podcast with Cheryl Lee.
Speaker 1:I think we should hear that song right now. Here it is Relentless from the Perfect Sea album. And then we're back to speak some more to Audio Rain. Pull up in the chamber. Pull up in the chamber. Pull up in the chamber. I need a bullet in the chamber. I need a bullet in the chamber. And the release of Relentless here's another little feather in your cap meant that you were the first Australian band to go on the cover of the US magazine High Wire Days.
Speaker 4:High Wire Days. That's right, we were yeah, and I was on the cover and Slash was on the cover as well. I thought first Aussie band. That magazine goes everywhere, like Whiskey A Go Go and bloody. It goes to all the places and so that was a cool little one, of those cool little things you know.
Speaker 1:It is no centrefold, just the cover. It is no centrefold, just the cover.
Speaker 5:Straight to the cover.
Speaker 1:They didn't like my centrefold picture and then getting closer to now, because I think you're on a bit of a trajectory, would you agree? Yeah, we've got some plans.
Speaker 4:We've got a line we're looking at.
Speaker 1:So last year you signed with X Music, yeah, released a great album, the Perfect Sea. Tell us all about the making of the Perfect Sea. Tell us all about the making of the Perfect Sea. And that also led to another cover, didn't it?
Speaker 2:It did, it did yes.
Speaker 1:Heavy Mag of oh yeah, we had a cover. Oh yeah, another cover. Oh yeah, yeah, I haven't heard it now.
Speaker 4:Yeah, we've been like great support from media in general, you know be the magazines and radio stations and TV Hard Rock Show. They've been fantastic with us guys. But yeah, On Channel 44?. Yes, big shout out to those guys as well. But yeah, the perfect C was a long time coming because obviously, I suppose through COVID and that we had to well, we're getting things happening, keeping things going, putting some videos out to get through, and then the perfect C was the final. Final.
Speaker 5:We were actually going to do an EP, I think, and then we decided, nah, it was the same as the first album was just going to be a five-track EP. And then we wrote what? Another five, six songs?
Speaker 1:It was like oh, I guess we're doing an album album.
Speaker 2:I think, oh, damn it. We had some interest in, uh, europe, in, you know, countries like germany and that, but they, they were keen on a full album rather than just an ep. Yeah, so that's what we did?
Speaker 1:the writing of the songs. Is that someone's job? Is it a collaboration? How do you guys work?
Speaker 4:it is yeah, yeah, we bring riffs together. Um, alec will bring some riffs, I'll bring some riffs and we just work on them. Sometimes There'll be a lot of parts of the song there and we'll just adapt and add it or we'll build it together. Yeah, we usually workshop them in the rehearsal room.
Speaker 2:Yeah, yeah, jake will write the lyrics at home after we've sorted out some melodies and whatever.
Speaker 4:Yeah, and that's a bit of a thing too, because you know a song can be however you want it to be, and it can be a million ways. So getting the right melody in place when there's a lot of thought that goes into it.
Speaker 1:So there's no sort of. You don't necessarily have a methodology that you go with. Everybody brings their ideas and you create magic together.
Speaker 4:Yeah, that's right.
Speaker 1:Oh, you guys. So you all are into the heavy rock genre, Among other things. Yeah, Anyone got any secret like jazz or you know?
Speaker 5:Yeah like Sinatra, dean Martin, like Rat Pack, era stuff. Really, we've known each other like a decade. Come on now, gee, I thought we were friends, no secret Taylor Swift obsessions?
Speaker 2:No, not like that, come on now I like Kate Bush, yeah, yeah. I love the Beatles, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 4:I don't have any guilty pleasures, man, if you like it and it forms who you are and all that stuff you listen to somehow goes to funnel and even though we do heavy stuff, there's little things that filter through. Yeah, yeah, you know I love Hall Oates man. You know bloody, it's Erwin John's. I like a lot of 80s music, love them.
Speaker 1:Excellent, yeah, but when you play, you like to play go hard, go hard or go home to play go hard, go hard or go home.
Speaker 2:There's something about heavy music which just heavy, heavy riffs and harmonies.
Speaker 4:Actually, that's right.
Speaker 2:I mean me too my favorite bands are mainly harmony bands, the ones that I grew up on, where the drummers sung as well.
Speaker 4:Yeah, yeah which is why, obviously, in our music you hear a lot of uh, a lot of harmonies, a lot of melodic stuff, because, uh, yeah, it's only you know, you know there's all the growlers and the, you know the heavy, heavy, heavy, but, um, melodics, um, it's just uh.
Speaker 1:That does it for me still rocking that podcast with that radio chick, cheryl lee. Let's have a quick one, shall we from hall and oats? I can't go for that. No, can do. And then we're back to listen to more of the tv interview with Audio Rain at the pub. You can hear the ambience in the background, can't you? The big news, of course, is the first time that album has appeared in the top 20 Australian albums on the Ari chart.
Speaker 4:It did, yay, well done, thanks. You know our fans how awesome, Just yeah, a lot of hard work and a lot of support from everyone just to get these sold. And yeah, when we got the news, we hit number 15. It was like on our first week of release. That was incredible, wow, yeah. I mean we didn't get invited to the awards or anything, but you know.
Speaker 5:Not this year, Not this year we had our own awards show. You know, cracked that bottle of gin.
Speaker 3:We did, we did, that's right.
Speaker 5:The only gin that has actually not tasted like gin and I was able to drink it without you know being sad.
Speaker 1:Yeah, that's right. Well, good on you.
Speaker 4:I believe that this is.
Speaker 1:I'm going to ask you and we touched on it a little bit about your favourite artists and what have you and inspirations. But I'm going to ask you what's on your playlist at the moment when you're in the car or whatever, and you can listen to whatever you want. What are you playing? What are you listening to?
Speaker 4:Well, it'll be a mixture. Some days I might be out from the door and listen to the 80s, or I'll be uh, listening to, uh, mammoth wolf and haylen um, and also listen to the release radars of my stuff and the heavy stuff and see all the latest tracks that are coming out, just the new songs and the hard rock new songs that come through as well. Doing your research, well, just give a pulse, see what's going on. You know, yeah, so, uh, that's what I'm doing so quite eclectic really yeah yeah, from 80s pop and bop to the heavy stuff, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 5:Yeah, release right there for sure At the moment. I think most recently I've been absolutely fresh on Opeth's new album. Yes, me too. Yeah, a good mix of prog and death metal, maybe more prog than death metal, but you know, it is what it is, just always trying to absorb new music. So there's, I've got a few playlists that are several hundred hours worth of music that you just hit, shuffle on and you know see what happens. Yeah, yeah, and some jazz. Yes, actually, soundtrack to Whiplash, probably the main jazz album. I know that's pretty cool.
Speaker 2:How about you? Well, could be anything from Dream Theater to Transatlantic, to Nightwish, to Amaranth Awesome old-style stuff like the Sweet Queen.
Speaker 1:Yeah to Amaranth awesome old-style stuff like the Suite Queen, all sorts. Yeah, nice, also on Rider TV. We also like to ask you a really important question what is the non-negotiable on your rider? What do you just have to have in the green room before the gig?
Speaker 5:I don't think we've ever been given that option before. No.
Speaker 1:Oh, you're on the ARIA charts now. We've ever been given that option before. No, oh, you're on the aria charts now you've got a. You know, insist on a rider I have to put that on the thing now.
Speaker 4:Now you've said that you're gonna count this list of yeah, just random stuff, but there's got to be beer, doesn't it like? Yeah, nothing else. Like that's. That's bottom line.
Speaker 5:Yeah yeah, bad stuff. A thousand brown m&ms to fill up. Yeah, no, not, not blue ones. No, no, brown Brown ones are fine. I'm not overly picky on the colours.
Speaker 4:We're not divas.
Speaker 5:No.
Speaker 2:Well, I do look forward to the day when I can get some real beer, some German or Belgian beer, you know.
Speaker 1:I think you need to put your order in he's fussy with his beers. Yeah.
Speaker 5:That sounds like shots, fired you know, because it's an.
Speaker 1:ARIA award. You can up the ante now.
Speaker 5:All right.
Speaker 1:So you haven't got any like fancy cheeses and bottles of red, fancy red wine. You're pretty easy going.
Speaker 5:I'm pretty sure a lot of the times when we get to the green room, it's just the stuff is already there and I mean I'm pretty loud, Although we did have, was it streaky sounds?
Speaker 4:Oh, we were loaded. Yeah, we did ask for one and we got it. Yeah, they came out.
Speaker 5:They got like a little pattern there, like all right, so just put your names and what drinks you want on here and when you get back from the gig it'll be in your room and yeah.
Speaker 4:Four fridge of stocks.
Speaker 5:That was about as rock and roll as it got at the time.
Speaker 4:Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 5:I think I'll be asking for Dog. It's a little elixir I like. Yeah. Yeah, I reckon you can up the ante now. What's the really expensive shower? I need one bottle of Cristal and a glass made of ice and a straw, a skull glass, yeah. And then I won't even drink it. It's just because they did it. That's the main thing.
Speaker 3:You are listening to Still Rocking it. The podcast with Cheryl Lee.
Speaker 1:Quick song and then we're back to listen to the rest of the TV interview with the guys from Audio Rain. Queen was mentioned in there on one of the fellas' playlists. I don't need any excuse to play Queen, here we go. Somebody to Love, Somebody, somebody, somebody somebody, can anybody find me? Somebody to love. How are we going for time Mark? 16 minutes 13 seconds. Oh, we've got plenty of time, plenty of time, yeah.
Speaker 1:Did you guys have anything that you particularly would like me to ask you, any topics that you would like to discuss, because I've got a couple up my sleeve, but I thought I'd ask you first.
Speaker 5:You're the interviewer.
Speaker 4:I'm not. Yeah, yeah, good, all right. What's coming up, or?
Speaker 1:Yeah, we'll do that at the end.
Speaker 4:You're going to ask about videos, or?
Speaker 1:Yeah, all right, our vinyl. I'm just going to ask a little bit about.
Speaker 5:I didn't realise that tape got out on the internet.
Speaker 1:DNA, then videos and then what's happening, and that would probably get us through. So I just wanted to go back a little bit again, because I love asking artists this question when did you discover that music was your thing, that it was your passion? Is it in your DNA? Are you from a musical family?
Speaker 4:Yeah, I've always loved music, Like from when I remember. I remember my first favourite band being Kissed when I was six and I wanted to go to the concert in Adelaide but my parents wouldn't take me because we lived far, far away. And I was like, yeah, it was just six, yeah, it was when I was six, that's right, and yeah, we can't tell you. But yeah, all the way through always just been into music. You know, at school I should be listening. I was drawing Eddie from Iron. You know pictures in my class my dad used to be in an album club vinyls and they'd bring slide vinyls would come in and he'd keep it on the stand back. So we were always playing records. First band at 14, as soon as I could get into a band, you know, played the drums, school musicals and stuff. So it was always going to be that way.
Speaker 1:And when did you find?
Speaker 4:out Well, I suppose. Well, you know, it's just something you do when you like music. You just sort of always pick up an acoustic guitar and play it here and there. You know, don't get me wrong, I'm still no bloody wild guitarist, but I do what I need to do and it's fun. Everyone wants to. You know, everyone fizzles around guitar. Yeah, yeah, but yeah, singing was the main thing. So I suppose once you've got a dream, if you it, you're always going to. You know you're not going to give it up, are you?
Speaker 1:Was there ever a plan B? Or once you picked up that guitar and that mic, that was it. Oh, you had to have real jobs.
Speaker 4:You know there's only a handful of million of us that get to become super rock stars that can. You know even some of the big bands. These days they're out and you know their names, but they're making just the same as a wage, same as anyone else in a normal job. So it's hard work being in a band. You don't do it for the money, you do it for the love. That's right, passionate, yeah. And if you just happen to be that lucky one that gets a good break and starts a good event, you know that's super cool. You listening gods.
Speaker 1:Rock gods.
Speaker 4:Yeah, so that's me.
Speaker 1:And Alec, when did you discover music was your thing.
Speaker 5:I couldn't tell the exact year, but I remember the exact song I heard when I figured it out. It was Mum and Dad used to have a cassette in the car which was like super hip to the 60s, and I remember hearing Jumpin' Jack Flash and I was like the Stones, yeah, 100% and yeah. Just remember hearing that and being like, yep, I can do that, yep, that's me. And then I got an acoustic guitar in primary school around that time and I didn't get my first electric guitar for a couple of years, but by that point my brother had showed me things like Metallica, acdc, iron Maiden, all those bits and pieces. I'm like I can do this, this could be fun. And yeah, there we are.
Speaker 1:Awesome, I used to be able to play Smoke on the Water.
Speaker 5:I think that's like.
Speaker 3:British. You Bring in the guitar, do you need?
Speaker 1:me.
Speaker 5:Bring in the guitar. Do you need me? I can fill in. That can be the next cover we do.
Speaker 1:Dita, what about you? Well, yeah, is it in your DNA?
Speaker 2:Yeah, my dad was a keyboard player. I remember he used to Not for the Deltones, no, actually, but he had a Hammond organ and a Leslie box and when Cliff Richard and Olivia Newton-John were touring together and they came to play at the Westlands in Moala, they actually hired his keyboard and Leslie box, his Hammond organ and Leslie box and so my parents got free tickets. And, yeah, I remember I used to see him playing at festivals on Ben Oval and going the next day to pick up his gear from the venue in his big commie van with flowers on it.
Speaker 1:So you reckon you absorbed it via osmosis?
Speaker 2:Well, yeah, I guess. And then once I saw Sweet playing Boring Blitz on TV and saw the drummer spinning his sticks and all that, Like I was about five or something, I reckon, and I said that's what I want to do, and I was supposed to say. I never looked back.
Speaker 1:It's interesting because most of you can just remember a moment, a song, a video where you went yep, that's what I want to do.
Speaker 2:So many musicians have cited seeing the Beatles on the O'Sullivan show. Right. For me it was yeah, seeing Sweet on TV, yeah.
Speaker 1:Still rocking that podcast with that radio chick, cheryl Lee. I think I'd like to play the title track of the album now the Perfect Sea. And then we're back to say goodbye to the fellas from Audio Rain. And you're the perfect sea. We're gonna sail this ship as far as you can go. Let's move up again to current day. You guys are not only great live shows and great recorded music, but you're also pretty good video makers.
Speaker 5:I just show up and they point at me.
Speaker 4:We work some good crews that have done our videos. Yeah, we've been fortunate we have.
Speaker 5:Yeah, and they that have done our videos.
Speaker 4:Yeah, we've been fortunate we have, yeah, and they've just done great work. First one Betrayal that was with a group of Kaleidoscope Productions. That was a lot of behind-the-scenes work to find a church that we could get to use for what we wanted to do. That's no easy feat. None of us are sent to flames doing that, yeah, especially if you're playing hard rock. It would have been cool for the people.
Speaker 1:Especially if you want to set fire to the church.
Speaker 4:Oh, I don't like that, but yeah, and then we worked with our good friend Eva Greslach, who came over and she shot. What did we do with her? We done Shining Relentless.
Speaker 5:Angel. Angel Shining Light. No, it wasn't Shining Light. Angel Relentless.
Speaker 1:And these are all available on your YouTube channel.
Speaker 4:Oh yeah, absolutely on the YouTube channel. Yeah, that's right, angel was shot. Part of him was shot in here. Really, yeah, yeah In the Gulf, yeah in the Gulf, the hallowed halls.
Speaker 2:It is, it is, yeah, yeah, Awesome, we've done a video at the woodshed.
Speaker 4:Yeah, which was brief.
Speaker 5:That was shot in someone's backyard. Jake's mate literally drove the entire night from Melbourne to Adelaide 10 hours to Kip Rockup with a full crane and everything like the whole shebang to set up in our mate's backyard shoot for the day and then drove right back to Melbourne afterwards Wow, that's dedication.
Speaker 4:But he had this crane and this crane was huge and so when he went to go up up because there was a bit of a ceiling and he just couldn't get high enough so there's this massive-ass crane just going, but hey, the clip looked pretty freaky.
Speaker 2:Yeah, we've done one out at Kaipe Forest. We've done one at Mikewe.
Speaker 4:Oh, wow.
Speaker 2:Yeah, that's right.
Speaker 4:Yeah, a lot of passionate people that have been involved. And then Perfect Sea. A lot of that was. That was at our album launch we'd done at Crybaby in the city and lots of footage we had from around. It was just one with a compilation of stuff, yeah, but with new music there's going to be obviously more videos Awesome.
Speaker 1:Love a good video, so get onto the YouTube channel and track them down, all righty. So we're moving on. You've just done a great gig at the Woodshed.
Speaker 4:Yep With some other bands that went off. That was fantastic. Yeah, shock our mistress, our brothers and triple size.
Speaker 5:I'm down a guitar now.
Speaker 4:What's next? That's right, alex smashed one of his guitars. Yeah, he'll keep buying them to stock them up, because he just keeps breaking them. I was misbehaving.
Speaker 1:I told him you think you're cold chisel on Countdown yeah, the countdown awards. So what's next?
Speaker 4:We've got to keep moving. We've got to keep moving forward. That trajectory is going. We just dropped a single three weeks ago which was our version of Elton John's Rocketman, which surprised a lot of people. But we had so much love for it. I suggested it as a joke. We kept faithful to it, but we had a few twists, put a bit of a solo in and just gave it a bit of audio reign to it, and we get some big love for that song. So that's really cool. I love that. Yeah, yeah, and obviously now we're getting ready to well, we've been writing the new album because we've got to keep going, We've got to keep bringing stuff out. This day and age, you can't sit around, you'll just drop away so.
Speaker 1:So get onto the website to check out the music, the tours yeah, yeah, and we want to get.
Speaker 4:We're going to go to europe too whether it's 2025 or 26, we're not sure but we are going to go overseas as well and take that out. There's going to be a lot coming, but, yeah, all the socials insta, youtube for our videos, spotify, all the streaming services, all the usual places yeah, you'll find us there, awesome thank you so much.
Speaker 1:Gentlemen, it is so good to finally sit down and chat with you and meet you, and I wish you all the best for the future. With Audio Rain, I feel like there's only fabulous things to come thank you so much, cheryl, thank you, thank you. Roto TV cut you are listening to Still Rocking it. Cut Rider TV socials for the full TV interview Channel 44 if you're in Adelaide, Channel 31 if you're in Melbourne.
Speaker 4:Information also available at thatradiochickcomau and I think it's gonna be a long long time, touchdown brings me round again to find I'm not the man they think I am at home. Oh no, no, no, I'm a rocket man.