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Operator PleaseLet's get it out of the way – I'm almost 30. It has slowly dawned on me that, like my parents before me, the kids of today just confuse the hell out of me. I don't understand their language, their ideals or their musical tastes. Just when I think I've got them pegged as a bunch of lazy, cooler-than-thou miscreants, a group of people like Operator Please come along and prove me wrong. Those people were Tim Commandeur on drums, Sarah Gardiner on keyboards, Ashley McConnell on bass and Stephanie Joske on violin - who has since been replaced by the classically trained Taylor Henderson. "After ten years classical training gets super boring," she asserts. "I was on the verge of quitting when I got the call. To tell you the truth, violin in a band – I originally thought it would be yokel, not that there's anything wrong with that." Like all good fairy tales Operator Please won the band comp first prize – a box of doughnuts that were donated to the school which they never even collected. "Someone stole our frickin' card that we needed to pick them up!" quips Amandah, but rather than waiting until studies and exams were out of the way, Operator Please saw a golden opportunity for good times and made the most of it. An independent EP was recorded on their own, and after a run of shows and some hardcore DIY promotion (not to mention a quick jaunt to New York to prove that they didn't just bring their school friends to shows), people started taking notice. Not only the cool kids on MySpace either, but the stuffy suits of my generation who generally need to be clubbed like the aforementioned seals before noticing fresh talent. End result? A quick signing to Virgin/EMI for Australia and New Zealand, and a deal with the influential Brille label in the UK. "It's really weird," laughs Wilkinson. It's really alien to us even still, we weren't expecting anything and we still don't expect things to fall into our hands, we were and still are just playing shows, it's cool when people turn up to them and it's a bonus if people like it. At first I thought someone was just screwing around with us, and I didn't email back. The person emailed me again and I realised, oh, maybe this is real." "To be quite frank, I'm not taking everything for granted and not letting it overwhelm me either way," adds Gardiner. "I think people are very suspicious of us, they just assume that we must have friends in high places, or that we've done something magic or that we're evil." Perhaps it's simply a jealousy thing – after all, who wouldn't begrudge the youth for succeeding where they themselves have failed? Especially when succeeding was actually the last thing on their minds. Operator Please Website: http://www.myspace.com/operatorplease |
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