and I'm going to write a journal about it so I remember how unbelievable it is/was and if anybody reading this can go or if you can't well you can read my ranting and raving here. Thanks for reading this too, I'll say that first before you read it all, well if you get though it all or not thanks anyway for looking.
If you don't know the W.A. Museum there is a space for temporary exhibitions downstairs which is painted all black not just for this show but works so well. I go in there and stare at the walls some times even if the exhibitions are totally shity but enough about me.
When you are walking into this exhibition you hear it before you see it because of all the songs playing but all at the same time in some kind-of fucked-up, Nick Cave mash-up. What you see first is a huge photo of him kind-off like on the poster but standing up. Next is one of his 90's suits on a dummy with an animal mask on it face. There is also these little framed photos of all sorts of people like Ned Kelly, Marilyn Monroe, St. Francis of Assissi, W.H. Auden and others. I'll have to note down all of these because their is so many of these all over the place. Like this one of Ned Kelly the day before his execution.

I'm going to write about The Boys Next Door and The Birthday Party room. There are all these fake walls up painted with dark colors and words from his lyrics pasted on. In the corner of this room there is a stand-up lamp with a white lamp shade with WOOF! written all over it.
In a glass box (well everything is in glass boxes) is a 1979 diary opened on the week of March 26th to April 1st. On Monday is "Buy oil paint" and "Make a tape with Andrew". On Tuesday is "Crystal Ballroom" at the top and in red pen is "Dole form to be Handed in" for the rest of the week there is a gig every night something called "Bombay Rock" is on Wednesday and Thursday with The Radiators. Friday is "Bananas" off course and April Fools Day in 79 is "Crystal Ballroom" with The Radiators again.
Under his diary is a few flyers for the same time and it seems they're playing with Teenage Radio Stars, Jab and X-ray-Z and never on top of the bill. All these bands were on the same record label, Nick's first, called Suicide Records. As a side note here Lethal Weapons album (not the Mel Gibson movies) was reissued by Aztec Music a couple years ago if you haven't got the first songs ever recorded by them: These Boots Are Made For Walking, Masturbation Generation and boy hero you can get it here: http://www.aztecmusic.net/ it's a classic Aussie punk record everyone should have but seems again it's not on last.fm.
Anita Lane bit is next up with a crazy shirt design by her and wore by Cave but no photos of him wearing it. Above the small photo of Nick Cave & Anita Lane together is one these little framed photos this one is Robert Mitchum in The Night of the Hunter with his LOVE knuckles showing like this:
Under all this is the hand written lyrics to Dumb Europe which on Die Haut's Burnin' the Ice which seems to be written together with Lane but on the album liner notes only credits Cave. Nick Cave Man or Myth poster framed hung next to the band is listed by name which is Barry Adamson, Mick Harvey, Tracy Pew and Hugo Race with the Painters & Dockers supporting for only $8 and it's a New Years show too.
A Happy Birthday 7" single is framed which was a give-a-way at the last show before moving to England. The Boys Next Door is on it but after moving there they changed their name to The Birthday Party. A TV is playing some very old bootleg videos of songs from this time, some of this is so bad you can't see some of it really but it's amazing to see anyway. The Birthday Party poster and some of Cave's hand drawn artwork is hung up here too.
Hand-written lyrics to
In Mojo Magazine last year, the one with The Clash on the cover on the very last page in Hello/Goodbye bit Roland talked about this totally differently, it was something like, Cave didn't like his guitar playing on the same song and Blixa started to play on it and Roland packed up his stuff and left because he thought it was the last day and didn't come back but there was a week left recording. Roland said they played some shows after this in Australia but it was already over for him."
Anyway whatever happened I love that song so I spent forever looking at these lyrics. It's kind-off like a long vomit of words which is how Bob Dylan talked about writing Like A Rolling Stone, I know all the Dylan nutters will say you can't compare the two songs but well Mutiny in Heaven to me looks like a long vomit words on paper, I haven't seen Dylan's.
More of his drawings and then on the last wall in this room is more Birthday Party photo's. One is Nick wearing a black and white striped t-shirt above this photo is another little photo of a penguin like this one:

Cool, eh?
Just outside this room is a huge photo of early Boys Next Door up not under glass and someone's circled a photo of Anita Lane which is hung in the background and written her name so I guess that is why almost everything is under glass.
The next box has the hand-written and typed-out lyrics to
On another pink piece of paper is Cave talking about making this film "...well that was a trip ...is a miracle it got made... filmed in a aircraft hanger... the script that reads like it been thrown up in the air and picked up at random... film director straight out of film school... punch-ups, meltdowns, walk-outs, overdoses and somehow this raw, brutal beast of a movie got made, a bloody miracle." On more papers there's Cave's notes of his dialogue or what his character "Maynard" was going to scream in his scenes. Above all this, is another little framed photo, this time of Elvis Presley in his late period, he's got those flower necklaces you get in Hawaii around his neck so my guess is he's in Hawaii.
To finish off this journal (I'm going to have to write two or three more of these to cover everything) with more photos but this time it's of The Birthday Party's final concert in Melbourne on 9th June 1983. With little frames of Ludwig van Beethoven's portrait by Joseph Karl Stieler, 1820 and black and white photo of John Coltrane from his A Love Supreme album cover.
In London at BFI Southbank there is a Preview: Do you love me like I love you, Part 5: Tender Prey + Q&A with Nick Cave, Iain Forsyth & Jane Pollard http://www.bfi.org.uk/whatson/bfi_southbank/film_programme/regular_strands/previews/preview_do_you_love_me_like_i_love_you_pt_5_te
On Wedensday 17th of June which is next week so your too late now but it means more reissues must be coming soon but no release dates yet.
One more thing two great new books about Nick Cave are out if you didn't know. First one goes with The Exhibition called Nick Cave Stories and if your not in Perth get it here: http://assets.theartscentre.com.au/Merchandise/nickcave.htm

and second one called Cultural Seeds: Essays on the Work of Nick Cave Edited by Karen Welberry, La Trobe University, Australia and Tanya Dalziell, The University of Western Australia, Australia

find it here: http://www.ashgate.com/default.aspx?page=637&calcTitle=1&forthcoming=1&title_id=9761&edition_id=11081
I've got the first one which so great (I think I've written about it here before) and second one looks so great but I have to save up for it. Both look like the best books written about him so far. Anyway I should stop now, I'll write part 2 in a few days because right now I've overloaded my head.