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23 May 2012 | 7:38 pm | Steve Bell

Clairy Browne is bringing her Bangin’ Rackettes back to Brisbane for the Love Letter tour and, as she tells Steve Bell, the fun has only just begun.

It's been a crazy 12 months for Melbourne chanteuse Clairy Browne. With the launch of their debut album Baby Caught The Bus her outfit Clairy Brown & The Bangin' Rackettes morphed quickly from hometown heroes to national news, their massive live shindigs taking the country's imagination by storm with the sassy music, retro chic and overarching party vibe. Now they're releasing killer new single Love Letter and touring the nation one last time, before turning their attention overseas and to album number two. So there's one last chance to dust off those dancing shoes...

“I didn't really know what to expect,” Browne ponders of the reaction to the album. “There isn't really a lot of music around at the moment like what we're doing and we didn't really have a lynchpin to base it on – we just made the music because we love it and it was a brilliant surprise that it did so well.”

Apart from the obvious '60s influence, Browne and her gang draw from a lot of contemporary sources, something that will possibly come to the fore in future releases.

“We kind of pull from a great field of different influences, because there's so many of us as well – everybody's got a different background and relationship with musical influence,” Browne continues. “We listen to a lot of early rhythm and blues, lots of the big divas like Etta James and Ruth Brown and Esther Phillips, old blues stuff. Then a bit of jangly Tom Waits-y stuff, plus some more contemporary r'n'b like Cee Lo [Green] and Erykah Badu and a lot of hip hop like Outkast – we're working on a new album at the moment and that will bring forward a lot of the contemporary vibe, which is mixed in there with our old influences.”

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Despite the band's strong live presence, Browne always intended the Bangin' Rackettes to be a studio project as well.

“Recording was always on the cards, sure,” she tells. “With the process of recording Baby Caught The Bus, everything that we do is so big – big sound, big hair, big band – so we just wanted to translate that to a recording as well, so you can take that hugeness into your living room or your bedroom, or to a massive party with DJs playing or whatever. So we always wanted to record, even though the live show is super-important to us.

“But above all the aim was definitely to put on a show. I think the idea was to bring something to people that they can participate in and I guess feel the show as much as listen to it – obviously the music's super-important, but I love a good show and I think that people really appreciate when performers put a lot of effort into what they're doing, so we try to make it a big 'kapow'.”

One need only spy the new film clip for Love Letter – shot in the spectacularly creepy Old Geelong Gaol – to see how this gang can bring the party to pretty much any locale.

“It was great,” Browne recalls of the shoot. “We did it in one 12- or 13-hour day – crammed it all in – and we had lots of great friends and people who gave their time and energy. There were amazing dancers and crew – we went down to this crazy, creepy jail and wanted to bring that whole Purple Rain Prince goes to prison, '50s and '80s fashion, John Waters-esque visual and it worked really well. It was very intense. The last shoot of the day we were totally in hysterics at ourselves – we really went to a crazy place.”