Rage (TV program)
This article needs additional citations for verification. (September 2020) |
Rage | |
---|---|
Real Wild Child" by Iggy Pop | |
Ending theme | "Speed Your Love to Me" by Simple Minds |
Country of origin | Australia |
Original language | English |
No. of series | 36 |
Production | |
Production locations | Sydney, New South Wales |
Running time | ABC TV Friday to Saturday 10–12 hours Saturday to Sunday 6.5 hours Weekday nights Varies intermittently ABC Me 1 hour (Sunday to Thursday) |
Original release | |
Network | ABC TV |
Release | 17 April 1987 present | –
Rage (stylised as rage) is an all-night Australian music video program broadcast on ABC TV on Friday nights, Saturday mornings and Saturday nights. It was first screened on the weekend of Friday, 17 April 1987.[1] With Soul Train and Video Hits no longer being produced, it is the oldest music television program currently still in production as of 2023. On Friday and Saturday nights, Rage typically starts between 11:00pm and 1:00am.
The program is classified MA15+ until 5:00am, where it is rated PG from 5:00 to 11:00am on Saturday mornings, and at 7:00am on Sundays. During the COVID-19 pandemic, the Saturday morning program aired from 5:00am to 7:00am, and resumes from 9:00am to midday, with Weekend Breakfast airing between 7:00am to 9:00am.[2]
Format
Rage has a reputation among viewers for its minimalist format which has remained largely unchanged since the program's inception.
Rage was given an idiosyncratic and alternative flavour by music
On Friday, new and recent releases are played, often including little-heard-of new names in the very early hours of Saturday morning. During his John Safran's Music Jamboree series, John Safran successfully demonstrated "...even a dog can get a video on Rage", by attaching a video camera to a dog, and editing the resulting footage together with simply produced looping music.
On Saturday nights, Rage features specials and often has guest programmers, including local and international personalities from the music industry. From 1988, Rage aired the Australian Top 50 music chart on Saturday and Sunday mornings, however in mid-2006 this practice ceased and it now shows selected hits, new release video clips and a one-hour guest programming/special programming slot on Saturday morning, with new release and classic videos on Sunday morning.
Between July 1993 and early 1995, Rage aired a separate "new releases" program weekly from 2:00am to 4:00am on a Friday morning.
The Saturday night editions are themed, often showing a large amount of an established artist's work. As an example of the other types of themes, in early 2004 edited highlights from
The first two music videos shown on Rage were "Weirdo Libido" by the
Because the show usually starts on one day and ends on the next, it is often unclear which day the show belongs to. The producers have decided that even if it begins after midnight, its identity belongs to the earlier day (Friday or Saturday) even though the majority of the show (if not all) will be on the later day. This is most likely because television guides in Australia start and end each day at 6:00am.
Top Fifty/Broadcasts on other ABC TV channels
Prior to 2006, from around 5:00am or 6:00am to 9:00am on Saturday mornings and 4 am to the end of show on Sundays, Rage would switch to the weekly Top Fifty from the ARIA singles chart. Rage aired the Top 60 chart from 1 September 1990 to 9 March 1991, and from 8 June 1991 to 6 March 1994. If a video from the Top Fifty was unavailable, unsuitable or non-existent, it would be replaced by a splash screen of the Rage logo with the position attained in the charts for the week, the artist's name and the track's title. Also, the videos shown until 6:00am were uncensored (after this, the rating was set back to G-rated material). However, some clips were unavailable in that form, particularly due to heavier restrictions on clips which originated in the United States. Sometimes, two different video clips for the same song were shown in the one session. When this happens, it was often a live (or sometimes remixed) version that was shown earlier in the night/morning, while the "mainstream" censored version shown after 6:00am was shown in the Top Fifty due to classification laws in Australia which prevented adult-oriented material being shown in the after-6:00am time-slot. Since 2005, Rage is classified PG when it carries over after 6:00am.
Rage has previously had to censor and remove videos which have breached
From 2005, the Top Fifty was added to the then-new digital channel
The weekend of 22 and 23 July 2006 was Rage's last broadcast of the Top Fifty countdown. In its place at 10 am to 11 am on Saturday mornings is a preview of the upcoming guest programmer or special. Rage programming on Sunday mornings includes a mix of new and hit songs. The decision to remove the Top Fifty countdown was made by ABC management, not Rage production staff, and was soundly criticised by Rage's viewing audience, which flooded the program's official message boards with complaints. The cessation of the Top Fifty countdown was due to ARIA initiating a commercial association with a telecommunications company[
In 2008 and 2009, Rage broadcast an assortment of clips on ABC2 on Saturday afternoons.
In 2011, rage on 3 is top video clips of the week as voted by the ABC3 audience to complement Stay Tuned.
Since 2012, shorter broadcasts have aired transiently overnight during the week.
Regular nightly airings of Rage for an hour on ABC Me started in July 2014, airing as the last program of the day.
Since Saturday 21 March 2015 new segment "The Chart" counts down 20 of the most popular videos from the ARIA Singles Chart. The segment also include chart predictions and appearances from some of the most popular acts of today. The Chart airs weekly on Rage from 6:00am to 8:00am Saturdays on ABC, and is repeated on Sundays at 9.30 pm on ABC Me.
Guest programmers
Rage have had many bands and artists host the show on Saturday nights. They select and introduce their favourite music videos of all time. This gives an insight into the bands' and artists' influences which are highly regarded by fans. Tapings of Rage guest programmers are not only valuable but highly sought after. Some of the guest programmers' short introductions were viewable on the Rage YouTube channel and playlists, but the channel's contents were removed in 2023. Clips from shows prior to 2019 were also removed from the Rage website on ABC.
Tex Perkins and Bernard Fanning are the most frequent guest programmers with five appearances on the Rage couch apiece. The most frequently chosen videos by guest programmers include Joy Division's Love Will Tear Us Apart, The Saints' (I'm) Stranded, Peter Gabriel's Sledgehammer and Aphex Twin's Windowlicker.[citation needed]
Simulcast
From New Year's Eve 1992, Triple J had simulcast Rage from 1:00am to 6:00am. This ended in 2003 when Triple J introduced their new dance show The Club in the same timeslot.
Considering televisions are increasingly stereo as opposed to older mono sets, the simulcast's advantage is now moot. Digital television was also becoming popular, and digital television broadcasts can not be precisely synchronised with FM radio transmissions.
Theme song
The theme song used to open the show is sampled from Iggy Pop's extended version of "Real Wild Child", with Pop's vocals and the word Rage manipulated backwards throughout. Visual images for the theme include footage from Iggy Pop's "Real Wild Child" and Johnny O'Keefe's "Shout" video clips.
The song used during the closing credits of the show is an extended remix of "Speed Your Love to Me" by Simple Minds, with visual image footage borrowed from "Speed Your Love To Me", "Sanctify Yourself" and "Waterfront".
"Sleepless" by King Crimson has also been used as the theme song.
Several years ago, a third theme was produced (also based on Iggy Pop's "Real Wild Child") to break up the guest programmer or specials clips on Saturday nights (except on Saturday mornings with hits and new releases).
In the last few years, the show has been using another theme specifically for the Top Fifty, sampled from the song "She Said" by now-defunct Brisbane band Lavish. It is now used instead of the opening theme to begin the Top Fifty and replace any missing clips.
During TISM's appearance on the show, they described the traditional theme song as "...new and exciting..." and its repetition as "always stimulating ... Why see different songs when you can see this one four or five times?"
Yearly specials
Up until 2009 for the last weekend of each year, Rage had two specials. On the Friday night, a selection of the preceding year's Best of videos was played. On the Saturday night, they have a selection of the year's Guest Programmers. This show started with a series of Guest Programmers introductions that were shown at the beginning of each of their shows and included them introducing a few of the videos they selected during their program, followed by one or two of their videos. In 2009, Rage launched the rage 50; a count down of the top 50 clips of the year, as voted by Rage viewers.[8]
On New Year's Eve 1999, ABC celebrated the Millennium by broadcasting the 28-hour one-off television program 2000 Today. Due to this, Rage had a rare night off air. When the program finished at midnight on New Years Day, Rage was the first program on air.
On Sunday 31 December 2006, Rage had a New Year's Eve special starting from midnight and going until 4:30 am. It played all the greatest party songs, to bring in the new year.
For the first weekend of each year, the Top 50 timeslot on Rage is used for the Top 50 songs of the previous year. This will no longer be the case from 2007 (for the Top 50 songs of 2006).
Rage usually broadcasts music videos of songs from the Triple J Hottest 100 over two nights, several weeks after the Hottest 100 broadcast in late January each year (usually sometime during March).
At the end of 2007, the ABC's satirical comedy group The Chaser hosted a New Year's Eve edition of Rage, the event being dubbed "The Chaser's War on Rage".
Rage New Year's Eve Special is shown on the ABC main channel following the ABC's New Year's Eve programming.
In 2012, Rage's Silver Jubilee, guest host Tex Perkins played featured videos of bands and artists that had been on past Rage programs.
Anniversary specials
Tenth Anniversary special
On 19 April 1997, a special episode was aired to celebrate Rage's tenth anniversary. It included a selection, by year, of some of the clips that had aired on Rage in the past ten years. It also included some footage of Guest Programmers from over the years. It was repeated later that year on 20 December.
Twentieth Anniversary special
Rage's 20th anniversary occurred during April 2007. Each Saturday night, they played videos from an era in Rage's history as well as immortals (clips that were not around during the particular years but which were important and influential videos) some of which were introduced by Guest programmers. Each week was introduced by some special footage and ended with a Star Wars-style crawl saying which years would be featured the next week (except obviously the last week in which the crawl thanked everyone), and then an exploding birthday cake. It also featured stock footage of each year featured, summarising that year. It also featured a special theme song. The following is a breakdown of what was shown week by week: –
- Week 1 (7 April)
- Tex Perkins, the only man to Guest Program Rage four times introduces the special
- clips from 1987 to 1991
- Week 2 (14 April)
- The "Godfather" of Rage (its original Executive ProducerMark Fitzgerald) explains how the show got started and explains the theme song. Stephanie Lewis who began the Rage Saturday night specials and the Rage guest programmers when she produced Rage, is also interviewed about the early days of the program
- Clips from 1992 to 1996
- The "Godfather" of Rage (its original
- Week 3 (21 April)
- Current Series Producer and Head Programmer Narelle Gee explains "a week at Rage"
- clips from 1997 to 2001
- Current Series Producer and Head Programmer Narelle Gee explains "
- Week 4 (28 April)
- The new Rage website is shown (as of 7 October 2007 is up and running) and the original one, which uses Shockwave is explained
- clips from 2002 to 2006
- this week also featured celebrities and festival goers throughout endorsing Rage and wishing it a happy birthday.
Thirtieth Anniversary special
Rage's 30th anniversary occurred during April 2017. The nation celebrated with a week of programming including two specially produced documentaries which explored the Australian experience of watching the show. The first celebrated the history of Rage and explored its influence on Australian music and culture. The program featured a plethora of musical talent and songs from across the decades, musicians whose work has been a mainstay of Rage but who were also viewers themselves. The second, Songs from the Red Couch: 30 Years of Guests Rage Programmers, delved into the archives to relive some classic moments from the studio. Out of the thousands of songs programmed by their guests over the years a few have been chosen multiple times.
Real Wild Child book
A Rage book was released in October 2010 by ABC Books/HarperCollins Australia. The author is Narelle Gee and the book is titled Real Wild Child: An Insider's Tales from the Rage Couch. The book gives an insight behind the scenes of Rage and tells the stories of the Rage guest programmers. The back cover description poses the question, What happens when the world's biggest musical acts sit down on Australia's most famous couch?
Australian Rolling Stone magazine reviewed Real Wild Child with this description: Rage's long-time producer recounts the humorous, often slapstick events of a rage taping. She's a close observer of her subjects and she conveys almost a hundred sketches of what rock stars are like when their guard drops.
CD and DVD releases
Rage has released two double compilation albums, composed of songs that are popular with the programmers.
A series of Rage music video DVDs have been released, including "The Chosen Ones", "Rage Gets Animated", "Most Chosen", "Rage in Love", "Retro Rage", "The Epic 90s", "Rage Adults Only", and "Rage Let's Dance". Some of these have been combined CD/DVD sets.
A 3-disc 30th anniversary compilation was released in 2017.
Critical reception
In 2016, Junkee listed Rage at #35 in its list of the 60 greatest Australian television shows of all time. The website described Rage as an icon for Australian music fans and commended the ABC's decision to not alter the program from its original format despite it being on air for several decades.[9]
In 2019, TV Week listed Rage at #97 in its list of the 101 greatest Australian television shows of all time, which appeared in its monthly TV Week Close Up publication. The magazine said the show has been the "go-to" for any music lover since its inception, and that while rival programs have run their course, Rage is still going strong.[10]
References
- ^ a b "#11: Rage 'til you puke". ABC Radio National. 13 April 2017. Retrieved 24 March 2020.
- ^ Martin, Josh (14 April 2020). "ABC's 'Rage' defends shortening Saturday morning show for coronavirus coverage". NME.
- ^ "25 Years of rage: The Story Behind the Scream". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 4 December 2016.
- ^ "20 Years of rage; 1992". Retrieved 3 December 2016 – via YouTube.
- ^ "rage Madonna special ad, 6th May 1989". Retrieved 3 December 2016 – via YouTube.
- ^ Gee, Narelle 1998 'Rage; the songs most chosen by guest programmers', CD liner notes https://www.discogs.com/Various-Rage-The-Songs-Most-Chosen-By-Rage-Guest-Programmers/release/742435 Retrieved 2016-12-04
- ^ "rage Guest Programmers & Specials > 1990". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 3 December 2016.
- ^ "rage - ABC Television". ABC Television. Retrieved 19 March 2018.
- ^ Welsh, Caitlin (11 July 2016) #35: Rage, The 60 Greatest Australian TV Shows of all time, Junkee, Junkee Media. Retrieved 6 August 2019.
- ^ Burfitt, John; Cullen, Tamara; Hadley, Amy; Hockey, Maddison; Mitchell, Thomas; Recchi, Karina; Vnuk, Helen; Wang, Cynthia; Zubeidi, Zara (July 2019), 101 Greatest Aussie TV Shows of All Time, TV Week Close Up, Bauer Media Group. Accessed 6 August 2019
External links
- Official website
- ABC Shop
- Former Rage Website from 2003
- Triple J music
- ABC Dig Music
- Rage music videos on demand
- 1990 Guest List (Rage Guest's of 1990, not linked on official site)