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Artist
Dave Mulcahy's first post-Jean Paul Sartre Experience band was the unfortunately short-lived Superette, who sprung up in Auckland in 1993. With Mulcahy taking guitar and vocal duties, he pulled together Ben Howe (bass) and Greta Anderson (drums/backing vox) to record the rough, thematically scary, but thoroughly charming Rosepig EP. From here the band became known as one of the better live pop-rock acts around New Zealand, and were a defining sound (along with the artists like 3Ds) in mid-1990s New Zealand music. Superette expanded the tracks on their earlier release to the fully-fledge debut Tiger in 1995. Over the twelve stellar tracks, not a single song drags. Over the common theme of murder, and the psycho-analysis of well-known murderers, the album retains a dynamic pop hook. Tiger carefully flows between the more up-beat earlier numbers (such as "Touch Me" and album highlight, the Anderson-penned "Saskatchewan"), through to the album-closing slower numbers (notably "Funny Weather" and the charismatic "Waves," which made a big impact on the Topless Woman Talk About Their Lives movie score), without ever missing a beat. Sadly, after touring the album for the best part of a year Mulcahy decided to move on to his own pressing solo career, leaving Ben & Greta (the moniker they took from that point on) to soldier on for themselves. Since Mulcahy left, Ben & Greta released the charming single "Creep Around the House" (with Howe on vocal duties), but the duo seems to be more