Reactions in Minneapolis on INXS's Michael Hutchence

from the St. Paul Pioneer press 11/24/97 & Kevin

 
Local bands stunned by INXS leader's death

Hutchence lived hard, says local musician Levy
JIM WALSH STAFF WRITER

`The phrase that keeps coming to mind is that he was just a really fabulous guy,'' said Adam Levy.
Ever since the news broke Friday night that INXS lead singer Michael Hutchence's body was found hanging from a leather belt in his Sydney, Australia, hotel room, friends and fans of Levy and the Honeydogs have been contacting the Twin Cities band.
``We were in Grand Forks Friday night,'' said Levy, the Honeydogs' singer/guitarist. ``We'd just got done with a show there, and (drummer) Noah Levy saw it scrawl across the bottom of the screen on MTV. He just started banging on the hotel room walls. We were just freaked.''
The Honeydogs served as opening act for INXS on what proved to be the Australian band's last American tour.
For five weeks, from Aug. 24 to Oct. 3, the Honeydogs traveled with INXS on their ``Elegantly Wasted'' tour, including an Aug. 26 date at the Orpheum Theater in Minneapolis.
Both bands record for Mercury Records, and during the course of the tour, Levy said the members of INXS took the Honeydogs under their wing.
``They were super nice right from the get-go,'' Levy said. ``We met them in Cleveland for the first show, and they were very welcoming. Michael came out and said, `Oh, it's the Honeybabies, we've heard so much about you.' They were full of advice, and seemed to genuinely like us.''
The two bands spent most of their time together at after-show parties, or in bars and hotel rooms.
``There was a lot of craziness,'' said Levy. ``It was an amazing show every night, and they were totally on. For a band that wasn't selling records and didn't have a hit, and that had been doing it for 20 years, they really enjoyed touring. They seemed like they could have done it for as long as they wanted.''
Another Minneapolis band with ties to Hutchence was Soul Asylum, which toured South America with INXS in 1995.
``It's sad, it's tragic, when you hear something about a pal of yours, that you spent time with, and they go that way,'' said Soul Asylum singer/guitarist Danny Murphy. ``I'm afraid they kind of lived up to their name, you know, `In excess': We spent much time with Michael and those guys on the beach, drinking beers until like 10 in the morning.''
The coroner's report on Hutchence won't be released until later this week, and Levy said that he had ``no clue'' about a motive for the 37-year-old singer's apparent suicide.
He did, however, echo a sentiment that several Australian sources have put forth in the past two days -- that INXS was anxious about an Australian tour that was set to have kicked off Tuesday.
``They said that they hadn't toured Australia in four years, and they'd kind of soured on it because they've been slagged there so much,'' said Levy.
Still, Levy said that Hutchence was excited about working on a solo album that would incorporate African music, and the fact that he was being considered for a role in a forthcoming Quentin Tarentino film.
``Michael was obviously a live-fast, love-hard kind of guy,'' he said. ``But he had all these side projects planned, which is why we all were so totally taken aback by the news. I guess you never know everything about somebody.''
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