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The Amanda Emblem Experiment – Ancient Dingo
The Amanda Emblem Experiment's latest release arrives with the weight of cultural history and ecological urgency strapped to its back like a swagman's bundle. "Ancient Dingo" represents that rarest of artistic achievements: a song that manages to be both politically engaged and musically compelling, avoiding the sermonic pitfalls that typically plague such endeavours.

The South East Queensland outfit has crafted two distinct versions of this meditation on human-wildlife conflict, each approach revealing different facets of their subject matter. The full electric version, featured on their recent album "The Wood", builds its argument through layers of distortion and driving rhythm—appropriate for a song about an apex predator forced into increasingly fraught encounters with humanity. The stripped-back acoustic alternative, distinguished by the haunting drone of didgeridoo, feels more ceremonial, acknowledging the dingo's significance as a totem animal for Indigenous Australians whilst grounding the track in ancient sonic territory.


Amanda Emblem's lead vocals carry the necessary authority for such charged material. The band—rounded out by Kelly King's harmonica and flute work, Billy Adams on percussion, and Scott Astill's bass—demonstrates the kind of musical literacy you'd expect from a group on their fifth album. They've clearly absorbed their folk, rock, blues, and roots influences without becoming derivative, creating arrangements that serve the song's narrative without overwhelming it.


The timing of the release proves deliberately provocative. Scheduled for Australia Day, the track positions itself as a dual commentary: one on the nation's fraught relationship with its native wildlife, the other on its equally troubled history with Indigenous peoples. The parallel isn't subtle, but subtlety seems beside the point when addressing subjects this consequential. The decision shows genuine conviction—these aren't musicians looking to coast on pleasant melodies and unchallenging themes.


Central to the track's concept is the transformation of K'gari's dingo population from the Butchulla people's Wat'dha (camp dingo) to exclusively Wongari (wild dingo) following the forced removal of Indigenous inhabitants over a century ago. This historical shift—from collaborative coexistence to mutual wariness—provides the song's emotional core. The accompanying video apparently illustrates this tension, documenting the uncomfortable reality of protected predators sharing space with 4WD enthusiasts and resort holidaymakers on Fraser Island.


The lyrical hook "The hand that feeds a bite" encapsulates the song's cautionary message with admirable economy. Dingos, curious and unafraid, approach humans who frequently misread these encounters, treating wild animals like domesticated pets with predictably dangerous consequences. Kelly King and bandmate Kylie Cowling hope to educate both Australians and international visitors about respecting wildlife boundaries whilst acknowledging the dingo's ecological significance.


Whether the song actually achieves its educational aims remains debatable—popular music rarely changes policy or behaviour—but the attempt deserves recognition. Too often, artists with environmental or social concerns produce worthy but forgettable material, mistaking sincerity for craft. The Amanda Emblem Experiment appear to have avoided this trap, investing equal energy into both message and medium.


The broader context enriches the release considerably. Australia's dingo management remains contradictory: protected within national parks, classified as restricted invasive animals beyond them, persecuted as pests whilst simultaneously recognized as vital ecosystem maintainers. This legal and cultural confusion reflects deeper anxieties about what belongs in contemporary Australia and who decides.


For a regional act operating outside the major metropolitan centres, The Amanda Emblem Experiment demonstrates remarkable ambition. "Ancient Dingo" tackles complex subjects without resorting to simplification or sloganeering. The dual-version release strategy also shows commercial savvy—offering both radio-friendly electric rock and more contemplative acoustic material broadens potential audiences whilst staying true to the song's thematic concerns.


Whether "Ancient Dingo" ultimately resonates beyond its immediate context depends partly on factors beyond musical quality: the video's execution, the strength of the vocal performance, the memorability of the melodic content. But as a statement of intent, as proof that Australian roots music can engage seriously with national identity and ecological responsibility, the single marks a genuine achievement.