In the summer of '84, Georgie Twat, for one of his first endeavours, approached the greats - Paul Pot, John Miner and Josef K. Peterson for help creating an ambitious mini LP - one that explored ideas of love across the border - as he had experienced with his beloved Catherine when she was in jail for battery and assault. He did it through the ingenious metaphor of farmyard animals - a cow and a chicken, with a love so passionate they can only express it in primal noises. In fact, if it weren't for the Robert Richard D Patterson track (the 23rd attempt at a song about the man), which directly names the alleged victim of Catherine's crime (pictured on the front of the EP), you wouldn't know what this cow and chicken represented. That's how good a metaphor it is.
The Philip Spector Experience was a music collective started by Dunedin born Josef K Peterson and Glaswegian Paul Pot in 1983.
Dozens of great musicians passed through the halls of Peterson and Pot’s music haven (a shack deep in the Aussie Outback), including the great Michael 53. Though their releases were not widely released at the time, they gained a cult following in the tens.