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Friday 28 February 2014

42nd STREET


42nd Street was a Brisbane based power-pop band 1978 – 1981. The original lineup was Ken Allen and Phil Mellifont on guitars, Greg Atkinson on bass and vocals and Darren Atkinson on drums and vocals. The band derived the name from a track on American band Piper’s 1976 album. An early highlight for the band was playing at Brisbane’s legendary Cloudland in front of 1500 people supporting Cold Chisel and Pop Rivet. The single ''Work it Out / Afraid Of The Dark'' was released in 1978 on the Virgo Seven label. Original guitarist Ken Allen left the band in 1979 due to a different in musical direction. 

For several months the band played as a three piece and in February 1980 the demo’s ''No Money'' and ''She’s Not Real'' were recorded. Guitarist Neil Coombe (ex-Bad Habit) joined the band around April 1980 and soon after ''Mistaken Identity'' was recorded and was included on Radio 4IP’s 'That’s Queensland' compilation album. In August 1980, 42nd Street gained third place in the Queensland final of the Battle of the Bands, and at that time a number of demo’s were recorded including ''The Boys are After Me'', ''Too Late'' and a cover of UK band The Records song ''Starry Eyes''. The band moved to Sydney in April 1981 and like many others broke up a few months later- shortly after recording the demo ''Tomorrow.''

Members

Greg Atkinson (bass/vocals), Darren Atkinson (drums/vocals), Phil Mellifont (guitar), 
Ken Allen (guitar), Neil Coombe (guitar)




SINGLES

Work It Out


1978    







References

http://stripedsunlight.blogspot.com.au/2011_09_01_archive.html




Thursday 27 February 2014

THE LAST WORDS


The Last Words were an Australian punk rock group formed in Sydney in 1977 by Malcolm Baxter (vocals), Andy Groome (guitar), Mick Smith (bass guitar) Jeffrey Wegener ex The Saints (drums). Baxter, Groome and Smith had been living in suburban, Liverpool when they met Wegener. Wegener left soon after formation and Smith exited before the end of the year. Their debut single, "Animal World" (March 1978), was recorded by the two remaining members with Baxter on lead vocals and drums and Groome on guitar and bass guitar; and it was co-written by the pair. Australian musicologist, Ian McFarlane, described how, "it was a poorly recorded, self-produced effort."

Baxter and Groome were joined by Ken Doyle (drums) and Leigh Kendall (bass) to re-record "Animal World", which was re-issued in February 1979 via Wizard Records. Bob Short of Kill Your Pet Puppy, described the label's rationale for signing the group, "As glam faded they desperately looked around for their chunk of the next big thing. If you were looking for an unsigned contender, the Last Words ticked off all their boxes. Authentically working-class punk with a firm grip on traditional pop sensibility, Wizard rushed them into the studio and did the business properly."

The Last Words relocated to London and were signed to Rough Trade Records. Doyle remained in Australia and was replaced by local musician, John Gunn on drums. Rough Trade used the Wizard Records version for another re-issue of "Animal World", which appeared in the United Kingdom in October 1979. It reached #8 in the Alternative Charts. Their next two singles, "Today's Kidz" (February 1980) and "Top Secret" (August), were followed by their debut album, The Last Words (December 1980). Although it contained a cover version of Jefferson Airplane's "White Rabbit" and was produced by Adrian Sherwood; it did nothing to lift the band out of its relative obscurity. The group disbanded with Baxter returning to Australia. In 2021 Czech Republic label Papagájův Hlasatel Records released a compilation album.

Members

Malcolm Baxter (vocals), Andy Groome (guitar), Leigh Kendall (bass), Mick Smith (bass), 
Jeffrey Wegener (drums), John Gunn (drums), Ken Doyle (drums)








References

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Last_Words_%28band%29


Wednesday 26 February 2014

WHIRLYWIRLD



In 1976, as a guitarist, Ollie Olsen formed The Reals, who on occasion shared the bill at suburban dance halls with The Boys Next Door. The Reals would eventually evolve into The Negatives, but before that Olsen had become dissatisfied with the group and left. Olsen went on to form The Young Charlatans. The Young Charlatans' four members would all go on to distinguish themselves in long music careers: they included Olsen, guitarist Rowland Howard (later of The Boys Next Door/The Birthday Party, as well as These Immortal Souls), drummer Jeffrey Wegener (Laughing Clowns) and bassist Janine Hall (later of The Saints). The group was short lived and after a brief, stormy existence, the band broke up. By then Olsen had met John Murphy, the drummer for another early Melbourne punk band, News.

The pair formed Whirlywirld in 1978 with their stated priority, from the outset, to use synthesisers and other non-'rock' instruments, departing from a guitar-based format. Whirlywirld was completed by two keyboardists, credited with 'electronics', Andrew Duffield and Simon Smith (Olsen, by this point, had abandoned guitar in favour of 'electronics') together with guitarist Dean Richards. Whirlywirld only played live very infrequently but they did rehearse on a rigid schedule. In June 1979, the band released a self-titled debut EP. Whirlywirld made their live debut at The Crystal Ballroom later that year, by which time Duffield left to join The Models and had been replaced by Philip Jackson.

Whirlywirld would go on to play only fourteen performances in their entire career. Gradually, the personnel within the band changed, in accordance with a change in direction, Richards, Jackson and Smith departed. Richards went on to two popular local 'underground' bands in Melbourne, Equal Local and Hot Half Hour, and more recently records and performs as Disturbed Earth. Arnie Hanna came in on guitar and Greg Sun on bass. During this period Murphy played an array of percussion devices, natural, electronic or otherwise and Olsen even played saxophone, clarinet, tape loops as well as keyboards. This incarnation of the band recorded at York St. Studios in December, 1979. Four of these tracks came out on a 12" EP, again titled 'Whirlywirld' in February 1980.

After the band split, Olsen and Murphy went on to form firstly The Beast Apparel, and then Hugo Klang, which performed a handful of gigs in England, and recorded a single, "Beat Up The Old Shack", released in Australia on Prince Melon Records. Olsen and Murphy then went on to form Orchestra of Skin and Bone, before their musical partnership ended with Olsen going to form NO in the late 1980s.

Hanna and Murphy later played with Olsen and Michael Hutchence in the band Max Q.A version of one of Whirlywirld's songs, "Win/Lose", was re-recorded by Olsen in 1986 for inclusion in the film Dogs in Space. Hutchence sang the early Whirlywirld song, "Rooms for the Memory" on the soundtrack, and the song became a hit on the mainstream Australian charts in 1987. The remixed version of "Win/Lose" was also released as a single by Olsen. Record label Missing released the compilation 'The Complete Studio Works' in 1986. John Murphy died in 2015.
 
Members

Ian 'Ollie' Olsen (vocals, synthesiser, saxophone), John Murphy (drums),
Andrew Duffield (synthesizer), Philip Jackson (synthesiser), Dean Richards (guitar),
Simon Smith (synthesizer), Arne Hanna (guitar), Greg Sun (bass)









References

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whirlywirld


Tuesday 25 February 2014

THE SLUGFUCKERS


The Slugfuckers were started in the late 1970s in Sydney by Terry Blake (vocals), John Laidler (guitar) and Graham Forsyth (bass) who were all at the time students or recent graduates of the Department of General Philosophy at Sydney University. Craig Wilcox (keyboard), Gordon Renouf (guitar, sax), Austin Laverty (drums) joined soon after. They released two extremely rare singles in 1979 and an album 'Transformational Salt' in 1981. Bridging the nascence of punk, DIY, and industrial, The Slugfuckers took the true intent of punk and carried it to a logical extreme. With shouted vocals, almost rudimentary playing, volume on ten and many obligatory messy interludes they enthralled, engaged and repelled in equal parts.

Johan Kugelberg, Ugly Things Magazine wrote ''A raw, underproduced angry attack that bores right into your brain. It will catch the ears of those who can embrace abstract punk sounds or industrial harshness. To be filed alongside The Homosexuals, The Desperate Bicycles, The Instant Automatons, The Prats, Door and the Window, The Versatile Newts, etc etc. Avant / Post -punk madness that leaves you scratching your skull . Noise historians will wonder over the use of Manson references, Burroughs samples and Anti-art manifestos way before the Industrial boys tried to claim them as their own.'' - Record label Harbinger Sound wrote. '' ...noisier and more abrasive than most first generation industrial stuff, a hell of a lot more punk than, say, The Lewd and intelligent in a scary, vicious bullying kind of way'' - This label released a compilation album 'Cacophony: 1979-1981' in 2004.

Members

Terry Blake (vocals, percussion), John Laidler (guitar, vocals), Graham Forsyth (bass, vocals),
Austin Laverty (drums), Craig Wilcox (keyboards, percussion), Gordon Renouf (sax, bass, guitar)










Monday 24 February 2014

JUST URBAIN


One of the greatest bands ever to come from the early Australian punk scene which is why they made the #36 spot on Johan Kugelberg's top 100 DIY 45's. Vocalist Peter Miller was at the vanguard of the punk push in Brisbane in the late 1970s. His band Just Urbain flew the flag of the then nascent punk movement. To have been a punk in Brisbane during that period would have required gumption and real conviction. He was a true believer pushing the envelope during a period when rednecks ruled during Joh Bjelke-Petersen's reign.

 Drummer Dave Holliday recalls their recording output, ''We knew Col from when he had a record shop then a video shop so when we heard he had a studio, fantastic. For a couple of hours Just Urbain, Young Identities and a side band of Rod's the Bodysnatchers recorded, mixed and produced what became the first three Savage Music releases. The second recording session of Just Urbain and Young Identities was done up on the north coast at Forrest Glen by Mungo Coates. For those who need to know, the Fun Things used that studio also. The third recording session was back at Mungo's but by now Young Identities had become Kicks with a slight change in their sound. Just Urbain had brought along a friend of Peter's to provide the keyboards. Wolfgang Kuepper had been in a band called Same 13 who played out a fair bit during '77/'78 but never released anything. Just Urbain was going through a lot of self-doubt, and we thought a shift in sound would help. It's obvious to me now that we were listening to too much Joy Division and Killing Joke. Aside from "Sounds Like" and "Goddess" we recorded a third song "My Love". It is so turgid that it is never going to surface.  Just Urbain disbanded in 1981. In 2010/11 American label 540 released two EPs of the original songs recorded in 1979/80

Members

Peter Miller (vocals), Robert Lewis (guitar), Rod McLeod (guitar/bass), Dave Holliday (drums),
Gavin McLeod (bass)







References

http://tropicalacceleration.blogspot.com.au/2011/01/just-urbain-burning-540-records-reissue.html

breakmyface.com ~ Just Urbain




Sunday 23 February 2014

THE LEFTOVERS



Originally from Sandgate QLD the Leftovers were formed in 1976. Beginning in parallel to The Saints from Brisbane’s southside, The Leftovers mostly played shows in suburban halls and practice rooms. In the conservative climate of late 1970s Brisbane, punk concerts were not looked upon fondly, and The Leftovers shows often ended with a heavy-handed response from the local police. "Many Leftover gigs were never finished – police would often pull the plug before they had a chance to get through a full set", The Leftovers had been quoted as saying. Chris Spencer, compiler for the Who's Who of Australian Rock, commented that they "Embodied the image of what Brisbane's visualization of 'punk' was all about. Raw, energetic and anti social and everything else that made the era fun, they captured the attention of fans, neighbours and the police.; The band released one seven-inch EP in 1979. The A-side, "Cigarettes and Alcohol" is considered an Australian punk "classic."

The band started out with members Warren Lamond on vocals, Jim Shoebridge on guitar, Glenn Smith on bass and Graeme ‘Hutch’ Hutchinson on drums but also had a plethora of other musicians filling in vacant roles. They included at various times Michael Hiron on drums, Johnny 'Burnaway' Gorman on guitar and Ed Wreckage, firstly on drums and then guitar. Some of these members went on to join The Riptides and The Pineapples from the Dawn of Time at various times. According to music historian, Ian McFarlane, Brisbane produced "some of the most anarchistic bands of the Australian punk rock era" and that it was a city nationally renowned for its ultra conservatism. Ian McFarlane also mentioned the group's first and only single, which was released in 1979 and rates it as "one of the classics of the late 1970s Australian punk rock era."

The Leftovers had acquired local cult punk hero status in Australia over the years due to their acknowledged reputation in the past for excessive anti-social practices, constant harassment by the Queensland Police Force and self-destructive deeds. Their musical style fitted the generic conventions of punk, but they also paid live homage to earlier proto–punk influences such as Lou Reed and Patti Smith.

The group disbanded in 1979, Lamond and Wreckage going on to form the Temporary Ornaments. After the split, according to Ian McFarlane, a string of tragedies occurred from the band's ex-members that included suicide attempts (Warren Lamond), prison (Ed Wreckage) and premature deaths. The group members who have died since are Warren Lamond, Glenn Smith, Michael Hiron, Johnny 'Burnaway' Gorman and Jim Shoebridge.

In 1985, they reformed for one live show featuring Warren Lamond on vocals, Ed Wreckage on guitar, Michael Hiron on bass and David Donald on drums. In 2012, the band reformed for a show called "Return to White Chairs", which featured various other local bands from the late 1970s to early 1980s. The Leftovers' line-up for this show was Ed Wreckage on guitar, Graeme Hutchinson on percussion, Michael Gilmore on vocals and Ché Wreckage on bass. The current line-up have continued playing live shows in Brisbane.

In 2003 a retrospective CD of Leftovers was released called 'The Fucken Leftovers Hate You' was released by Dropkick Records as well as a re-issue of their 1979 vinyl record. The material on the CD included recorded songs including Patti Smith’s ''Hermine'' and a collection of live recordings. Songs from the original EP., ''Cigarettes And Alcohol'' and ''I Only Panic When There Is Nothing To Do'' were included on several Australian CD compilations during the 2000s.

Members

Warren Lamond (vocals), Jim Shoebridge (guitar), Glenn Smith (bass) Graeme "Hutch" Hutchinson (drums), Michael Hiron (drums), Mark Troy (saxophone), Johnny "Burnaway" Gorman (guitar), Ed Wreckage (drums, guitar), Mal "Malcontent" Skewis (bass), David "Dodo" Donald (drums)







References

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Leftovers_%28Australian_band%29


PLAYER ONE


"Space Invaders" is a disco song by Australian songwriters Russell Dunlop (PICTURED ABOVE) and Bruce Brown, recording under the band name Player One (commonly stylised as Player ) in 1979. The song is based on the hugely successful 1978 video game Space Invaders. It was a novelty hit in Australia, peaking at #3 on the Kent Music Report charts, and ending up as the fourth best selling single in Australia for 1980. The song was released internationally but failed to chart outside Australia. It was, however, influential in the history of dance music, being sampled by Jesse Saunders for the bassline of what is commonly held to be the first Chicago house music record, "On and On" (1984). 

Dunlop and Brown also released an album as Player One, 'Game Over'. Dunlop recalled: "We sat down and wrote a bunch of space songs, but instead of sticking to the concept of the hit, we wandered off into the 'clever' musical genre with fancy time signatures, radical chord progressions and so on. The reply came back for the States that this was intended for 13- to 14-year-olds: 'You've lost us.'" The single and album were released in the US under the band name Playback, which Brown and Dunlop had used for other projects, to avoid confusion with the US band Player. The US version of the album was titled 'Space Invaders'.



SINGLES
Space Invaders

4 FEB '80#3





References

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_Invaders_%28Player_One_song%29


Friday 21 February 2014

THE COURTMEN


Formed in Sydney in the early 60s The Courtmen were a five-piece band that played in front of 40,000 fans at the 2UW Spectacular in 1963 along with The Bee Gees, Col Joye, Judy Stone and Johnny Rebb. In March 1964 rock 'n' roll singer and recording star Warren Williams joined the band as lead vocalist. The Courtmen backed him on his song "It's Party Time / Great Balls Of Fire". Soon after Williams left the band to start a career as a cabaret singer. The band soldiered on and released two singles on the Leedon label: ''I've Got To Let You Go / Sticks And Stones'' in 1965 and ''Zing! Went The Strings Of My Heart/Sea Cruise'' in 1966. Barry Shepherd has since died.

Members

Barry Shepherd (vocals, saxophone), Laurie Chatto (guitar), Ronnie Wilton (guitar), Con Serrafis (bass), Joe Skurnik (drums), Warren Williams (vocals), Vince Camelleri, Terry Coughlan, Claude Canero, Bill Younger, Peter Rowan




SINGLES
''I've Got To Let You Go / Sticks And Stones'' 1965 Leedon
''Zing! Went The Strings Of My Heart / Sea Cruise'' 1966 Leedon






Wednesday 19 February 2014

THE OTHERS



Originally formed as a duo in 1963 with guitarist Terry Radford, (First performance New Year's Eve 1962) then teenaged Ian Nancarrow wanted to expand the sound to match his own energy and enthusiasm, so by 1964 The Others was formed with Ian Nancarrow on guitar, Terry Radford on guitar, Jeff Gurr on bass, Paul Young on drums and Dave Yelland on vocals and they were ready to show the world their original take on blues/rock music. Ahead of their time, The Others were strutting their original stuff while most of their contemporaries were simply mimicking whatever style was in vogue at the time. This determination to be true to their musical vision and individuality is in fact the inspiration behind the band's name. From the outset The Others played a different brand of music to the rest of the bands around Adelaide. Signed to the Leedon label they released their first single in 1966 the Bo Diddley cover ''Dancing Girl'' backed by Nancarrow's ''Sharade Blues''. 

For over 50 years (and with a few lineup changes and disbanding and reforming), The Others have played all around the country, in cities and towns, stadiums, pubs, clubs and dives with a consistent enthusiasm and obvious passion. With music becoming more and more polluted by the mighty dollar, it is refreshing to see a band remaining true to its roots and values. The Others have always done things their way and this independence and self-belief still shines through. But the story certainly doesn't end there. More recently The Others have made more than twenty appearances at major Australian music festivals including: East Coast Blues and Roots Festival, at Byron Bay, NSW; Bridgetown Blues Festival, at Bridgetown, WA; Blues on Broadbeach, QLD; Thredbo Blues Festival, in the Australian Alps. The band was inducted into AMC South Australian music hall of fame on August 21st, 2015.

Members

Ian Nancarrow (guitar, harmonica, vocals), Terry Radford (guitar), Jeff Gurr (bass), Paul Young (drums), Dave Yelland (vocals), Brian Cain (vocals), Terry Osmond (guitar),Pete Smith (drums), Dave Connock (bass), Stefan Korovljev (guitar), Dave Skull (vocals),Joff Buttman (drums), George Abbott-Young (drums), Paul Reading (vocals)




SINGLES
''Dancing Girl / Sharade Blues'' 1966 Leedon

ALBUMS
'Collectors Item' 1981 EMI Custom
'It Wasn't Easy' 1998
'Hit The Wall' 2004 Greasy Pop
'The Devil Made Me Do It' 2006 Greasy Pop



References

http://www.theothers.com.au/History/


Tuesday 18 February 2014

THE SOUL AGENTS



Formed in 1964, The Soul Agents were a respected Sydney band comprising: John Green (guitar) – Barry Kelly (keyboards) – Gerry Dean (bass) and Roger Felice (drums), all musicians of varied background. Their first single ''I Just Want To Make Love To You / I'm Still Mad At You'' was recorded on the short lived Downunder label produced by Nat Kipner and Ossie Byrne. Kipner had seen The Soul Agents performing at a Sydney club and was very impressed with the band, so in January 1966 he got his new signing Marty Rhone to join forces with The Soul Agents and became part of the Spin roster along with Steve & The Board, the Bee Gees, Jeff St. John & The Id, Tony Barber, The Dave Miller Set and Ronnie Burns. The next twelve months was a hectic schedule taken up with recording, touring and television appearances.

The Soul Agents backed Rhone's next two singles, "Thirteen Women / I Can Tell" and "I Want You Back / What More Can I Do". In 1966 Jerry Darmic replaced Gerry Dean on bass guitar. During the same year Marty Rhone and The Soul Agents supported The Rolling Stones on the United Kingdom rock group's tour of Australia. They also performed on the bill of the P.J. Proby Show at the Sydney Stadium with Wayne Fontana, Eden Kane and The Bee Gees appearing. Marty Van Wyk (ex-The Throb) later replaced Green on guitar after The Throb split in January 1967. The Soul Agents disbanded not long after

Members

Marty Rhone (vocals), Barry Kelly (keyboards), John Green (guitar), Gerry Dean (bass), Roger Felice (drums), Marty Van Wyk (guitar), Jerry Darmic (bass)





SINGLES
''I Just Want To Make Love To You / I'm Still Mad At You'' 1966 Downunder
''Thirteen Women / I Can Tell'' [with Marty Rhone] 1966 Spin
''I Want You Back / What More Can I Do'' [with Marty Rhone] 1966 Spin







Monday 17 February 2014

DOUG OWEN


Doug Owen born in 1941 was a country folk/bush singer originally from Melbourne. Owen in his own words stated - In 1963, Graham Kennedy found me singing Australian folk music in a Hawthorn coffee lounge, and in a week or two, he featured me on his national television show, with regular spots from there on. Suddenly, I was a full-time professional entertainer, notching up more than one hundred television appearances all over Australia. I worked live in most of the best venues throughout this country, and recorded a few albums, mainly Australian material. In 1967, I was invited to head a government sponsored concert tour for the Australian and American armed forces in Vietnam with Patti Newton, Denise Drysdale and the Strangers, and then a second tour in 1970 with Pat Carroll and Lenore Somerset. In the early 70’s, I moved from Melbourne to Sydney – a brave move but not a wise one. Doug recorded on the W&G label in the 60s recording four singles an EP and three albums. Moving to Festival he recorded one single in 1971. He died in 2016 in Castlemaine Victoria.




SINGLES
''Pay Me My Money Down / Kisses Sweeter Than Wine'' 1963 W&G
''Rambling Boy / What'cha Gonna Do'' [with The Hayes Bros] 1965 W&G
''I Love A Sunburnt Football / I've Gotta See A Man About A Dog'' 1967 W&G
''The Anti-Football Blues / The Golden Sound Of Silence'' 1967 W&G
''Native Companion / Way Back'' 1971 Festival

EPs
'It Ain't Necessarily Folk' 1966 W&G

ALBUMS
'The Folksong World of Doug Owen' 1963 W&G
'At The Copper Inne' [with The Hayes Bros] 1964 W&G
'A Toast To Gundagai' 1967 W&G
'Doug Owen Sings Contemporary Australian Songs By Bryan Kryger Conway' 1971 The Australian





Sunday 16 February 2014

TANGERINE BALLOON


Not much info on this band. In 1970 The Tangerine Balloon recorded one single "It Rained in New York City/If You Wait (Until Tomorrow)" produced by Buddy England on the short-lived Air label. Vocalist Alistair Innes had been with The D Coys in the mid 60s that had a couple of hits. Pianist Dave Allardice would later turn up in the Linda George Band and performed regularly in the studio bands for Hey Hey its Saturday, New Faces, The Big Gig and Don Lane Show.

Members

Alistair Innes (vocals) Tony Helos (guitar) Bruce Baker (bass) David Allardice (piano)
Trevor May (drums) 








Saturday 15 February 2014

CHAPTER III


Formed in 1964 in Toowoomba QLD as The Defenders. The band played on the local scene before setting off on a tour of NZ. Original drummer Col Zeller refused to move to New Zealand so on arrival in Auckland in June 1965, they got Auckland drummer Rick Phillips to take his place. Whilst in that country they supported Sandie Shaw and The Pretty Things on their tour. The band auditioned at the Top Twenty club in Durham Lane Auckland and were regularly booked by the owner. Viking Records A&R man Ron Dalton asked the band to demo two songs at the Studio. The Defenders coupled a band original, "I'm Happy Too" with a cover of Maurice Williams and the Zodiacs hit "Stay". Good enough to be a record, Dalton decided, but not as the Defenders, so he re-christened the band Hubb Kapp and the Wheels. The record was released in August 1965.

The Defenders, who felt they were doing quite well under their own name, decided not to change. They added recently sacked Pleazers singer Bob London (real name Bob Cooper) to their ranks. The Defenders were offered full-time work in Dunedin at Eddie Chin's Sunset Strip teen venue in Rattray Street. Rick Phillips didn't want to leave Auckland, so he was replaced by Mike Conway on drums. They didn't stay long at Sunset Strip and set up their own dance club, the Nightspot. They became very popular in the local area and packed out the Dunedin Town Hall for a series of concerts. They also appeared on a local Television show Clickety Click 66 which ran for 13 weeks. Its theme song was written by Kerry Wright.

In mid 1966 the Defenders headed to Sydney with local keyboard player John Sayers (who later became one of the top record producers in Australia) in tow. They renamed themselves Chapter III and in August 1966 cut a single for Festival records "Fool / Not Your Man". The record went nowhere chartwise and the band, tiring of the showbiz treadmill, split up, with Wright, Moore and Smith returning home to Queensland, but soon reformed as Chapter III, with original Defenders' drummer Col Zeller. Frank Klaasen replaced Moore and they became Toowoomba's favourite band and ruled the entertainment scene in the Darling Downs. The band backed the Bee Gees at the 4GR Cabaret Summer Spectacular in 1966. Chapter III moved to Sydney and had a residency at The Thunderbird in Bondi.

In 1966 they returned to Toowoomba. ''Just Can't Live Without You / See See What I See'' was released in 1968. In 1969 Chapter III became the first regionally based band to contest the Melbourne grand-final of the legendary Hoadleys Battle Of The Sounds. The band were also in demand in Brisbane and appeared on local TV shows. Recorded in 1970 "Please Do Something / Voodoo Queen" was their last single before disbanding the same year.

Members

Kerry Wright (vocal/guitar), Ray Moore (vocals/bass), Ron Smith (guitar), Col Zeller (Drums), Bob London (harmony/tambourine) John Sayers (keyboards), Frank Klaasens (bass), Bob Donovan (keyboards), Mike Conway (drums),




SINGLES
''Fool / Not Your Man'' 1966 Festival
''Just Can't Live Without You / See See What I See'' 1968 Festival
''Please Do Something / Voodoo Queen'' 1975 Zachs







Friday 14 February 2014

IMAGINATION


Formed in 1961 out of Wollongong as The Tremors. Changed their name to The Marksmen in 1963 and recorded a single ''Moonshine / But Why'' on the very rare Enterprise label in 1966. A copy of this single sold on Ebay for $AU 2225.00 in 2013. Upon moving to Sydney, the band changed their name to Imagination. Karl Stefanovic (Channel 9's Today) is the son of Alex Stefanovic the band's lead vocalist who had the stage name of Alex Steel. Imagination had a Sunday residency at the Moby Dick Club at Whale Beach in Sydney. The band had a Top-40 Queensland hit with a cover of the Bob Dylan song 'Tonight I'll Be Staying Here With You''. They recorded a second single, The Beatles ''A Day In The Life'' backed by the self-written ''We Got Fun''. Drummer Geoff Foster died in 2019.

Members

Geoff Foster (drums), Lyle MacLean (guitar, vocals), Neil Porter (bass), Alex Stefanovic [aka Alex Steel] (vocals), Stephen Sadler (organ)




SINGLES
''Tonight I'll Be Staying Here With You / The Way I Like It'' 1969 Parlophone
''A Day In The Life / We Got Fun'' 1969 Parlophone





Thursday 13 February 2014

GEORGE GOLLA



George Golla was born on 10 May 1935 in Chorzów, Poland. He emigrated to Australia in the 1950s and began working in Sydney from 1957. In 1959, he commenced a long-term working musical partnership with the clarinetist, flautist and saxophonist Don Burrows that continued for almost forty years. They recorded frequently together and in quartets and other combinations. Together they nurtured and featured many young talents, including brassman and multi-instrumentalist James Morrison, guitarist Guy Strazzullo, drummer David Jones and others they taught at the New South Wales Conservatorium.

Golla was a teacher at the Academy of Guitar in Bondi alongside Don Andrews, specialising in jazz and classical guitar. He has written several books on theory, scales and the modes. Golla toured frequently throughout Australia and at times with international guest support artists such as vibraphonist Gary Burton in the early 1970s. He has had a long association with Brazilian musicians including Luis Bonfa and extensive performance of and many recordings of Latin American-influenced jazz, including the Bonfa Burrows Brazil (The Orchard).

Golla recorded his first album 'The George Golla Guitar Plays ...On The Centre Line' in 1967 on the Festival label produced by Sven Libaek which was followed by many albums including ''The Don Burrows Quartet at the Sydney Opera House' (1974), and 'Steph'n'Us' (1977) with Stephane Grappelli during a tour with Grappelli and Burrows. Golla appeared at both the Montreux Jazz Festival and Newport Jazz Festival in 1972 and has performed at many Australian festivals. He is a frequent contributor at the annual Frankston International Guitar Festival.

Golla continues to perform in and around Sydney where he resides, touring interstate and internationally and recording. He has appeared at many workshops locally, nationally and overseas. From 2005 to 2015, Golla performed regularly in a duo with Australian jazz flugelhorn player and singer songwriter Elizabeth Geyer. To celebrate his 80th birthday in 2015, Golla collaborated with Australian jazz singer Jacki Cooper to record a duo album called 'Tea for Two'.

 


SINGLES
''Theme From ''Adventures Of The Sea Spray'' / Nice 'n Juicy'' 1966 HMV
''Wives And Lovers / This Guy's In Love With You'' 1969 Festival
''Little Spanish Love Song / In Vain My Love'' 1973 Cherry Pie

ALBUMS
'On The Centre Line' 1967 Festival
'Wives & Lovers' 1968 Festival
'Composers Gallery' 1970 Festival
'George Golla' 1973 Cherry Pie
'Easy Feelings' 1975 Cherry Pie
'Duo' [with Don Burrows] (#98) 1975 Cherry Pie
'From The Top' [with Don Andrews] 1976 Cherry Pie
'My Favourite Guitar' 1978 Cherry Pie
'Steph 'n' Us' [with Don Burrows & Stephane Grappelli] (#38) 1978 Cherry Pie
'Bonfa Burrows Brazil' [with Don Burrows & Luis Bonfa] (#92) 1980 Cherry Pie
'Quiet Moods' 1980 Music For Medicine
'A Tribute To Duke Ellington & Billy Strayhorn - Lush Life' 1986 ABC
'Tea For Two' [with Jacki Cooper] 2015




References

George Golla - Wikipedia


Wednesday 12 February 2014

DON BURROWS


Donald Vernon "Don" Burrows AO, MBE was born in Sydney in 1928 and attended Bondi Public School where, in 1937, a visiting flute virtuoso and teacher, Victor McMahon, played and inspired Burrows to take up the flute. Initially it was a B-flat flute, which he had to pay off at sixpence per week. (He later played the same little flute in Carnegie Hall at the Newport Jazz Festival.) By 1940 he was captain of the Metropolitan Schools Flute Band and studying at the Sydney Conservatorium of Music. By 1942 Burrows had taken up clarinet and played on The Youth Show, a Macquarie Radio show, and in 1944 was invited to play and record with George Trevare's Australians.

He became well known in Sydney jazz circles and was playing in dance halls, nightclubs and radio bands. During the 1960s and 1970s, Burrows was the best-known jazz musician in Australia and had many engagements in Australia and the United States, including six years performing in the Wentworth Hotel in Sydney. One of his early album sessions as a bandleader from 1963 showcased a collection of tunes by Burrows originally recorded for TV programs like The Bryan Davies Show and This Is Jazz. His band, too, featured A-list Aussie players including Judy Bailey (piano), George Golla (guitar), John Sangster (vibes) and Errol Buddle (reeds). In 1972, Burrows was invited to perform at the Montreux Jazz Festival and later the Newport Jazz Festival.

The year 1973 was a watershed one for Burrows as he received the first gold record for an Australian jazz musician for his record 'Just the Beginning', instigated the first jazz studies program in the southern hemisphere, at the New South Wales Conservatorium of Music (under the direction of Rex Hobcroft) and was awarded the Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE). In 1979 he was appointed Chair of Jazz Studies at the Conservatorium. Burrows had performed to normally classical music audiences through tours with Musica Viva and the Australian Broadcasting Corporation concert series. 

He fronted the nationally televised show The Don Burrows Collection for six years. This was but one of many productions Burrows was involved with for TV and film across his career. Burrows' warm stage presence, coupled with his ability to play a wide range of instruments in varying styles, enabled him to make the most of his appearances on the small screen.

He had an extensive recording career in his own right with his groups and he performed on many more albums with other artists. In the 1980s, Burrows was associated closely with the then young James Morrison. In the 2000s, his public profile had receded somewhat as he performed less than he used to. In 2005, Burrows toured with a small band including renowned Australian jazz pianist Kevin Hunt. He used his photographic images with his music in a show called Stop, Look and Listen. On 12 March 2020, an era of Australian music ended after the multi-instrumentalist died peacefully in his hometown of Sydney.



SINGLES
''Golden Wedding / Titles Theme (From The Bryan Davies Show)'' 1963 Columbia
''Yucatan Man / Minha Saudade'' 1976 Cherry Pie
''God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen (Edited Version) / Jingle Bells (Edited Version)'' 1981 Cherry Pie
''Sara's Theme / Londonderry Air'' 1982 Cherry Pie

ALBUMS
'On Camera' 1963 Columbia
'A Tribute to Freddy Gardner' 1966 Columbia
'The Jazz Sound of the Don Burrows Quartet' 1966 Columbia
'2000 Weeks' [Movie Soundtrack]1969 Columbia
'Just the Beginning' 1971 Cherry Pie
'Live! at Montreaux' 1972 Cherry Pie
'At The Sydney Opera House' 1974 Cherry Pie
'Duo' [with George Golla and Luis Bonfa) (#98) 1975 Cherry Pie
'The New Don Burrows Quintet' 1975 Cherry Pie
'The Tasman Connection' 1976 Cherry Pie
'Steph 'n' Us' [with George Golla and Stephane Grappelli] (#38) 1977 Cherry Pie
'Don Burrows and the Brazilian Connection' 1978 (#92) Cherry Pie
'Cool Yule' 1978 Cherry Pie
'Other Places Other Times' [with George Golla Duo] (#38) 1980 Cherry Pie
'Don Burrows with Neil Thurgate Orchestra' 1980 ABC
'Bonfa Burrows Brazil' [with Luiz Bonfá and George Golla] 1980 Cherry Pie
'Other Places Other Times' [with Luiz Bonfá and George Golla] 1981 Cherry Pie
'This Time Tassie' [with George Golla Duo] 1981 Cherry Pie
'Sara Dane' 1982 (#86) Cherry Pie
'Fluteman' [with John Sangster] 1982 Rain-Forest NB: Soundtrack to the film Fluteman
'A Retrospective' 1982 ABC
'Burrows at the Winery' 1984 ABC
'Makin' Whoopee!' [with The Adelaide Connection] 1985 ABC
'Jazz at The Opera House' 1985 ABC
'Flute Salad' [with Chris Hinze] 1986 ABC
'Nice 'n' Easy' [with The Adelaide Connection) 1987 ABC
'With Orchestra' 1990 WEA
'Quintet' 1990 WEA
'Duets' 1990 WEA
'Together at Last' [with Julie Anthony] 1994 Castle Communications
'In Flight' 1999 MDM
'Eye to Eye Vol 1+2' [with Kevin Hunt) 2007
'In Good Company' [with James Morrison] 2016




References

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Don_Burrows


Tuesday 11 February 2014

RAY WARLEIGH



Raymond "Ray" Kenneth Warleigh (28 September 1938) was born in Sydney and migrated to England in 1960, where he quickly established himself as an in-demand session musician. He played and recorded with major figures and bands of the UK jazz and blues scene, including Alexis Korner, Tubby Hayes, Humphrey Lyttelton, Terry Smith, Ronnie Scott, Long John Baldry, John Mayall, Keef Hartley, Allan Holdsworth, Soft Machine, Georgie Fame, Mike Westbrook, Dick Morrissey and Kenny Wheeler, as well as Mike Oldfield, Nick Drake, and Charlie Watts.

He accompanied visiting artists such as Champion Jack Dupree. According to John Fordham in The Guardian wrote: "Ray Warleigh brought a unique touch to every venture he played on from the 60s on, and had a successful 30-year career that partnered him with Dusty Springfield, Marianne Faithfull, Scott Walker and Stevie Wonder, among others." 

Warleigh's first album, in 1968, was produced by Scott Walker. Warleigh's last album, 'Rue Victor Massé' (2009), is an improvisation with free-jazz drummer Tony Marsh, has received critical acclaim. According to Jazz Review: "The duo’s synergy and common goals resound mightily here. Featuring Warleigh’s lyrically resplendent sax and flute lines, in concert with a crystalline audio sound, the musicians flex some muscle amid buoyant underpinnings."

In 1973 he joined Latin fusion band Paz, led by vibist and composer Dick Crouch. He featured with the band for eight years playing a weekly Sunday residency at the Kensington pub in Holland Park, recording albums including 'Kandeen Love Song', 'Paz Are Back' (Spotlite Records), 'Paz Live at Chichester Festival' (Magnus Records) and 'Look Inside' (Paladin Records). Other members of the band were Dick Crouch leader and vibes, Ed Speight on guitar, Geoff Castle on keyboards, Ron Mathewson on bass guitar, Dave Sheen on drums and Chris Fletcher on percussion.

In his leisure time Warleigh was an accomplished yachtsman, completing many voyages with his long-standing friend, Dr Gillian Ross, with whom he co-owned several boats, before serious illness struck in 2011. He died of cancer on 21 September 2015








References

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ray_Warleigh


Monday 10 February 2014

PIP PROUD


Pip Proud was born Phillip John Proud in Adelaide in September 1947 and is the younger brother of artist Geoffrey Proud (born 1946). He grew up in the inner city suburb of Hindmarsh, where his parents were "middle class and so on, and so on." The family moved to the Snowy Mountains. He later recalled his childhood, "I was tremendously lonely as a child. I was slightly spastic, couldn't write properly, couldn't catch balls... I never understood why my peers rejected me. I had no close friends. I was a near-failure at English and used to get someone else to do my poetry for me. But I matriculated, just to prove to my parents I could do it."

Proud worked as a radio repairer, electrician's apprentice, and started writing poetry, "it was mostly protest stuff, and I'm not proud of it." Geoffrey had moved to Sydney and Proud joined him there in the mid-1960s. Proud explained his style, "I tried to keep away from reading poetry so as not to be influenced. I have to write in my own way, with words you can taste. I didn't want to learn other people's tricks, but make my own tricks. I kept away from the moderns especially, yet I have come by myself to use a modern idiom."

Proud's unusual musical style was likened to Tom Rapp and Syd Barrett, though he was unfamiliar with the latter's work when he recorded his three albums of the late 1960s (which pre-dated Barrett's solo releases). The first album, 'De Da De Dum' (Grendel, 1967), appeared as a limited edition with about 50 copies pressed. His then-girlfriend, Alison, assisted on cow bells. According to Kay Keavney of The Australian Women's Weekly, "The result was passing strange. Pip chanted his poems in his soft, unmelodious voice, to his own guitar music."

He was signed to the Phillips/Phonogram label and his first commercial album 'Adreneline and Richard' (1968) reprised most of the tracks from his earlier effort, re-recorded. Some tracks had a full band backing added without his involvement. Australian musicologist, Ian McFarlane has written that it "contained such sparse, idiosyncratic and evocative songs as ''De Da De Dum'', ''Purple Boy Gang'', ''Into Elizabeth's Eyes'', ''An Old Servant'' and ''Adreneline and Richard'.

The album garnered positive reviews in Go-Set, and Proud made a few television appearances as well as doing a handful of live gigs. Proud described how he was treated by the media, "Mostly they sent me up." Keavney reported, "abruptly as the bubble blew up, it burst." A small number of concerts Proud put on were, Keavney wrote, "a disaster''. ''I was nervous, and the PA systems didn't work'', said Pip."

Proud was the subject of a 15-minute experimental documentary, De Da De Dum (May 1968), directed by Sydney film maker, Garry Shead, a member of the Ubu Films collective. In his book Ubu Films: Sydney Underground Movies 1965-1970 (1997) Peter Mudie described the film as an "experimental documentary" which "observes Pip and his constant companion Alison in a variety of settings which project Pip's attitudes to urban life. Slow, fast and single frame filming are used, and some images are drawn on and punctured. Pip sings his own songs on the sound track." One of his supporters in the late 1960s was the poet Michael Dransfield, who encouraged him to write novels.

His second album, 'A Bird in the Engine', appeared in July 1969. Keavney felt "there was steel in young Pip... It was highly original and very much Pip Proud... And 'the literary people' began to take notice of Pip." Two poems were anthologised in a collection published by Sun Books, Australian Poetry Now through Dransfield's advocacy; Dransfield also created a publishing firm, Dransfield and Sladen, "to publish both his poetry and two of his novels, Miss Rose and The River, the Snake, the Tree, and the House." Although these books were written, they were not published. McFarlane summarised Proud's impact, "This shy singer/songwriter/poet was a true anomaly on the Australian 1960s pop scene. Proud sang his gentle pop songs in a quaint, quavering voice while strumming or tapping the strings of his (unamplified) electric guitar." He ceased working with the Philips label and did not release any further recordings until the mid-1990s.

Proud travelled to Britain in late 1969 to further his career. he told Keavney, that he intended to travel to the east, "Buddhism is a very gentle, unbinding religion. That's why I want to learn more about it. I might stay in a monastery for a year just to see." He returned to Australia in 1971. He "spent most of the 1970s writing poems, novels and plays." His novels are yet to be published, "although Sydney radio station Double J aired two adaptations of his plays Vlort Phlitson, Intergalactic Trouble Shooter and Don Coyote." In 1975 Proud contributed to a three-author poetry collection, Upon the Dancing, with Iain Ramage and Michael Ney. He lived in northern Tasmania for some years before relocating to northern New South Wales, eventually living in Tenterfield in the mid-1990s.

In 1994 New Zealand singer-guitarist, Alastair Galbraith, released a track, "Pip Proud", on his four-track extended play, 'Cluster'. Proud was tracked down in 1995 by historian David Nichols leading to the re-release of his two Polydor LPs on CD via Nic Dalton's Half a Cow label as 'Eagle-Wise' (1996). Nichols and Dalton also helped Pip record six new songs in 1996, two of which have been released to date.

Proud resumed recording new material to release more albums, primarily, for the Emperor Jones label. He described how, "I started recording again. I had to learn the guitar again. I recorded to a cassette player that was hooked up to the car to power it, then a petrol generator, then solar cells. I've released four or five albums on the Emperor Jones label and I'm looking forward to doing another, a call-and-response rap album." During the 2000s Proud's health declined. In 2002 he had a stroke which left him blind and partially paralysed. He played two live shows, his first in over thirty years, in Melbourne in late 2006. Proud died in March 2010, aged 62, from throat cancer. 




ALBUMS
'De Da De Dum' 1967 Grendel
'Adreneline & Richard' 1968 Polydor
'A Bird In The Engine' 1969 Polydor




References

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pip_Proud


Friday 7 February 2014

JOAN SUTHERLAND


Joan Sutherland was born in Sydney in 1926, to Scottish parents and attended St Catherine's School in the suburb of Waverley, New South Wales. As a child, she listened to and imitated her mother's singing exercises. Her mother, a mezzo-soprano, had taken voice lessons but never considered making a career as a professional singer.
 
Sutherland was 18 years old when she began seriously studying voice with John and Aida Dickens. She made her concert debut in Sydney, as Dido in a production of Henry Purcell's Dido and Aeneas, in 1947. After winning Australia's most important competition, the Sun Aria (now known as the Sydney Eisteddfod McDonald's Operatic Aria) in 1949, she came third after the baritone Ronal Jackson in radio 3DB's Mobil Quest, which she won a year later, in 1950. In 1951, she made her stage debut in Eugene Goossens's Judith. She then went to London to further her studies at the Opera School of the Royal College of Music with Clive Carey. She was engaged by the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, as a utility soprano, and made her debut there on 28 October 1952, as the First Lady in The Magic Flute, followed in November by a few performances as Clotilde in Vincenzo Bellini's opera Norma, with Maria Callas as Norma.

Being an admirer of Kirsten Flagstad in her early career, she trained to be a Wagnerian dramatic soprano. In December 1952, she sang her first leading role at the Royal Opera House, Amelia in Un ballo in maschera. Other roles included Agathe in Der Freischütz, the Countess in The Marriage of Figaro, Desdemona in Otello, Gilda in Rigoletto, Eva in Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg, and Pamina in The Magic Flute. In 1953, she sang the role of Lady Rich in Benjamin Britten's Gloriana a few months after its world premiere, and created the role of Jenifer in Michael Tippett's The Midsummer Marriage, on 27 January 1955.

Sutherland married Australian conductor and pianist Richard Bonynge on 16 October 1954. Their son, Adam, was born in 1956. Bonynge gradually convinced her that Wagner might not be her Fach, and that since she could produce high notes and coloratura with great ease, she should perhaps explore the bel canto repertoire. She eventually settled in this Fach, spending most of her career singing dramatic coloratura soprano.

In 1957, she appeared in Handel's Alcina with the Handel Opera Society, and sang selections from Donizetti's Emilia di Liverpool in a radio broadcast. The following year she sang Donna Anna in Don Giovanni in Vancouver.

In 1959, Sutherland was invited to sing Lucia di Lammermoor at the Royal Opera House in a production conducted by Tullio Serafin and staged by Franco Zeffirelli. The role of Edgardo was sung by her fellow Australian Kenneth Neate, who had replaced the scheduled tenor at short notice. In 1960, she recorded the album 'The Art of the Prima Donna': the double LP set won the Grammy Award for Best Classical Performance – Vocal Soloist in 1962. The album was added to the National Film and Sound Archive's Sounds of Australia registry in 2011.

Sutherland sang Lucia to great acclaim in Paris in 1960 and, in 1961, at La Scala and the Metropolitan Opera. In 1960, she sang Alcina at La Fenice For her performance of Lucia di Lammermoor, standees began lining up at 7:30 that morning. Her singing of the Mad Scene drew a 12-minute ovation. Sutherland would soon be praised as La Stupenda in newspapers around the world. Later that year (1960), Sutherland sang Alcina at the Dallas Opera, with which she made her US debut.

Her Metropolitan Opera debut took place on 26 November 1961, when she sang Lucia. After a total of 223 performances in a number of different operas, her last appearance there was a concert on 12 March 1989. During the 1978–82 period her relationship with the Met deteriorated when Sutherland had to decline the role of Constanze in Mozart's Die Entführung aus dem Serail, more than a year before the rehearsals were scheduled to start. The opera house management then declined to stage the operetta The Merry Widow especially for her, as requested; subsequently, she did not perform at the Met during that time at all, even though a production of Rossini's Semiramide had also been planned, but later she returned there to sing in other operas.

During the 1960s, Sutherland added the heroines of bel canto to her repertoire: Violetta in Verdi's La traviata, Amina in Bellini's La sonnambula and Elvira in Bellini's I puritani in 1960; the title role in Bellini's Beatrice di Tenda in 1961; Marguerite de Valois in Meyerbeer's Les Huguenots and the title role in Rossini's Semiramide in 1962; Norma in Bellini's Norma and Cleopatra in Handel's Giulio Cesare in 1963. In 1966 she added Marie in Donizetti's La fille du régiment.

In 1965, Sutherland toured Australia with the Sutherland-Williamson Opera Company. Accompanying her was a young tenor named Luciano Pavarotti.

During the 1970s, Sutherland strove to improve her diction, which had often been criticised, and increase the expressiveness of her interpretations. She continued to add dramatic bel canto roles to her repertoire, such as Donizetti's Maria Stuarda and Lucrezia Borgia, as well as Massenet's Esclarmonde. With Pavarotti she made a studio-recording of Turandot in 1972 under the baton of Zubin Mehta, though she never performed the role on stage.

Sutherland's early recordings show her to be possessed of a crystal-clear voice and excellent diction. However, by the early 1970s her voice lost some of this clarity in the middle register, and she often came under fire for having unclear diction. Some have attributed this to sinus surgery; however, her major sinus surgery was done in 1959, immediately after her breakthrough Lucia at Covent Garden. In fact, her first commercial recording of the first and final scene of Lucia reveals her voice and diction to be just as clear as prior to the sinus procedure. Her husband Richard Bonynge stated in an interview that her "mushy diction" occurred while striving to achieve perfect legato. According to him, it is because she earlier had a very Germanic "un-legato" way of singing. She clearly took the criticism to heart, as, within a few years, her diction improved markedly.

During the 1980s, Sutherland added Anna Bolena, Amalia in I masnadieri, and Adriana Lecouvreur to her repertoire, and repeated Esclarmonde at the Royal Opera House performances in November and December 1983. Her last full-length dramatic performance was as Marguerite de Valois (Les Huguenots) at the Sydney Opera House in 1990, at the age of 63, where she sang Home Sweet Home for her encore. Her last public appearance, however, took place in a gala performance of Die Fledermaus on New Year's Eve, 1990, at Covent Garden, where she was accompanied by her colleagues Luciano Pavarotti and the mezzo-soprano Marilyn Horne. According to her own words, given in an interview with The Guardian newspaper in 2002, her biggest achievement was to sing the title role in Esclarmonde. She considered those performances and recordings her best.

After retirement, Sutherland made relatively few public appearances, preferring a quiet life at her home in Les Avants, Switzerland. On 11 October 2010, Sutherland's family announced that she had died at her home at Les Avants in Switzerland the previous day of cardiopulmonary failure – "the heart just gave out...When it came to the point that she physically couldn't do anything, she didn't want to live any more. She wanted to go, she was happy to go, and in the end she died very, very peacefully." 




SINGLES
''Il Dolce Suono Mi Corpi Di Sua Voce... (Mad Scene, Part 1, Act Il) / Ardon Gl' Incensi (Mad Scene, Conclusion, Act Il)'' 1969 Decca
''Recit: Surta E La Notte... Aria: Ernani, Ernani, Involami ("Ernani," Act 1) / Recit: Ah! Tardai Troppo... Aria: O Luce Di Quest' Anima ("Linda Di Chamounix," Act 1)'' 1960 Decca
''Recit: Surta E La Notte... Aria: Ernani, Ernani, Involami ("Ernani," Act I) / Recit: Ah! Tardai Troppo... Aria: O Luce Di Quest' Anima ("Linda Di Chamounix," Act I)'' 1960 Decca
''Scena: E Strano / Aria: Ah Fors' E Lui - Sempre Libera ("La Traviata") / Recit: Mia Madre Aveva Una Povera Ancella... Aria: Piangea Cantando (Willow Song) ("Otello") 1962 Decca
Falling In Love With Love / Love Will Find A Way'' 1968 Decca
''Ocean! Thou Mighty Monster ("Oberon")'' / Aria: Deh! Se Un' Urna ("Beatrice Di Tenda")'' Decca
''Il Dolce Suono Mi Corpi Di Sua (Mad Scene, Part 1) (Act II) / Ardon Gl' Incensi (Mad Scene, Concl.) (Act II)'' Decca

EPs
'Handel - Messiah' 1961
'The Art Of The Prima Donna, Volume 2' 1962 Decca
'Command Performance No. 1' 1963 Decca

ALBUMS
'Operatic Arias' 1959 Decca
'The Art Of The Prima Donna' 1960 Decca
'The Art Of The Prima Donna, Vol.2' 1960 Decca
'Joan Sutherland Sings Noël Coward' 1966 Decca
'Romantic French Arias' 1970 Decca
'Songs My Mother Taught Me' 1973 Decca
'Bel Canto Arias' 1986 Decca




References

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joan_Sutherland