Friday, October 31, 2025

W.O.C.K on Vinyl: The Ghouls - Dracula's Deuce (1964)

 Before things get too serious here at Rock On Vinyl, I thought it might be fun to post a song / album at the end of each month, that could be categorized as being either Weird, Obscure, Crazy or just plain Korny.

Now here's an album that's guarenteed to grab you (down! Igor. down!). Something new and different for all you Monstrous Music lovers. Half the tunes are vocals with great, horrifying lyrics, and half are swinging instrumentals guaranteed to wake the dead (go back to sleep, Igor, the sun's still out)

So whether you're in the mood to mash, jerk, watusi or swim - or just want to lie back on your slab and relax with some wonderful music for queasy listening - this album is for you. [Album liner notes]

This album is actually Dracula parodies of the Beach Boys and surf music in general. It's particularly notable for having come out in 1964, before the heyday of psychedelia. It perfectly presages a lot of retro interest in goofy halloween music, surf rock, sunshine pop, etc. among the garage rockers of the 2020s, purely innocently. No sinister psychedelia or subversion here, just good clean fun.

Cemetary Rockers will really dig this album
While I love hearing a 60’s-era monster party song any time of year, cemetery rockers and blood-sucking bops make up a substantial part of my diet come October. I’ve been reviewing a mix of gleefully ghastly and truly god-awful genre pieces through my Instagram stories all month long, but for Halloween-proper I wanted to dig a little deeper into a record that’s fascinated me for decades: The Ghouls’ Dracula’s Deuce, from 1964.

The Ghouls weren’t exactly a real band, but rather a studio project concocted by Gary Usher, a California producer/musician who carved out a career making music with various fictional ensembles.

Drac loves surf music too
Dracula’s Deuce is a weird beast. It pretty well trades off song-for-song between instrumental and vocal pieces. But it’s also a novelty record to the max, and painfully punny to the core. Considering Gary also had a dozen co-writes with Brian Wilson (most famously “In My Room”), it’s not surprising to see the Ghouls' macabre goofs on iconic tracks from Jan and Dean (“The Little Old Lady from Transylvania”), The Beach Boys (“Be True To Your Ghoul”) and even Chuck Berry's "Johnny B. Goode" ("Bela be Good").

While borrowing quite liberally from the surf and hot rod music scenes, it’s hard to miss that Dracula’s Deuce also owes an eternal debt to “Monster Mash”. Vocalist Richie Burns often works a similar Boris Karloff lilt as the Crypt-Kickers’ Bobby “Boris” Pickett; the Ghouls’ “The Graveyard Shift” is musically a beat-for-beat Mash, though it moves the monsters from the party to a back-breaking night of ditchdigging.

Drac's Red Deuce 
The simmering, sax-loaded “Monsterbilly Heaven,” the album’s best vocal track, is an accidentally profound piece about monsters crossing over into a second afterlife, with Drac and Vampira having one last bash before ascending to that big black cloud in the sky. That’s kind of how the Ghouls avoid being mere “Monster Mash” retreads, putting them a rung ahead above more pitiful Pickett bites like Mann Drake’s “Vampire’s Ball”.

That’s not to say the record is without faults. Burns loves dropping these pained cries throughout the vocal pieces that are a struggle to listen to. It’s as if he’s constantly being staked through the heart (maybe he was !) For this reason alone, the instrumentals steal the show. Take “Dracula’s Theme,” a cool-but-creepy bit of whammy-undulated guitar exotica.

While they haven’t repressed The Ghouls’ lone record since the ‘60s, it is streaming through Apple and Spotify. It’s doubly niche, between the hot rod talk and the horror aesthetic, but when it comes to songs about vampires racing custom-plated hearses through a graveyard, you can’t get much better than Dracula’s Deuce.[BY GREGORY ADAMS]


This WOCK post certainly ticks the C box for being Creepy and of course the 'Korny' Box [Coffin]
Happy Halloween my little Ghouls......have fun finding the link (it's dead easy).

Track List
A1 Dracula's Deuce
A2 Dracula's Theme
A3 Little Old Lady From Transylvania
A4 Weird Wolf
A5 Be True To Your Ghoul
A6 Shake, Rattle And Rot
B1 Monsterbilly Heaven
B2 Blood And Butter
B3 The Graveyard Shift
B4 Voo Doo Juice
B5 Bela Be Good
B6 Coffin Nails



(MP3/320 + Artwork -70Mb)
New Link 1/11/25

Tuesday, October 28, 2025

Hobo - Child Of The Earth (1978)

 (Australian 1977-1978)

Hobo’s 'Child of the Earth' is one of the most elusive and rare progressive releases from Australia’s 1970s scene, seemingly unknown to even the most knowledgeable Australian music historians. After appearing in one of Han Pokora’s books, the album has been placed on many wish lists created by record collectors around the world. The record is so phenomenally obscure that the last time it appeared on popsike was over a decade ago for the pricely sum of $800.

This obscurity may be attributed to the fact that the album supposedly sunk without a trace upon release in 1978, due to the small Sydney-based ‘Down Under’ label folding immediately after release. The only notable musician in Hobo is bassist Henry Correy who had been in the Australian Jazz-Rock band, Sun with Renee Geyer, releasing a rare album on RCA Victor in 1973.

Henry Correy
Musically, I would categorise the music as mid-1970s progressive rock. The arrangements are dominated by: densely layered analogue synthesizer colours, melodies and effects by the ARP Omni string synthesizer and Mini-Moog; trebly Chris Squire-esque bass lines that are high in the mix; and good lead guitar playing including occasional Steve Howe-esque volume swells, Richie Blackmore-like ferocity and space-rock guitar theatrics redolent of early UFO.

However, the music is firmly on the simplistic end of the progressive rock spectrum, with the band tending to focus mainly on heavily reverberated and symphonic space-rock textures rather than complex time signatures and unusual chord progressions. Thus there is a proclivity in the compositions towards atmosphere, mood and texture (which they do very well) rather than compositional complexity found in other 70s progressive rock bands such as Gentle Giant and King Crimson. Their dense and simple symphonic style is best represented on the epic 6 minute-long tracks ('Hobo' and 'Every Running Man'), and the 10 minute ode to a troubled friend ('Song for Mitch'), which features a great delay-inflected space-rock guitar solo over a drone.

Hobo (L-R Henry Correy, Michael Pandelis, Mark Riley, Ken Bunguric, John Faddoul)
[Photo thanks to Michael Pandelis]
The band also explore up-tempo riff-based Hard Rock a la Deep Purple with some ferocious guitar leads ('Dizzy Girl'); swinging piano and bass driven Jazz-Rock reminiscent of early Spirit with a Randy California guitar solo and jazz guitar sound ('You Got Women'); and heavy blues / boogie rock with Hammond organ and lightning fast guitar leads ('Drive On'). The latter also possesses an intro that recalls Ariel’s version of Spectrum’s ‘I’ll Be Gone’ - isolated heavy drums with rural harmonica.

Ralph Morrison (Replaced Mark Riley in 1978)
The musicianship on this album is consistently good throughout - especially keyboardist and guitarist - despite unspectacular songwriting skills. Progressive fans I am sure will find something enjoyable across the album. [Review by ursamajor69 at RateyourMusic]
And now a word from Michael Pandelis:

Micahel Pandelis
"Gday, Mick Pandelis here. I played guitar on the album ‘Child of The Earth’ by Hobo. Here's some trivia for you:

The band leaders name was Henry Correy who also had a classic oz jazz rock band in the late sixties early seventies called 'Sun'. This band has had Renee Geyer and I believe Richard Clapton at one stage. Sun appeared on GTK and many other iconic oz music shows.

Hobo appeared on Donnie Sutherland's Sounds on a few occasions. Mark Opitz was our engineer and producer at EMI, we were his first there. When we first met Mark it was in the mastering room, he had just received a master tape of " I Robot" by the Alan Parsons Project, and was getting it set for pressing. Sherbet was in the other studio recording Howzat.

A few years back I bumped into Henry again and did a blues album with him called ‘Prisoner of Desire’. Unfortunately Henry suffered a stroke a couple of years back and hasn't been himself.

Mark Riley was the original drummer in Hobo, but left to join another high profile band before we recorded the album and was replaced by Ralph Morrison. Mark eventually played with the Australian Jazz Rock outfit Crossfire on the Live in Montreux album in 1982. Sadly, Mark was killed in a motor bike accident in 1983.


In Chris Spencer's book 'Who's Who of Australian Rock', he lists Henry Correy as a one-time member of SUN, and also BLUESBERRY JAM from Wollongong as recently as 2000.

I am fairly certain that the label 'Down Under Records' has no affiliation with the short-lived Sydney indie label from the mid 1960s. Perhaps it is their own custom moniker?

None of the songs on this album are currently held in the APRA or ASCAP repertoires.

This post consists of FLACs ripped from Vinyl (Thanks to BrianL at Midoztouch2) and includes full album artwork and label scans. This album is a true Aussie gem, and needs to be listened to multiple times, to be fully appreciated. Although the vocals are not a strong point, the musicianship on this album is equal to any other Aussie Prog Rock bands at that time, like Sebastian Hardie, Airlord and Peak
My favourite tracks are "Song For Mitch", "Ever Running Man" and the album closer "Hobo".

Track Listing:
A01. Dizzy Girl  (03:41)
A02. Song for Mitch   (10:10)
A03. You Got Women  (03:58)
A04. Love Torn Katie   (03:50)
B05. Drive On   (03:19)
B06. Ever Running Man   (06:10)
B07. Try    (04:41)
B08. Hobo   (06:13)

Hobo were:
John Faddoul (lead vocal, harmonies)
Henry Correy (bass, vocal, harmonies)
Mick Pandelis (all guitars, mini moog)
Ken Bunguric (piano, oran, strings,
omni synth, harmonies)
Ralph Morrison (drums, percussion)

Recorded at: EMI Sydney; and Atlantic Studios, 
Earlwood, Sydney; under a recording grant 
from the Australia Council Music Board.
Produced by: Hobo and Ray Wight.
Engineers: Mark Opitz (EMI); Godfrey Gamble (Atlantic).

Hobo Link (167Mb)

Friday, October 24, 2025

Southern Cross - Selftitled LP (1976) plus bonus Rehearsal Tracks

(Australian 1975-1978)

Sydney-based hard rock band Southern Cross had its roots in heavy progressive rock pioneers Buffalo. John Baxter had been sacked from Buffalo at the end of 1974. Baxter's savage guitar work had virtually defined the Buffalo sound and approach; his departure robbed the band of its most distinctive feature and boldest asset. 

The band's spirit simply faded thereafter. Original line-up was: Alan Milano (vocals; ex-Buffalo), John Baxter (lead guitar; ex-Head, Buffalo), Michel Brouet (bass, vocals), Jeff Beacham (drums).

Southern Cross
Initially Baxter formed Boy Racer before teaming up with original Buffalo singer Alan Milano in Southern Cross. Milano was co-vocalist on Buffalo's debut LP 'Dead Forever'.

Baxter wrote much of the band's early live set, although he left six months after its formation. Seventeen-year-old Bruce Cumming replaced Baxter on guitar.    Alongside the likes of Finch, The Angels, Kevin Borich Express, Rose Tattoo and Chariot, Southern Cross swiftly became one of the most popular hard rock bands on the Sydney scene. Southern Cross signed to the independent Living Sound/Laser label and issued its debut single, `Stormy Lady'/`Queen of Rock'n'Roll', at the end of 1976.

The funky, bluesy and heavy `Stormy Lady' was a good indication of the band's over-the-top style. The band's selftitled debut album (1976) featured melodic, raunchy hard rock in the vein of Billy Thorpe and the Aztecs and UK band Bad Company. It mixed flat-out, riff-rockers (`You Need It', `Money Maker', `Stormy Lady') with moody rock ballads (`Jesse', `Story Teller' and `Games').

The album scored only minimal sales, despite its strong points. By 1978, Southern Cross had broken up and Cumming and Brouet moved on to 'The Press', another Sydney based band with a punk edged heavy metal sound. Steve Kot (vocals) and Rick Doolan (drums) completed the line-up.

Southern Cross
This post consists of FLACs ripped from a 2011 CD release of this highly sought after and rare Aussie rock album. (copies selling for $400+
Full artwork for both CD and Vinyl media is included, with the exception of a Side 2 LP label scan. If any blog followers have a copy of this LP, I would love to get hold of this missing label scan. Likewise, if anyone has their only single, I would love to get hold of a rip of the B-Side "Queen Of Rock 'n' Roll".

As a bonus, I'm also including a 'Southern Cross' rehearsal tape from June 1976, which includes album tracks - "Money Maker"and "You Need It"; and a non-album (Bad Company cover)  "Movin' On", all featuring John Baxter on guitar. 


The following is a transcript that was written by Bruce Cumming, describing the moment when he first auditioned to play with the band:

I walked into a teenage dream.......I guess…when I attended an audition for guitarist in this cramped room out the back of some shops in Bronte, an eastern suburb of Sydney in 1975.

John Baxter
The next guy to walk in the door was a local rock star, guitarist John Baxter, who had recently left Buffalo, one of Sydney’s biggest live acts…and it was he and former Buffalo singer Alan Milano who were putting the new band together.

I was 17 and I passed the audition!  Even though Baxter didn’t stick with us for long, we all remained friends and you can hear him talking here as he passes constructive criticism on my guitar solos and jokes in a serious way about the overall sound.

We rehearsed in a dilapidated shell of a house that we rented in Harris St, Ultimo, an inner – Sydney City suburb…the walls were lined with egg–cartons, we set up a little PA in there and pretty much blew the roof off whenever we wanted to.

This stuff here was recorded in mono onto cassette…over 30 years later you can hear the tape scrunching over the oxide on the pad. The ‘quality’ is terrible, of course, but if you turn It UP, I don’t think you could possibly hear the energy in what we were doing long, long ago.

Tracks listing:
01. Money Maker  (4:31)
02. You Need It  (5:10)
03. Jessie  (5:12)
04. What Am I Waiting For?  (5:12)
05. Harris Street  (4:42)
06. Story Teller   (5:12)
07. Games  (8:58)
08. Stormy Lady  (4:51)
Bonus Rehearsal Tracks
09. Money Maker  (8:08)
10. Movin' On   (3:24)
11.  You Need It  (7:29)

Southern Cross were:
Alan Milano - vocals
Bruce Cumming - guitars
Jeff Beacham - drums
Michel Brouet - bass, vocals


Southern Cross Link (405Mb)

Saturday, October 18, 2025

REPOST: Sherbet - Slipstream (1974)

(Australian 1969 - 84)
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Sherbet was Australia's top pop group in the 1970s, with a fan base largely made up of teenage girls. They were the first band to reach AUS $1M in record sales in Australia; pioneered the concept of massive regional tours; and turned its merchandising into a huge industry.
Sherbet were formed in Sydney in 1969 by guitarist Clive Shakespeare with members of his former band Downtown Roll Band. Initially they started out as a soul band doing Motown material. They released their first single "Crimson Ships" the following year. In 1971 they won Australia's prestigious national rock band contest Hoadley's Battle of the Sounds. In the same year they had their first hit with the Ted Mulry song "You're All Woman" and from then on they had a string of hits. They became the darlings of Australia's teenyboppers and did regular appearances on the top TV pop show Countdown.
During the seventies no act was more popular on Countdown than Australia’s premier pop band, Sherbet. Sherbet made more appearances on Countdown than any other band in the program’s 13 year history.

Sherbet had a clean-cut boys-next door image; a big contrast to the bad boy persona favoured by their peers. There were often scenes of screaming, shirt-ripping and general girl-fan mayhem on the Countdown set when the band appeared. Sherbet’s first Countdown appearances coincided with their 'Slipstream album', which earned them five gold records. 'Slipstream' reached Number 5 in October 1974 in the Australian Charts and went on to sell over 100,000 copies. 'Life is for Living' and a greatest hits album soon followed [extract from www.countdown.com.au]

For the better part of the Seventies, Sherbet were the Kings of Pop in Australia. By mid-decade they were undisputed rulers of the Australian charts and stages, and only with the appearance of the mighty Skyhooks was Sherbet confronted with its first serious rival.
Michael Gudinski (Skyhook's Manager) is quoted as saying "Like the Beatles and the Stones, despite the public rivalry, privately, the bands were good mates". He recalls - "Funnily enough, we got on really well with Sherbet. Roger Davies (Sherbet's Manager) and I were already friends and we stayed good friends. Both bands used the rivalry thing to their advantage. People used to think 'Oh, they hate each other' and the fans would be fighting. Yet Sherbet actually helped us out. The first gig Skyhooks ever did in Sydney was at the Opera House with them, and we did quite a few shows together. But there'd be radio polls where listeners would vote for their favourite, either Skyhooks or Sherbet. It was an exciting time, a great era for Australian music" (Taken from Ego Is Not A Dirty Word: The Skyhooks Story by Jeff Jenkins, 1994, p 60)

Davies, vigorously marketed Sherbet as a teen-oriented singles band, producing some polished, highly commercial pop/R&B. In terms of teen adulation (especially with girls), they were the true successors to The Easybeats, with lead singer Daryl Braithwaite unquestionably the most popular male performer of the period. Their popularity reached Beatle-esque heights, with regular riots, mobbings and scenes of crowd hysteria. Exposure to a national television audience on Countdown vastly increased their popularity across the country. Sherbet avoided some of the excesses of glam, such as heavy make-up, but were partial to satin, velvet and custom-made bomber jackets.

.Although sometimes criticised (at the time) as lightweight, they were a classic pop band whose success was solidly founded on great musical ability and sheer hard work, not just marketing hype. Sherbet remains one of the best-selling and most successful bands in Australian music. They produced some great original material and enjoyed a record-breaking string of hits, with an amazing run of sixteen consecutive Top 40 singles between 1971 and 1977. They also hold the unique honour of being our first band to score an overseas hit with a song written, recorded and produced entirely in Australia - "Howzat".
In concert, Sherbet were outstanding. As their live recordings attest, they were tight, disciplined, consistent and highly professional. They were also one of the hardest working bands in the business. They kept up a punishing touring schedule throughout their career and visited almost every part of the country at one time or another, completing around 20 national tours. In an industry well-known for tantrums and "no shows", Sherbet missed only one gig in fifteen years of touring, according to Sandow! Sherbet was also the first Australian band to be able to maintain a large-scale, permanent touring operation which included "specially-designed stage clothes, 3 1/2 tonnes of stage equipment, a 2000-watt amplification system, and an integrated light show which included ... pyrotechnic effects." [extract from Milesago.com.au]
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[Thanks to Debbie Krugger for the 'Live Photos' above]
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Sherbet had the best tour books of any group around in those days, local or international. The "On Tour" book, written about the band's "Around Australia in 80 Days" tour, sold at newsagents and apparently was the biggest selling book on a pop group in its day.
In 1977 Sherbet went back overseas and – other than a quick trip home over Christmas/New Year to see family and do free concerts for 2SM and 3XY — stayed away for a year. When they returned, Daryl had a beard, Tony had tamed the afro, and the music sounded all grown up. The "Another Night on the Road" tour was in smaller venues than previous tours, and more musically satisfying, although the guys seemed frustrated that the fans still wanted to scream and hold up signs saying "DARYL U SPUNK" rather than listening to the lyrics of songs that they had sweated over in Canada and California. [extract from DebbieKruger.com]

From 1978, the band spent several years attempting (without success) to make an impact in the United States. The last studio album from 1978 'Sherbet' was issued in the United States under the name Highway and titled 'Highway 1'. After making little headway in the US market the band broke up for a short period before reconvening with new wave sound as The Sherbs and releasing 'The Skill' which made the US Top 100, 'Defying Gravity' and the mini-album 'Shaping Up'. Harvey James left towards the end of 1982 to be replaced by Tony Leigh. They decided to call it a day in 1984, reverting back to the Sherbet moniker for a farewell tour and final single "Tonight Will Last Forever".
Following the group's break-up, lead singer Daryl Braithwaite went on to a successful solo career in Australia, and Garth Porter became a successful record producer.

The improved rip provided here was taken from CD in FLAC and includes full album artwork (thanks to Brett from Midoztouch for the artwork).
Some choice photos of the band in the 70's are also included. As a bonus, I have also added a videoclip of Sherbet performing 'Slipstream' on the Paul Hogan Show in 1974.

The one track that first attracted me to this album when it first came out was "Wild Love", a real funky, hard base line 12 bar blues - but I would never have admitted this in front of my mates at the time! The title track "Slipstream" and "Freedom" (not the same track that Hendrix did by the way) were also personal favourites, but as a whole the album is probably one of their best releases. Something to watch out for (and it only took me 35 years to notice) is the teeny bopper track 'Handy Mandy' which contains some rather interesting lyrics!

              NEW IMPROVED RIP !

Track Listing
01 - Slipstream
02 - Endless Place
03 - Wild Love

04 - Another Hustler

05 - What's It All About

06 - Freedom

07 - Silvery Moon

08 - Handy Mandy

09 - When the Sunshine Turns to Grey

10 - Earthquake in My Head

11 - So Glad You're Mine

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Band Members:
Daryl Braithwaite (Vocals)

Clive Shakespeare (Guitar, Vocals)

Tony Mitchell (Bass)

Garth Porter (Keyboards, Vocals)

Alan Sandow (Drums)

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Sherbet Link (275Mb) 
New Link 18/10/2025
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Wednesday, October 15, 2025

Various Aussie Artists - Seventies Downunder Volume 1, Raven Records (1991)

(Various Australian Artists 1970-75)

A continuation of Raven’s overview of the formative years of one of the world’s most highly acclaimed musical forces – Oz Rock. This volume, dealing with the first half of the 1970s, brings together 19 exceptional performances – not novelty chart hits but bands and records of credibility and consequence – Chain, Healing Force, Daddy Cool, Jeff St John & Copperwine, Spectrum, Country Radio, Billy Thorpe & the Aztecs, Axiom, Blackfeather, La De Das, Carson, Skyhooks, AC/DC and others. With an extensively annotated colour booklet, this is one of Raven’s most impressive and essential releases.

Liner Notes (by Glenn A Baker)

The infectious insanity which began with The Beatles just couldn't last. lt wasn't allowed to. The established order of the music industry had been bowled-for-six in 1964, and for three years, rock music galloped unfettered, unashamedly innocent, naive and enjoyable. But by 1967 the 'moguls' of showbiz raised their ugly heads and the adrenalin ride was over. The clumsy but sympathetic rock TV shows were castrated, radio banished the last traces of raw R&B rock from the airwaves and, in a final blow, record companies, managers and promoters bought sufficient consolidated pressure to bear on groups to make them follow a new version of the established order.

The screaming died because the fun died, music took upon itself a dreaded element of seriousness. Records were no longer made for fun, those few groups not dumped by their record companies saw recording as a 'new art'. The age of psychedelic and progressive music was upon us and under those labels was created some of the most intelligently complex and, alternatively, appallingly self-indulgent music imaginable.
The entire fabric of 'fandom' had undergone drastic change as well. Fans were split into two camps: teenyboppers and 'heads'. The boppers supported The New Dream, Zoot and bubblegum, while the heads (prodominatly male) got off on a level of musical snobbery, which decreed that the universe revolved around a stoned, hirsute guitarist gazing at his sandalled feet during a twenty minute solo. The newly emerged drug culture can be held responsible for the latter group ('mind expansion' failed because of the poor quality of raw material it had to work upon).


The change in Australian music and society between 1967 and 1970 was drastic and severe. Music moved out of Melbourne's (the new pop capital) steamy discos into Sydney's thriving dances and finalty on to open acreage. We intently watched Monterey and Woodstock and then (following a fine tradition of aping the rest of the world) tried rock festivals ourselves. Off we trooped to Ourimbah, covering ourselves with flowers and professing undying love for fellow man. A few years later we tired of sitting in muddy fields dodging beer cans and gave the whole thing up as a bad joke.
Protest went down much the same path, as the fine and just cause of anti-war activity became little more
than a trendy 'be-in'. We didn't change the world much, as hard as we tried.

The music made in this country after the end of the 60s certainly reflected the indulgence and the uncertainty but some of it also, as the selections herein doth attest, began to display a startling innovation born of both isolation and the distillation of myriad influences. This collection picks up the story of Oz Rock from 1970 and takes us through its final half-decade in the international wilderness.
From 1975 on, thanks to Little River Band, Rick Springfield, AC/DC, John Paul Young and others (and to a change in focus from England to America), it was no longer a one-off or fluke to have Australian music on the charts of the world.

Assembled here is a breathtaking array of styles - soul, blues, country-rock, heavy metal, rock'n'roll, progressive hippy rock, unashamedly commercial pop and more. If you listen carefully enough you can discern a thread running through it all - a thread that inevitably led up to Men At Work, Split Enz, Cold Chisel and INXS. After this period though, Oz Rock was a little more calculated, a little less starry-eyed.

Now, for those interested in details.....


Max Merritt & The Meteors
Beloved soul/r&b masters Max Merritt & the Meteors had been in Australia (from NZ) for five years before scoring their first national hit, with a storming version of The Impressions' U.S. charter, "Western Union Man", from their self-titled top ten album. By this stage, Max was the only Kiwi still on board, the other slots being filled by rotund drummer Stewie Spears, bassist Yuk Harrison and saxophonist Bob Bertles. By the mid 70s, Max was recording in England for Arista and had scored a number one hit in Australia with "Slipping Away".

Jeff St. John & Copperwine
The soaring, soulful voice of Jeff St John had first been heard in 1967 when The Id made top ten with "Big Time Operator". By the end of that year he was recording with the unsuccessful Yama and, in 1969, returned to the airwaves as leader of Copperwine, a sturdy outfit comprising of Harry Brus, Barry Kelly, Peter Figures, Ross East and fellow vocalist Wendy Saddington. This cover of the Rotary
Connection's "Teach Me How To Fly" reached top twenty in Sydney in January 1971, by which time Saddington had split. A year later, Jeff did the same thing and Copperwine recorded under their own steam.




Axiom
With Glenn Shorrock from the Twilights, Brian Cadd and Don Mudie from the Groop, Chris Stockleigh from Cam-pact and Don Lebler from the Avengers, Axiom was fairly hailed as Australia's first 'Supergroup'. After cracking the top ten first out in late 1969 with "Arkansas Grass", the unit made top five in April 1970 with Cadd's hymn to his newborn daughter, "A Litte Ray Of Sunshine". 


Although they turned out a superlative album with 'Fools Gold' and then left to work in Britain, the momentum (to say nothing of the artistry) evaporated and disbandment occurred in March 1971. A few years later, Shorrock was leading the Little River Band.

Daddy Cool
Like Shorrock, Ross Wilson is an incredible survivor, his chart career beginning in 1965 with the Pink Finks and continuing to this day with Mondo Rock and solo ventures. Daddy Cool, the merging of the Party Machine and the Rondells, took shape in the first half of 1970 as a rollicking, good- time band amid a sea of hairy heavyweights. Mixing covers of obscure, vintage r&r and r&b with clever appealing originals, Daddy Cool offered a joyous celebration of rock'n'roll which took them to number one for eight weeks with their debut single, "Eagle Rock".


Carson
Carson, formed in 1970 as Carson County, deftly cashed in on the Canned Heat boogie climate to become rock festival staples. By 1972, when "Boogie" became a top thirty hit, the lineup included vocalist Broderick Smith, guitarist Greg Lawrie, Healing Force pianist Mal Logan and Chain bassist Barry Sullivan. After a chart album with 'Blown', Carson dissolved, early in 1973.


Spectrum
Some months before Ross Wilson got his new band to number one, his Party Machine partner Mike Rudd had already done just that with the bluesy, shuffling, "l'll Be Gone". Spectrum did not enjoy any further singles success but did make a series of albums which are amongst the most adventurous 'art rock' works to come out of Australia, Rudd later led Ariel and the Heaters.


Healing Force
The airy, seductive "Golden Miles" was the only hit for the band which formed in Adelaide late in 1970 (at the hands of Twilights drummer Laurie Pryor) and always seemed a shadowy, semi- permanent entity. Signed to the same label as Daddy Cool (Sparmac), Healing Force recorded no albums and had a sole hit. Vocalist Charlie Tumahai turned up in England in 1975 as a member of Be Bop Deluxe.


Blackfeather
Like Golden Miles, "Seasons of Change" was an intriguing, compelling piece, though in this case the inspiration seemed to be the gothic/medieval oveltones favoured by the British progressive/heavy metal bands of the day. Written by Blackfeathers's resident guitar wizard, John Robinson, for Bon Scott's Adelaide band Fraternity, it proved to be a far bigger hit for its originators.
The highlight cut from the 1971 album 'Mountains of Madness', it was sung with great power and distinction by Neale Johns.


Masters' Apprentices
"Because I Love You" was the peak of the writing and conceptual prowess of Masters' Apprentices guitarist Doug Ford and vocalist Jim Keays, who, with bassist Glenn Wheatley and drummer Colin Burgess, had given yet another dimension to one of the most venerable names in Oz Rock history. Recorded at Abbey Road Studio 2 in London (at the same time John Lennon was recording Working Class Hero in Studio 1), this splendid, shifting piece, with predominating acoustic guitar, became a hit all over again at the end of the 80s when it was rerecorded and reissued after being used in a television commercial.


The Zoot
Like many bubblegum bands trapped by a profitable image, Thc Zoot had a heavyweight heart just begging to be exposed. Their crashing, thunderous treatment of the Beatles' "Eleanor Rigby" was as impressive as it was unexpected and gave them their only top five hit, at the beginning of 1971 .
This unit proved to be a useful stepping stone - guitarist Rick Springfield was in the U.S. charts as a sole heartthrob a year later, bassist Beeb Birtles followed him there in 1976 as a member of Little River Band, vocalist Daryl Cotton recorded Stateside with Cotton, Lloyd & Christian, and drummer Rick Brewer was at number one on the Austalian charts in 1977 as a member of the Ferrets.


Chain
A tad heavier and immeasurably more credible was the grunting, grinding Chain and their 1971 Melbourne number one, "Black And Blue". Formed in 1967 and originally featuring the mighty Wendy Saddington, Chain hit its commercial stride in 1970 with the compact lineup of vocalist Matt Taylor, guitarist Phil Manning, drummer Barry Harvey and bassist Barry Sullivan. There seems to have been, on and off, in some format or another, a version of Chain in operation ever since, rendering the name synonymous with quality rock blues.


La De Das
The La De Das had as many musical lives as the Masters Apprentices. Beginning life in New Zealand as a down-down-under Blues Magoos in the mid 60s, they ended up as a high-powered Sydney-based hard rock quartet (then trio) in the early 70s, led by guitar hero Kevin Borich. A major concert and festival drawcard, they enjoyed only occasional radio support; the strongest being for the elastic, athletic "Gonna See My Baby Tonight", which made top ten in November 1971.




Billy Thorpe & The Aztecs
By 1972, rock chameleon Billy Thorpe probably thought that his popchart topping days were over. By then he was a wild rock warrior - pony tail flying, vocal chords quavering, decibels mounting. There was a new Aztecs and a new attitude but Thorpie could never suppress his inherent commerciality. Even a humorous piece of self-deprecation like "Most People I Know (Think That I'm Crazy)" was able to strike a responsive chord with the crowds.



Country Radio
Greg Quill was a writer for Go-Set magazine who happened to possess as much talent as most of the people he wrote about. A quality folk/country singer-songwriter, he recorded an album for EMI ('Fleetwood Plain') before signing up with Festival as Country Radio. 


Although members came and went with peak hour railway frequency, the band managed to score a substantial hit in August 1972with its second single, "Gypsy Queen", written by Greg and guitarist KerrynTolhurst. A 'live' studio album fared reasonably well but by the end of 1973 it was all over. Greg cut an impressive solo album, 'The Outlaw's Reply', before moving to Toronto, Canada, where a full circle turned and he became a leading rock journalist.


The Dingoes
Canada also proved to be a receptive market for the band Broderick Smith formed after Carson. The Dingoes, featuring Chris Stockleigh from Axiom and Kerryn Tolhurst from Country Radio, played a meaty version of country-rock overlaid with a blues sensibility. After a top thirty 1974 hit with the evocative "Way Out West", they headed way up north and spent most of the next five years flogging themselves across North America seeking a big break that sadly never came.

Matt Taylor
Uncompromising white bluesman MattTaylor recorded three solo albums for Mushroom Records between 1973 and 1975, one of which ('Straight As A Die'), sold almost as well as his Chain album. Originally not on his LP (but later added to CD reissues as a bonus track) the sprightly and disarmingly honest "I Remember When I Was Young", gave him a top thirty Melbourne hit.


Stevie Wright
When Vanda & Young returned from Britain in 1973, their first project was to restore the chart prominence of their Easybeats comrade Stevie Wright, a vocalist who had been asked to front Mott The Hoople. In 1974, they appeared live with him at the Sydney Opera House and wrote/produced the extraordinary epic "Evie", the only 11 minute plus single to go to number one anywhere in the world.
This renewed association lasted for three hits and two fine albums.


Skyhooks
Australian rock has given us few finer experiences than Skyhooks, an underground-cult politico Carlton rabble which tore the country apart with a glam rock parody built upon pithy, smart-arse lyrics that provided a long overdue observation of the contemporary Australian experience. No kangaroos or elderly emus but dreary Melbourne suburbs and unrestrained adolescent lust. "Living ln The Seventies", the title track to the band's debut album (which instantly became the biggest domestic selling Australian album in history) is as close to an anthem as we had in that era.

ACDC
And talking about anthems.....Like the resuscitation of Stevie Wright, the rise of hard rock powerhouse AC/DC was the work of Vanda & Young, who shaped the raw energy of the young band to fill an international vacuum they were convinced existed. The double-punch of Bon Scott's leering, lascivious and decidedly tongue-in-cheek vocal assault and Angus Young's brash, exuberantand bluesy guitar work proved irresistible in a country where no-frills working-class rock'n'roll had ahrvays been warmly embraced. "It's A Long Way To The Top" was AC/DCs third hit, reaching the top five at the end of 1975.


This post consists of FLACs ripped from CD and includes full album artwork.  In my opinion, this is one of the best Aussie Rock compilations from the Seventies.  It should also be noted that Raven's follow up release was titled "Do Y'self A Favour! The Countdown Years 1975-79 (Seventies Downunder Vol. 2) which was released in 1993.  

Track Listing:
1. WESTERN UNION MAN – Max Merritt & the Meteors
2. TEACH ME HOW TO FLY – Jeff St John & Copperwine
3. A LITTLE RAY OF SUNSHINE – Axiom
4. EAGLE ROCK – Daddy Cool
5. BOOGIE PART I – Carson
6. I’LL BE GONE – Spectrum
7. GOLDEN MILES – Healing Force
8. SEASONS OF CHANGE – Blackfeather
9. BECAUSE I LOVE YOU – The Master’s Apprentices
10. ELEANOR RIGBY – The Zoot
11. BLACK AND BLUE – Chain
12. GONNA SEE MY BABY TONIGHT – La De Das
13. MOST PEOPLE I KNOW, THINK THAT I'M CRAZY - Billy Thorpe & The Aztecs
14. GYPSY QUEEN – Country Radio
15. WAY OUT WEST – The Dingoes
16. I REMEMBER WHEN I WAS YOUNG – Matt Taylor
17. EVIE PART 2 – Stevie Wright
18. LIVING IN THE 70’s – Skyhooks
19. IT’S A LONG WAY TO THE TOP – AC/DC