classic and rare Australian popular music from the 1950's, 1960's. 1970's and beyond..including rock and roll, pop, beat, rock, surf and progressive, plus contemporary artists, new releases, reviews and other fun stuff

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Showing posts with label Surfing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Surfing. Show all posts

Friday, October 11, 2019

Morning of the Earth...1972 original film soundtrack...music by Taman Shud, Brian Cadd, G.Wayne Thomas


Morning of the Earth is arguably the first surf movie that went beyond waves and into something of a (wordless) meditation on life based on surfing. The film is a product of it's time (very early '70's - first years of shortboard transition) and is full of back-to-the-country hippy vibes as well as some beautifully filmed surfing on Australian, Hawaian and Bali waves. The soundtrack is therefore a mixed bag of Australasian country folk (G.Wayne Thomas, Brian Cadd) and psychedelic prog-rock (Taman Shud). Like the film the soundtrack is a bit of a time machine back to a by-gone era. It is for the nostalgic or those wanting a good compilation of early 70's Australasian psych-folk stuff. The film is still one of the all-time classic surf movies too so check it out. (Amazon review)

Very few soundtrack recordings give themselves to anything more than a passing link to the film as a movie soundtrack should. Morning Of The Earth defies that definition! it cleverly assembles (in that era) Australia's finest musicians and makes a group statement through the music of a land that existed once where you could grab a change of shorts a board and a couple of cassettes in the panel van and head on up the coast! (discogs review)


Tracklist:
–G. Wayne Thomas Morning Of The Earth 5:09
–Terry Hannigan I'll Be Alright 4:05
–Taman Shud First Things First 4:09
–Brian Cadd Sure Feels Good 3:44
–G. Wayne Thomas Open Up Your Heart 3:41
–John J. Francis Simple Ben 7:41
–Taman Shud Bali Waters 6:13
–Brian Cadd Making It On Your Own 6:00
–G. Wayne Thomas Day Comes 2:55
–Taman Shud Sea The Swells 6:13
–Peter Howe I'm Alive 3:41
–Brian Cadd Come With Me 4:56




Friday, January 24, 2014

The summer of surf music 50 years later...article from National Film and Sound Archive

If you're into surfing music from the 60's, this article from the National Film and Sound Archive site is essential reading. 

                  

The summer of 1963-64, 50 years ago, was the summer of surf music in AustraliaSixteen Australian recordings with a surfing theme hit the charts, with The Atlantics’ 'Bombora’ and 'Hangin’ Five’ by the Delltones reaching No. 1 on the Sydney charts between August 1963 and April 1964. Another Atlantics instrumental, 'The Crusher’, and Little Pattie’s 'He’s My Blond Headed Stompie Wompie Real Gone Surfer Boy’ got to No. 2 while the other 12 made it into the Top 40 for at least a week or two. The Beach Boys, Jan and Dean, The Surfaris and other American musicians joined them in the charts, but Australian surf music captured the public’s imagination in equal measure...read more here



Thursday, October 31, 2013

Tully...Sea of Joy.. The Original Soundtrack 1972


Tully formed in Sydney in late 1968, and, along with Tamam Shud (with whom they often performed), they were the doyens of the Sydney underground/progressive scene in the late 60's and early '70s. Their lyrical and expansive music and their interest in mysticism and esoteric philosophy was at some remove from the earthy blues/boogie ethos of contemporaries like The Aztecs, but they built up a strong following on the Sydney underground scene and the Melbourne concert circuit. Tully's members were all highly accomplished multi-instrumentalists, with years of experience behind them, and this musical breadth quickly earned them a reputation as one of the most adventurous and polished concert bands of the period.

Tully :
Colin Campbell - guitar
Michael Carlos - keyboards
Richard Lockwood - flute, sax, clarinet, piano
Ken Firth - bass
Shayna (Karlin) Stewart - vocals

Tully released 3 albums in the 1970's:
  • Tully (July 1970)
  • Sea Of Joy (June 1971)
  • Loving is Hard (1972) 
An augmented version of Tully (billed as "Tully +4") provided instrumental backing for the "HAIR - Original Australian Cast Recording" in 1970. Tully vocalist Terry Wilson was a member of the original cast in 1969-70 and performs "Aquarius" on the soundtrack LP. 

Sea of Joy is the soundtrack to an Australian surfing documentary movie released in 1971.

01.Sea Of Joy (Part 1) 4:27
02.Pseudo-Tragic-Dramatic 1:12
03.Follow Me 3:50
04.Cat-Clarinet Mit Orgel 4:01
05.Trinidad 3:13
06.I Feel The Sun 5:40
07.Thank You 3:22
08. Syndrone 6:46
09.Softly, Softly 4:31
10.Brother Sun 3:16
11.Down To The Sea 3:38
12.Sea Of Joy (Part 2) 2:30







Saturday, October 19, 2013

Aussie Gems and Rarebits...various artists...52 tracks..B-Sides, Little Known Songs and Artists



There are 52 sensational tracks here from the 60s and early 70s. As the cover says: "Little known songs, hard to find B-sides and bands you may not have heard of". From Beat, Garage, Surf, Instrumental, Pop, Rock and everything in between. The download comes with all artwork too.

I've played it through a few times and just about every track is good if not great. Some artists you may know (or at least I do) are The Strangers, Python Lee Jackson, The Rondells, The Cherokees, Ian Turpie, Johnny Young, Marcie and The Cookies and Patsy Ann Noble. It will take you back to those TV shows of the 60s like Go! and Kommotion and have you groovin', stompin', rockin' and whatever other dance you care to remember!






Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Board Boogie...Surf'n'Twang from Down Under


Okay, surf's up! If you like instrumentals with a driving drum beat and twangy guitar then this collection of early Aussie surf tunes will more than satisfy your cravings. Includes "Smoke and Stack" from The Aztecs (pre-Billy Thorpe), "Murphy the Surfie" by The Joy Boys and "Expressway" by The Vibratones.

These 30 killer tracks will make you want to polish up your board and head on down to catch the next big wave. Great cruising music or for that beach party or barbeque. Enjoy!


1 The Aztecs – Board Boogie 2:25
2 The Joy Boys– Midnight Surfer 1:54
3 The Playboys – The Mean One 1:36
4 The Joy Boys– Sandy The Surfin' Sandfly 1:45
5 The Fabulous Blue Jays– Jay Walker 2:33
6 The Joy Boys– Swamped 2:34
7 The Nocturnes – Storm Warning 2:25
8 The Surf Riders – Panel Five 2:18
9 The Joy Boys– Gavotte Espresso 2:10
10 The Dee Jays– Twistin' Drums 2:17
11 The Joy Boys– Murphy The Surfie 2:04
12 The Sunsets – Windansea 2:34
13 Laurie Wade's Cavaliers– Cloudburst 1:40
14 The Joy Boys– (Theme From) The Ant Hill 2:02
15 The Playboys – Sabre Dance 2:01
16 The Aztecs – Smoke & Stack 1:54
17 The Resonets– Surf Carnival 1:47
18 The Joy Boys– Boots, Saddle, & Surfboard 2:24
19 The Vibratones – Expressway 1:57
20 The Nocturnes – Riptide 1:52
21 The Dee Jays– Barbecue 1:57
22 Laurie Wade's Cavaliers– The Phantom Guitarist 2:04
23 The Playboys – Theme From Dr. No 2:09
24 The Joy Boys– The Frolic 2:12
25 The Nocturnes – Prarie 2:04
26 The Playboys – Desperado 2:19
27 The Resonets– Shorebreak 2:38
28 The Joy Boys– Standin' & Stompin' 2:16
29 The Dee Jays– Sunday Patrol 2:12
30 The Playboys – Adventures In Paradise 2:31






Tuesday, March 12, 2013

The Joy Boys...Shazam!...classic instrumental group from the 60's


The Joy Boys were the Australian equivalent of The Shadows and The Ventures. Twangy, Rockin', Surfin', Stompin' instrumentals that kept the scene buzzin' in the 60s. Originally a jazz band , they became 'Col Joye and the Joy Boys' when Kevin's bother, Col joined in 1957. They had ten Top 10 hits in the Sydney charts alone from 1959 to 1962, including four #1s. Cole became a star on television pop show Bandstand. They disbanded in 1966.

Members were Kevin Jacobsen, Keith Jacobsen, John Bogie, Ron Patton and Norm Day.

This rare compilation collects 30 of their finest which includes their biggest "Southern 'Rora". They were also backing band for legendary singer Col Joye.