Australian ska
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Timeline · Portal | |
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Genres | classical · hip-hop · indigenous · Ska · immigrant music · jazz · country · rock (pub rock · indie · punk · metal) |
Organisations | ARIA · APRA · CMAA |
Awards | ARIA Music Awards · CMAA Country Music Awards of Australia · The Deadlys · Australian Music Prize · J Award · WAMi Awards · NT Indigenous Music Awards · Perth Dance Music Awards |
Charts | Kent Music Report · ARIA Charts · Triple J Hottest 100 |
Festivals | Big Day Out · Splendour in the Grass · Livid · Homebake · Falls · Tamworth Country Music Festival · Womadelaide · National Folk Festival · Overcranked |
Media | Countdown · Rage · Triple J · Jtv · ABC · Community Radio |
National anthem | Advance Australia Fair |
Cities and regions | |
Adelaide · Brisbane · Canberra · Melbourne · Sydney · Perth · Hobart |
In 1979 ska enjoyed a renewal of popularity. Initially the ska revival was a UK phenomenon, but gradually it spread to the rest of the world, including Australia. Ska has been in Australia largely since the mid 1980's. Ska at the time took off in Australia, enjoying the same sort of interest as it did in the UK, following the success of UK bands The Specials, The Beat and Madness.
Australian ska bands formed quickly from the ever increasing population of Rude Boys and Skinheads. Early ska bands included Sydney bands The Allniters, The Hangovers, Itchy Feet(lead by vocalist Tim Freedman, who would go on to form commercially successful band The Whitlams, The Bystanders, Naughty Rhythms, The Allsorts, and the Off the Shelf. From Melbourne, the most well known was the Hearn brothers ska band, The Strange Tennants. The Allniters were the most high profile band of this era. The Allniters were a Sydney-based music band that played ska music in the early and mid 1980s. They were best known for a ska-style cover of the Bobby Bloom hit "Montego Bay", followed by the slower and more mainstream "Love and Affection", both of which received wide airplay on radio stations around Australia and were top 40 hits. The Allniters reformed to support reggae band, UB40 in 2004.
More recent bands include Backy Skank, Los Capitanes, Trojan Horns The Porkers, Blowhard, Dr Raju, Addiction 64, Mad Not Madness, Suspect 7, Foghorn Leghorn, The Resignators, and Rubix Cuba. Another band, Area 7, has been one of the more successful bands of late, arising from the ashes of Madness cover band Mad Not Madness. In 1994 three members, Dugald McNaughtan (keyboards), Charles "Chucky T" Thompson (guitar) and Dan Morrison (drums) left Area 7 and began to write their own songs. They formed a band and named it after a lyric from The Specials' Dawning of a New Era.
There are a number of Australian bands that play with ska/punk influences, and also many Ska orientated clubs, in Melbourne, Sydney and especially in Brisbane. The Ska scene is enjoying a resurgence in popularity and is kept alive by regular Ska and Punk radio shows on the very popular independent Brisbane radio station 4ZzZ.