Gary Young (Australian musician)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Gary Young | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Birth name | Gary Young |
Born | New York |
Genre(s) | Rock and roll, progressive rock |
Occupation(s) | drummer, songwriter, vocals, radio personality |
Instrument(s) | drums, vocals |
Years active | 1950s — present |
Label(s) | Sparmac Wizard Sony/BMG Liberation |
Associated acts | The Rondells Sons of the Vegetal Mother Daddy Cool Gary Young's Hot Dog Jo Jo Zep & the Falcons The Rockin' Emus Rock Doctors Cold Chisel The Black Sorrows Little Red Rooster Relax With Max The Prestones Crackajacks The Cool Healers Southern Lightning |
Gary Young (born c. 1945) was a founding member of Australian rock band Daddy Cool in which he played the drums and sang backing vocals. He also played drums with Jo Jo Zep & The Falcons amongst other bands. Daddy Cool and Jo Jo Zep & the Falcons were inducted into the Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) Hall of Fame in 2006 and 2007 respectively.[1][2]
Contents |
[edit] Biography
[edit] Rondells
Gary Young (drums, vocals) and Wayne Duncan (bass, vocals) were the rhythm section of many bands particularly instrumentals since the 1950s.[3][4] One of these was The Rondells which were also the backing band for Bobby & Laurie a popular singing duo with their #1 hit "Hitch Hiker" from 1966.[4] Young joined the Rondells in 1962, at the age of 17, and whilst still at Carey Baptist Grammar School.[5]
This band had originated around 1962 as The Silhouettes, a Shadows-style instrumental band with Ian B. Allen (bass), future Aztec Gil Matthews (guitar), Ed Nantes (guitar), Roger Treble (lead guitar) and Young (drums, vocals).[6] The group changed its name to The Lincolns in 1963, by which time Matthews had left and bassist Wayne Duncan (ex-Ramrods) had replaced Allen. They added singer Bob Johnson when beat music broke through in 1964.[6] Young later took over from Johnson, but tired of having to sing and play, he quit in early 1965 to form the vocal duo Double Trouble with Issy Di and was replaced by drummer Barry Gough.[6] Double Trouble split soon after and Young rejoined Duncan, Treble and rhythm guitarist John Sullivan (who was later replaced by Barry Rogers) in a new touring version of The Lincolns, which was billed as The Rondells when they backed Bobby & Laurie. They also backed other Blackmore artists such as Bobby Knight, and several other acts like Lynne Randell, Buddy England, Billy Adams and Bobby Shore.[6] Young also played in The Changing Times, Laurie Allen Revue and Ram Jam Big Band.[5] In February 1967, following the split of Bobby & Laurie, Laurie Allen put together a soul revue, originally called Dice, it was later renamed The Laurie Allen Revue. The lineup included Rondells' Gary Young, Barry Rogers and Wayne Duncan, guitarist Phil Manning and as backing singers, sisters Glenys and Colleen Hewett. The Revue released three singles on Festival - "Beautiful Brown Eyes" (Aug. 1967), "Any Little Bit" (Apr. 1968) and "As Long As I Got You" (Jun. 1968).[6]
[edit] Vegetal Mothers
Young and Ross Wilson met in 1969 whilst both were working in a book warehouse, each had previous band mates who were interested in forming a new group.[4] Wilson, Ross Hannaford, Young and Duncan formed Sons of the Vegetal Mother later that year,[7] this band had a more experimental Progressive rock sound.[3][8] Other members included: Mike Rudd (later in Spectrum) (bass), Trevor Griffin (piano), Jeremy Kellock (Jeremy Noone) (tenor sax), Tim Partridge (bass), Ian Wallace (alto sax), Simon Wettenhall (trumpet) and Bruce Woodcock (tenor sax).[9]
[edit] Daddy Cool
As a side project from Sons of the Vegetal Mother, four of its members (Duncan, Hannaford, Wilson and Young) formed Daddy Cool in 1970.[3][4][10]
[edit] Jo Jo Zep
[edit] Radio show host
Young hosts the Chicken Mary radio show on 3RRR.[11] Daddy Cool featuring the original line-up reformed in 2005, released a single in February 2005 to play at a 27 February 2005 benefit concert for victims of the 2004 tsunami at the Myer Music Bowl in Melbourne.[4][12] A new Daddy Cool recording, "The Christmas Bug", was released for charity.[13] A new Daddy Cool album, The New Cool was released in 2006 on Liberation Records.[10]
Jo Jo Zep & the Falcons were inducted into the 2007 ARIA Hall of Fame,[1][14] this was the second time for Young who had already been inducted as a member of Daddy Cool in 2006.
[edit] Discography
- Bobby & Laurie/Rondells (1962-1968)
- "I Belong With You"/"Trouble in Mind" (August 1964)
- "Someone (Ain't Right)"/"You Are Gone" (June 1965)
- I Belong With You EP (1965)
- Bobby & Laurie (August, 1965)
- "Judy Green"/"Mojo Queen" (September 1965)
- "Crazy Country Hop"/"It Ain't Fair" (December 1965 )
- "Sweet and Tender Romance"/"Down in the Valley" (February 1966)
- "Hitchhiker"/"You'll Come Around" (February 1966)
- Hitchhiker EP (1966)
- Hitchhiker (1966)
- "High Noon"/"Tonight When I Come Home" (March 1966)
- "Every Second Day"/"First Sreet Blues" (October 1966)
- Exposiac (1967)
- The Laurie Allen Revue
- "Beautiful Brown Eyes" (August 1967)
- "Any Little Bit" (April 1968)
- "As Long As I Got You" (June 1968)
- Sons of the Vegetal Mother (1969-1971)
- Garden Party (1970)
- Daddy Cool (1970-1972,1974-1975, 2005-present)
-
- "Rock 'n' Roll Lady" (1972) #30 AUS
- "One Night" (1973)
- "Saga of the Three Pigs" (1973)
- "Rockabilly Beatin' Boogie Band" (1973)
- "Ubangi Stomp"/"Mystery Train" (1980)
- "Running Late for Wandong" (1981)
- "Keep your Hands off my Baby" (1982)
- Gary Young and the Rocking Emus
- Gary Young and the Rocking Emus (1982)
- Dancehall Racketeers (1985-1986)
- Southern Lightning (1986-1987)
- "Down the Road" (1986)
- Down the Road (1986)
- "Stones in my Pathway" (1986)
- "Don't Call Me Mister" (1987)
- Southern Lightning (1987)
- "Moonlight Street" (1987)
- Andy Baylor's Cajun Combo (1992- )
- Andy Baylor's Cajun Combo (1992)
- The Hornets
- Can't Live With You
[edit] References
- ^ a b ARIA presents the 2006 ARIA Hall of Fame. ARIA (2006). Retrieved on 2008-05-05.
- ^ ARIA Awards 2007: About Hall of Fame. ARIA Awards. Retrieved on 2008-05-08.
- ^ a b c Daddy Cool. Milesago. Retrieved on 2008-05-08.
- ^ a b c d e Donovan, Patrick. "Grandaddies of Oz rock are still cool", The Age, 2005-02-19. Retrieved on 2008-05-07.
- ^ a b Dave's Diary. Nu Country (2004-08-29). Retrieved on 2008-05-11.
- ^ a b c d e Bobby & Laurie. Milesago. Retrieved on 2008-05-11.
- ^ Daddy Cool entry at Howlspace. Ed Nimmervol. Retrieved on 2008-05-05.
- ^ "The early years". Mike Rudd and Bill Putt. Retrieved on 2008-05-07.
- ^ Sons of the Vegetal Mother. Milesago. Retrieved on 2008-05-07.
- ^ a b Australian Rock Database entry for Daddy Cool. Magnus Holmgren. Retrieved on 2008-05-06.
- ^ TripleR On-air: Programs (Chicken Mary). 3RRR. Retrieved on 2008-05-08.
- ^ Elder, John. "Hot rock plays it Daddy Cool", The Age, 2005-01-30. Retrieved on 2008-05-10.
- ^ Daddy Cool bio. Official website. Retrieved on 2008-05-10.
- ^ Pope, Mark (2007-05-07). (PDF) "ARIA presents the 2007 ARIA Hall of Fame". Retrieved on 2008-01-25.