Max Q (band)
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- This article is about the Australian musical group. See Max Q (disambiguation) for other meanings of the term "Max Q".
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Max Q was a short-lived Australian rock band, active in the late 1980s, essentially a vanity recording project for INXS frontman Michael Hutchence. It consisted of Hutchence (vocals) and Ollie Olsen (production), accompanied by key members of the Melbourne post-punk scene, most of whom had previously collaborated with Olsen.
The project followed on from Hutchence and Olsen's work on the film Dogs In Space, where they met. Max Q released one critically acclaimed but commercially unsuccessful self-titled album in 1989 and had minor hits with the songs "Sometimes" (originally recorded by Olsen with Orchestra Of Skin And Bone) and "Way of the World". They toured briefly before Hutchence went back to his day job with INXS.
The other members of INXS have been reported as being unhappy with Hutchence's solo "career"[citation needed]. As of 2005, The Max Q album has not been re-issued.
The band name "Max Q" is an aeronautical term, short for "Maximum Quotient": the point of maximum stress on an aircraft during flight that it can sustain without failing. Another band called Max Q consists of astronauts assigned to the Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas. The Hutchence/Olsen band was named after Ollie Olsen's dog, Max.
In October 2006, two of the Max Q songs had been featured in the Triple M Essential 2006 Countdown which had been voted by listeners[1] :
- "Sometimes" (ranked 1301 out of 2006 songs)
- "Way of the World" (ranked 716 out of 2006 songs)
Contents |
[edit] Band members
- Michael Hutchence: Vocals, Songwriting
- Ollie Olsen: Production, Songwriting
- Arne Hanna: Guitar
- Michael Sheridan: Guitar, Feedback
- Bill McDonald : Bass Guitar
- Gus Till: Piano, MIDI Programming
- John Murphy: Percussion, Trumpet, Screams
[edit] Additional musicians
- Peggy Harley: Backing Vocals
- Marie Hoy: Backing Vocals (Soul Engine)
- Pat Powell: Backing Vocals (Bucket Head)
- Pam Ross: Narration
[edit] Singles
Year | Title | Chart positions | Album | ||||
US Hot 100 | US Modern Rock | US Mainstream Rock | UK | AUS | |||
1989 | "Way of the World" | - | 6 | - | 87 | 8 | |
1989 | "Sometimes" | - | - | - | 53 | 31 | |
1990 | "Monday Night By Satellite" | - | - | - | - | - 1 | Max Q |
1 'Monday Night By Satellite' did not enter the Australian ARIA Chart top 100 singles, but peaked at #93 on the Kent Report singles chart.