Pat Aulton (Patrick Aulton) was a noted Australian record producer, musician, arranger and songwriter.
He is best known for the successful pop and rock singles and albums he produced for Australian and New Zealand artists in the 1960s and early 1970s on the Sunshine and Spin Records labels. He also became a successful composer of successful commercial jingles and TV themes.
Aulton began his career as a vocalist with the Adelaide-based group The Clefs. Ca. 1963 Aulton began working for rising Adelaide entrepreneur Ivan Dayman and his Sunshine group, which grew to include a management and booking agency, record labels and a string of pop music venues from Adelaide to the north coast of Queensalnd. Aulton established the Sunshine Records label for Dayman and produced records for most of the performers on its roster, most notably the string of Australian hit singles, EPs and albums by vocalist Normie Rowe who was Australia's most popular solo artist in the mid-1960s.
Following the collapse of Sunshine and its short-lived sister label Kommotion Records in early 1967, Aulton was hired as a house producer and A&R manager by Festival Records. He oversaw the installation of the new 4-track recording equipment at Festival's new Pyrmont studio and from 1967 to 1973 he produced and engineered most of Festival's pop output between (as well as performing uncredited backing vocals and instrumental contributions on many of these recordings. One example being his distinctive falseto on the 1968 Christopher James (real name-Francis Edwards) recordings 'Goodbye Mama' and 'Going Home for the last time')
He produced many hit singles for local acts, released on the Festival and Spin Records labels between 1967 and 1973. He produced all the Spin singles recorded by Sydney band The Dave Miller Set including their 1969 hit "Mr Guy Fawkes", which made the Top 10 in Sydney and was named "Single of the Year" by Ed Nimmervol in Go-Set magazine. Other productions in this period include the acclaimed progressive rock albums Joint Effort by Jeff St John & Copperwine, and Wide Open by Kahvas Jute. He also produced the first two singles by Sherbet, who became one of the most popular and successful bands in Australia in the 1970s. Aulton also produced Neil Sedaka's 1969 'comeback' album Workin' on a Groovy Thing and the Australian hit single lifted from it, "Wheeling West Virginia", which were recorded at Festival Studios with Australian backing musicians; Aulton regarded his work with Sedaka as one of his career highlights.
After leaving Festival in 1973 he established a successful career as a writer-producer of advertising jingles; his well-known creations (some of which are still in use today) include jingles for Coca-Cola, Weetbix, Singapore Airlines and Trans Australia Airlines. His best-known and most influential composition is the probably "It's Time", the Australian Labor Party campaign song for the 1972 federal election. Aulton spent several years in the New York as a jingle writer in the late 1970s. After retiring to the Queensland coastal town of Noosa, Aulton worked as a vocal coach. In a short biography published on the website of former Clefs lead singer Barrie McAskill's Aulton reported in the mid-2000s that he was working on a novel.
Aulton died in mid-February 2009, aged in his early seventies; he died peacefully at his home with his family. An article commemorating his life was published in the Sunshine Coast Daily on St. Patricks Day 2009.