Greg Macainsh | |
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Birth name | Gregory John Macainsh |
Born | Melbourne, Australia | 30 December 1950
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Gregory John Macainsh (born 30 December 1950[ citation needed ]) is an Australian former musician and songwriter. He provided bass guitar and backing vocals for pop rockers, Skyhooks from 1973 to 1980 and subsequently for various reformations. According to Australian musicologist, Ian McFarlane, "Macainsh's biting, provocative songs were the perfect expression of adolescent obsessions and frustrations. With those songs, the band made an enormous impact on Australian social life." Macainsh became an intellectual property lawyer. [1]
Gregory John Macainsh was born on 30 December 1950 and grew up in Warrandyte. [2] [3] [4] His father was a some-time poet and his mother was a librarian. [4] He attended Norwood High School, Ringwood and recalled attending a Scouting jamboree when he heard the Beatles on the radio. [4] "It was wild stuff, amazing. I lost interest in the Scouts and concentrated on music. The little tranny had just hit. I listened to a valve radio at home and then to a crystal radio set I made for my bedroom. 3UZ was the station and Stan Rofe was the man." [4]
In 1966, with Macainsh on bass guitar and school mate, Imants "Freddie" Strauks on lead vocals, he formed a group, Spare Parts. [5] [6] [7] It was followed by Sound Pump two years later; Macainsh then formed Reuben Tice in Eltham, with Tony Williams on vocals. [5] [6] [8] One of their songs, written by Macainsh, was "I Went Down to Eltham to Get Me a Job in a Band". [4] By 1970 Macainsh was back with Strauks, who was now on drums, first in Claptrap and by 1971 in Frame, which had Graeme "Shirley" Strachan aslead vocalist. [5] [8] [9] The line-up also included Pat O'Brien and Cynthio Ooms on guitars. [6] Australian rock music journalist, Ed Nimmervoll observed, "[Reuben Tice were] a local group that hardly ever ventured out of its alternate lifestyle Eltham area, [Frame were] a group that looked for gigs in inner suburban Melbourne." [10]
In March 1973, Macainsh on bass guitar, backing vocals and as main songwriter, and Strauks on drums and backing vocals, formed Skyhooks in Melbourne as a glam rock, pop rock group. [5] [8] [10] Other founders were Steve Hill on vocals (ex-Lillee), Peter Inglis on guitar (ex-the Captain Matchbox Whoopee Band), and Peter Starkie on guitar and backing vocals (ex-Lipp & the Double Dekker Brothers). [8] [10] [11] By August Bob "Bongo" Starkie (ex-Mary Jane Union) on guitar replaced his older brother, Peter Starkie, and Inglis was replaced by Red Symons (ex-Scumbag) on guitar, vocals and keyboards. [8] [10] [11] Ross Wilson (ex-Daddy Cool) caught one of their early gigs and signed Macainsh to a publishing deal. [8] Late in that year they were signed to Michael Gudinski's booking agency, Australian Entertainment Exchange, and eventually to his label, Mushroom Records. [8] [12] The group recorded two live tracks, "Hey What's the Matter" (written by Macainsh) and "Love on the Radio" (co-written by Macainsh and Hill), during their performance at the Sunbury Pop Festival in January 1974. [8] [13] These tracks appeared on Mushroom Record's various artists' live album, Highlights of Sunbury '74 (1974). [8]
In June 1974, three months after Strachan had replaced Hill, Skyhooks recorded their debut album, Living in the 70's (October 1974), with nine of its ten tracks written by Macainsh. [8] [12] According to Australian musicologist, Ian McFarlane, "Macainsh's biting, provocative songs were the perfect expression of adolescent obsessions and frustrations. With those songs, the band made an enormous impact on Australian social life." [8] The album spent 16 weeks at the top of the Kent Music Report Albums Chart from late February 1975, and became the highest-selling album by an Australian act until that time, with shipment of 240,000 copies. [14] In October 2010 it was listed at No. 9 in the book, 100 Best Australian Albums . [15]
Ego Is Not a Dirty Word (July 1975), Skyhooks' second album, spent 11 weeks at the number-one spot and shipped 180,000 copies. [8] [12] [14] Of its ten tracks Macainsh wrote eight and co-wrote another with former member, Hill. Nimmervoll opined, "With two of the biggest selling Australian albums of all time to their credit, the band put everything into the most elaborated stage settings Australia had ever seen. Everything Skyhooks did put Australian music on a level never seen before." [10] Macainsh's then girlfriend, Jenny Brown, [12] wrote a book about the band in 1975, entitled Skyhooks : Million Dollar Riff. [6] Macainsh remained with Skyhooks until it disbanded in 1980. [5] [8]
Macainsh has participated in Skyhooks reunions in 1983, 1984, 1990 and 1994. [5] [8] He also played with John Farnham on his Whispering Jack Tour in 1986–87 and appears in the music video for Farnham's single, "You're the Voice" (1986). [5] [16] According to Farnham's manager, Glenn Wheatley, "[the video] was done on a shoestring budget. I called in Derryn and Jacki, some of the guys from Pseudo Echo (James and Vince Leigh) and Greg Macainsh from Skyhooks are in the band, it was pretty much anyone who'd do me a favour." [16] Macainsh later worked with Dave Warner's from the Suburbs. [5] In 1988 he put together and managed an AC/DC tribute band, Back in Black, which supported Skyhooks on a reunion tour. He was a board member of Australasian Performing Right Association (APRA) (1997–2000) and Phonographic Performance Company of Australia (PPCA) (2001–06), [17] and is an intellectual property lawyer. [1] [18]
The King of Pop Awards were voted by the readers of TV Week . The King of Pop award started in 1967 and ran through to 1978. [19]
Year | Nominee / work | Award | Result |
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1975 | Greg Macainsh | Best Australian Songwriter | Won |
Skyhooks were an Australian rock band formed in Melbourne in 1973. Their classic lineup (1974–1977) comprised Graeme "Shirley" Strachan (vocals), Greg Macainsh, Red Symons, Bob "Bongo" Starkie, and Imants "Freddie" Strauks (drums).
Graeme Ronald Strachan, professionally billed and known as "Shirley" Strachan or Shirl, was an Australian singer, songwriter, radio and television presenter, and carpenter. He was the lead singer of the rock group Skyhooks. While still a member of Skyhooks, he had solo singles, which charted on the Kent Music Report, with a cover recording of Brenda Holloway's "Every Little Bit Hurts" and a remake of The Miracles "Tracks of My Tears". After leaving Skyhooks in July 1978, he concentrated on his solo career. He was the host of children's TV program Shirl's Neighbourhood (1979–83). From 1993, he appeared on home renovation TV program Our House as a carpenter and co-host. At the ARIA Music Awards of 1993, Skyhooks were inducted into the ARIA Hall of Fame. Strachan died in August 2001 in a self-piloted helicopter accident.
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The Sports were an Australian rock group which performed and recorded between 1976 and 1981. Mainstay members were Stephen Cummings on lead vocals and Robert Glover on bass guitar, with long-term members such as Paul Hitchins on drums, Andrew Pendlebury on lead guitar and vocals, and Martin Armiger on guitar. Their style was similar to both 1970s British pub rock bands and British new wave. The Sports' top forty singles are "Who Listens to the Radio", "Don't Throw Stones", "Strangers on a Train" and "How Come". Their top 20 releases on the Australian Kent Music Report Albums Chart are Don't Throw Stones, Suddenly and Sondra.
Scented Gardens for the Blind is the second album by New Zealand group Dragon released in February 1975 on Vertigo Records before they relocated to Australia in May. Scented Gardens for the Blind, along with their first album Universal Radio, is in the progressive rock genre—all subsequent albums are hard rock/pop rock. "Vermillion [sic] Cellars" was released as a single in March and was followed by non-album singles, "Education" in May and "Star Kissed" in August but neither albums nor singles had any local chart success.
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Ego Is Not a Dirty Word is the second studio album released by Australian rock band, Skyhooks, in July 1975. The album was the follow-up to their highly successful debut album, Living in the 70's (1974). As with the former album, it was also produced by Ross Wilson.
Whispering Jack is the twelfth studio album by Australian adult contemporary pop singer John Farnham. It was produced by Ross Fraser and released on 29 September 1986, peaking at No. 1 on the Australian Kent Music Report albums chart. Whispering Jack became the second-best-selling album in Australia, behind only Meat Loaf's album Bat Out of Hell, and the highest-selling album in Australia by an Australian artist―24× platinum, indicating over 1.68 million copies sold; it remains the third-best-selling album of all time in Australia, as Shania Twain's Come On Over eventually eclipsed it. It spent 25 weeks at the No. 1 spot on the albums chart during 1986–1987, it was awarded the 1987 ARIA Award for Album of the Year, and it was the best-charting album for the decade of the 1980s in Australia. It was the first Australian-made album to be released on compact disc within Australia. One of Farnham's biggest hits, "You're the Voice", was issued as the lead single from the album and peaked at No. 1 on the Kent Music Report singles chart.
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"All My Friends Are Getting Married" is a song by Australian band Skyhooks, released in June 1975 as the second and final single from the band's second studio album, Ego Is Not a Dirty Word. It is written by the group's bass guitarist, Greg Macainsh and was produced by Ross Wilson. The song peaked at number two in Australia.