Paul Norton | |
---|---|
Birth name | Paul McNaughton |
Born | 31 March 1961 |
Origin | Melbourne, Australia |
Genres | |
Occupations |
|
Instruments |
|
Years active | 1979–present |
Labels | Mushroom |
Formerly of | Runners |
Website | paulnorton |
Paul Norton (born Paul McNaughton, 31 March 1961) is an Australian singer-songwriter and guitarist. He was bass guitarist of the pop rock band Runners before launching a solo career in 1987.
Paul Norton (as Paul McNaughton) started playing bass guitar in various bands in his teens. In the late 1970s he formed the band, City, in Melbourne with Mark Edwards on vocals and guitar, Mark Greig on guitar and Trevor Reading on lead guitar. [1] [2] In 1980 local pop singer Ronnie Charles (ex-the Groop), recorded a single, "Rock and Roll Hoodlum", with his backing band, the Runners. [1] [3] The pop rock group were formed by Norton on bass guitar and backing vocals, Edwards and Reading with Grant Hamston on drums and Lester Price on keyboards. [1] [3]
The Runners separated from Charles in early 1981 and attracted "a strong following on the pub circuit". [1] Former bandmate Greig replaced Price on keyboards and guitar in 1982 and they signed to Mushroom. [1] [3] The group released their first single "Sure Fire Thing" in that year, which was produced by Beeb Birtles. [1] [3] Runners followed with a single, "Endlessly" (January 1983) and its associated album, Hitting the Wall (March 1983). [1] [3] The Runners toured throughout the early eighties but had numerous line up changes before disbanding late in 1984. [4] [1] [3] During his time with Runners, Norton co-wrote various tracks including, "Don't Apologise", "Walk Between the Lines" and "Sky Is Falling". [5]
Norton spent mid- to late 1980s playing with various bands. [2] [4] He briefly joined Wendy and the Rocketts[ sic ] in 1985. [2] He followed with a stint in Steve Hoy and the Hoy Boys (1985–1988) alongside former bandmates Grieg and Hamston; they backed Newcastle-born folk and blues singer-songwriter, Hoy. [2] [6] Norton was recorded on Hoy's extended play, Possession (1987). [2] [6]
Norton on lead vocals and lead guitar issued his debut single, "Larapinta", independently in 1987 via Enrec. [2] [7] In the following year he signed with Mushroom as a solo artist to release another single, "Stuck on You", [2] [7] which peaked at number three on the Australian charts. [8] It was certified gold in 1989 for shipment of 35000 units. [8] Norton's debut album, Under a Southern Sky was released in August 1990, which peaked at number 44. [4] [8] It was produced by Paul Muggleton. [2] [7] For touring, the singer-songwriter, guitarist formed the Paul Norton Band with his spouse Wendy Stapleton (ex-Wendy and the Rocketts[ sic ]) on backing vocals, Greig on guitar, Tim Milikan on bass guitar and Derek Pellicci on drums (ex-Little River Band). [2] [7]
In 1991, Norton commenced work in this second album, Let It Fly, which was released in October 1992. [2] [7] The singles were "Lil Red Riding Hood" and "When We Were Young". [4] [7] Neither album nor singles reached the top 50. [8]
In 1994 Norton formed Hillbilly Moon with Peter Wells (ex-Rose Tattoo) on guitars and vocals and Cletis Carr on guitars and vocals. Later that year they released an album, Hillbilly Moon Volume One, with the song "She Left Me" receiving airplay on Country Music Television. [4]
In 2006, Norton toured Australia with The Countdown Spectacular, featuring 27 of Australia's top rock acts of the 1970s and 1980s performing to 100,000 people nationwide. [4]
Norton is married to Australian performer and actress Wendy Stapleton. They have one daughter, Alexandra, who performs under the name Ally Mac.
Title | Album details | Peak chart positions |
---|---|---|
AUS [8] [9] | ||
Under a Southern Sky | 44 | |
Let It Fly |
| 141 |
Title | Year | Peak chart positions | Certification | Album | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
AUS [8] | NZ [10] | ||||
"Stuck on You" | 1989 | 3 | 33 | Under a Southern Sky | |
"I Got You" | 31 | — | |||
"Southern Sky" | 1990 | 37 | — | ||
"Billy Billy" | 114 | — | |||
"Shake That Devil" | 1991 | — | — | ||
"Lil' Red Ridin' Hood" | 1992 | — | — | Let It Fly | |
"When We Were Young" | 99 | — |
Orchestra of Skin and Bone were an Australian post-punk band active from 1984 to 1986. The band's core members were Ollie Olsen, Marie Hoy and John Murphy.
Girl Monstar were an all female Australian rock band which formed 1988 with the line-up of Damian Child on bass guitar; Anne McCue on lead guitar and vocals; Sherry Valier on vocals and rhythm guitar ; and Sue World on drums and vocals. Both of their singles, "Surfing on a Wave of Love" / "He's Hell" (1989) and "Joe Cool" (1990), topped the Australian Independent charts. They issued one album, Monstereo Delicio, in July 1992 on Timberyard Records. Child was replaced by Janene Abbott but the group disbanded in 1993. Australian musicologist, Ian McFarlane, described their sound "trash pop style mixed tough guitar riffs with strong harmonies". Valier as Rich, is a country rock artist and has issued solo material as well as performing in bands. McCue is also an alternative country artist, she relocated to Nashville and has released several solo albums.
Mississippi were an Australian soft rock band (1972–1975), which included Graham Goble on lead vocals and guitar, Beeb Birtles on lead vocals and guitar, and Derek Pellicci on drums. The band had started as Allison Gros in Adelaide in 1970 and moved to Melbourne in 1971 where they recorded as Allison Gros, Drummond and, early in 1972, became Mississippi. As Drummond they issued a cover version of "Daddy Cool", which peaked at No. 1 on the Go-Set National Top 40 for eight weeks. As Mississippi they reached No. 10 with "Kings of the World". In early 1975, with Birtles, Goble and Pellicci aboard and the addition of Glenn Shorrock, the group were renamed Little River Band.
Wendy June Saddington, also known as Gandharvika Dasi, was an Australian blues, soul and jazz singer, and was in the bands Chain, Copperwine and the Wendy Saddington Band. She wrote for teen pop newspaper Go-Set from September 1969 to September 1970 as an agony aunt in her weekly "Takes Care of Business" column, and as a feature writer. Saddington had Top 30 chart success with her 1972 solo single "Looking Through a Window", which was written and produced by Billy Thorpe and Warren Morgan of the Aztecs. After adopting Krishna Consciousness in the 1970s she took the name Gandharvika Dasi. In March 2013 she was diagnosed with oesophageal cancer and died in June, aged 63.
Fundamental or Fundamental As Anything is the fifth studio album released by Australian rock/pop group, Mental As Anything. The album was produced by Richard Gottehrer and was released on Regular Records in March 1985. It peaked at No. 3 on the Australian Kent Music Report albums charts.
Electric Hippies were an Australian band formed by ex Noiseworks members Justin Stanley and Steve Balbi. The pair also used the same name for their production work. They released a self titled album in 1994 and had a top 30 single with "Greedy People".
Wendy Anne-Marie Stapleton is an Australian pop/rock singer-songwriter, musical theatre performer and television actress and presenter Stapleton has performed as a backing singer, session musician and a solo artist; she fronted various Melbourne-based groups including Wendy Stapleton Band (1976–1978) and Wendy & the Rocketts [sic] (1980–1985) which had a top 30 hit single with "Play the Game" in June 1983.
Cordrazine are an Australian rock band formed in 1996 in Melbourne. They released a top ten album on the Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) Albums Chart, From Here to Wherever in April 1998. The album was nominated for Breakthrough Artist - Album at the ARIA Music Awards of 1998; however they disbanded in 1998. They reformed in 2009.
Émigré is the debut solo studio album by Australian singer-songwriter Wendy Matthews released by rooArt in Australia in November 1990. It was produced by Ricky Fataar and reached No. 11 on the Australian Albums Chart. It yielded three singles: "Token Angels", "Woman's Gotta Have It" and "Let's Kiss ". Matthews won the ARIA Award for Best Female Artist at the ARIA Music Awards of 1991.
The Monitors were an Australian pop band of the early 1980s. They were primarily a studio group which involved a collaboration between Terry McCarthy on vocals and keyboards, and Mark Moffatt on guitar, bass guitar and keyboards. They used various guest vocalists. Their debut single, "Singin' in the '80s", was released in 1980 and reached No. 16 on the Kent Music Report singles chart.
Bakery were an Australian progressive hard rock band formed in 1970 in Perth. The original line-up was Hank Davis on drums, Mal Logan on keyboards, Eddie McDonald on bass guitar, Peter Walker on guitar, and John Worrall on vocals and flute. They released two albums on Astor Records, Rock Mass for Love and Momento and had a Perth hit with "No Dying in the Dark". Bakery appeared at the Sunbury Pop Festival in January 1973 and disbanded in early 1975.
The Way It Has to Be is the first live album released by Australian singer Wendy Matthews recorded in Melbourne in May 1991, the album was released in October 1991. Following the commercial and critical success of her album Émigré, Matthews assembled a touring band that included Paul Abrahams (bass), Robbie James (guitar), Michael King (guitar), Amanda Brown, James Valentine (sax), Mark O'Connor (keyboards), Lisa Maxwell and Mark Meyer (drums).
The Bootleg Family Band were an Australian folk, R&B and rock band formed in 1973 by Brian Cadd on lead vocals with Geoff Cox on drums, Tony Naylor on lead guitar, Penny Dyer on backing vocals, Gus Fenwick on bass guitar, Brian Fitzgerald on keyboards, Angela Jones on lead and backing vocals, Louise Lincoln on backing vocals and Russell Smith on trumpet. The group became the in-house band for Cadd's label, Bootleg Records. They also released their own material and had chart success with cover versions of "Your Mama Don't Dance" and "The Shoop Shoop Song ", which both reached the top 10 on Australian singles charts. The group toured the United States and performed on the TV shows, The Midnight Special and Don Kirshner's Rock Concert in 1974. Early in the following year they trimmed back to a five-piece line-up as The Bootleg Band. Late that year, Cadd left to work in the US and the remaining members renamed themselves as Avalanche. That group issued a self-titled album in September 1976 and had a further name change to Front Page disbanded in 1978. Cadd reassembled the Bootleg Family Band in 2015 to release a studio album, Bulletproof, which was supported by a short tour.
"Comin' Down" is a song by Australian hard rock band The Angels, released in March 1978 as the lead single from the band's second studio album, Face to Face. The song first peaked at number 80 on the Australian Kent Music Report. It was co-written by band members, Doc Neeson, John Brewster and Rick Brewster.
Hot City Bump Band were an Australian soul, funk band which formed in late 1973 by Chuck McKinney (vocals), his wife, Margaret McKinney (vocals), John Adolphus (guitar), David McMaster (organ), Robert Ellis (congas), David Green (bass) and Mick Holden. They released a studio album, Come Together (1975), that peaked at No. 11 on Melbourne album charts. They broke up in 1976. According to Australian musicologist, Ian McFarlane, they were "one of the first soul/funk bands ever assembled in Australia, and local audiences took a while to warm to the band's dance-oriented sound." Chuck McKinney died in September 1994.
Screen Memory is the first and only studio album by Australian new wave band MEO 245. The album peaked at No. 69 on the Kent Music Report Albums Chart. It was produced by Peter Dawkins, with Dave Marett as audio engineer, at Studios 301, Sydney. According to Australian musicologist, Ian McFarlane, "[the] title was taken from A Critical Dictionary of Psychoanalysis and the record itself was full of English-influenced pop rock." The album provided two singles, "Other Places" and "Jewels " (October). For Screen Memory MEO 245's line-up was Paul Brickhill on keyboards and vocals; Mark Kellett on bass guitar; Campbell Laird on drum kit; and Paul Northam on vocals and guitar.
Bang the Drum is an Australian pop rock band formed in Sydney. Two of their singles reached the top 50 on the Australian Singles chart.
Band of Talabene were a briefly existing Australian blues rock band formed in April 1972 as Willy & the Philtones by Tony Buettel on drums, Phil Gaunt on bass guitar, Phil Manning on lead guitar and lead vocals, and Tony Naylor on guitar and vocals. According to Australian musicologist, Ian McFarlane, their name was both, "[a] homage to bands like Derek and the Dominoes and because it comprised two Phils and two Tonys." In July Gaunt was replaced on bass guitar by Gus Fenwick (ex-Pleazers) and they were renamed as Band of Talabene. Manning explained that his young daughter had dreamt of a band, Talabene, with pumpkins playing guitars.
Pantha were an Australian jazz, rock band formed in 1973 by Dannie Bourne on electric piano, percussion and backing vocals, Paul Curtis on lead vocals and percussion, Peter Lee on congas and percussion, Adrian Paine on drums and percussion, Roger Pell on lead guitar, percussion and backing vocals and Jack Wilson on bass guitar and percussion. The group released one studio album, Doway Do Doway Do, which peaked at number 43 on the Australian albums chart. The group disbanded in late 1977.
Satellite were an Australian hard rock band, formed in 1993 by Bryce Ewing on guitar, Alex Fricke on bass guitar, Simon Grainger on guitar, Graham Scott on drums and Mia Stone on lead vocals They released two studio albums, Wicked Wanda (1995) and Feed the Monster (1996) before disbanding in 1997.