Vic Simms

Last updated

William Victor Simms, known as Vic Simms and Vicki Simms, is an Australian singer and songwriter. He is from La Perouse, New South Wales, and is a Bidjigal man. [1]

Contents

Simms performing Vic Simms.jpg
Simms performing

Career

Simms began his singing career at age 12 at the Manly Jazzorama Music Festival in 1957, [2] soon after Col Joye heard him as an 11-year-old singing at a football social. He released his first single (as "Vicki Simms"), "Yo-Yo Heart" (Festival Records), at age 15. He performed with Johnny O'Keefe, Shirley Bassey and Robie Porter among other prominent singers. [3]

After getting into alcohol and committing a robbery, he was sent to prison. [1] Whilst incarcerated in the notorious Bathurst Gaol [4] he learnt how to play guitar and started writing songs. In 1973, his music was heard by a Robin Hood Foundation and they sent a tape to RCA who organised to have him record an album. This album was recorded in one hour with a mobile studio in the prison dining room and was released as The Loner . It has been described as "Australia's great lost classic album of black protest music". [4] After the release of the album he was sent on tours of other prisons, shopping malls and the Sydney Opera House as an example of a model prisoner. After he was convinced he was being used he refused to continue the shows. [2]

After his release from prison, he reentered the entertainment industry. He has toured Australian prisons and, in 1990, he toured Canada with Roger Knox and Bobby McLeod where they played in prisons and on reservations. In 1996, he released a covers album, "From The Heart".

Simms was given a Deadly in 2001 for Outstanding Contribution to Aboriginal Music. [5]

In 2009, The Loner was added to the National Film and Sound Archive's Sounds of Australia registry. [6] In 2013, it was re-released by Sandman records. [7] [8]

"Selections From the Loner" was released by Painted Ladies 6 June 2014. [9] Songs from the original album were re-recorded by artists including Luke Peacock, Paul Kelly and Vic Simms himself. [10] [11] [12]

Simms sang "Stranger in My Country" in both the SBS documentary and accompanying cd, Buried Country: The Story of Aboriginal Country Music.

Discography

Related Research Articles

Yothu Yindi Australian musical group

Yothu Yindi are an Australian musical group with Aboriginal and balanda (non-Aboriginal) members, formed in 1986 as a merger of two bands formed in 1985 – a white rock group called the Swamp Jockeys and an unnamed Aboriginal folk group. The Aboriginal members came from Yolngu homelands near Yirrkala on the Gove Peninsula in Northern Territory's Arnhem Land. Founding members included Stuart Kellaway on bass guitar, Cal Williams on lead guitar, Andrew Belletty (drums), Witiyana Marika on manikay, bilma and dance, Milkayngu Mununggurr on yidaki (didgeridoo), Geoffrey Gurrumul Yunupingu on keyboards, guitar and percussion, past lead singer Mandawuy Yunupingu and present Yirrnga Yunupingu on vocals and guitar.

Morphine (band) American alternative rock band

Morphine was an American alternative rock group formed by Mark Sandman, Dana Colley, and Jerome Deupree in Cambridge, Massachusetts in 1989. Drummer Billy Conway also played in the band, frequently during Deupree's absence, though at times both played together. After five successful albums and extensive touring, they disbanded after lead vocalist Sandman died of a heart attack onstage in Palestrina, Italy, on July 3, 1999. Founding members have reformed into the band Vapors of Morphine, maintaining much of the original style and sound.

Warumpi Band were an Australian country and Aboriginal rock group which formed in the outback settlement of Papunya, Northern Territory, in 1980. The original line-up was George Burarrwanga on vocals and didgeridoo, Gordon Butcher Tjapanangka on drums, his brother Sammy Butcher Tjapanangka on guitar and bass guitar, and Neil Murray on rhythm guitar and backing vocals. Their songs are in English, Luritja and Gumatj. Their key singles are "Jailanguru Pakarnu" (1983), "Blackfella/Whitefella" (1985), "Sit Down Money" (1986), "My Island Home" (1987) and "No Fear" (1987). The group released three albums, Big Name, No Blankets (1985), Go Bush! (1987) and Too Much Humbug (1996). From late 1987 to mid-1995 the group rarely performed as Murray focused on his solo career. In early 1995, Christine Anu, issued a cover version of "My Island Home". Warumpi Band regrouped before disbanding in 2000. Burarrwanga died on 10 June 2007 of lung cancer.

Archie Roach Australian musician

Archibald William Roach is an Indigenous Australian musician. He is a singer, songwriter, guitarist, and a campaigner for the rights of Indigenous Australians.

Jimmy Little Musical artist

James Oswald Little, AO was an Australian Aboriginal musician, actor and teacher from the Yorta Yorta people and was raised on the Cummeragunja Reserve, New South Wales.

The Donovans are an Australian Aboriginal country music band. It comprises The Donovan brothers Michael, Ashley, Mervyn as well as Michael's daughters Shalina, Jaleesa and with Robert Graham on drums.

Troy Cassar-Daley Australian musician

Troy Cassar-Daley is an Australian country music songwriter and entertainer.

Coloured Stone is an Aboriginal Australian band whose members originate from the Koonibba Mission, west of Ceduna, South Australia. The band performs using guitar, bass, drums, and Aboriginal instruments – didjeridu, bundawuthada and clap sticks – to play traditional music.

Emma Donovan Musical artist

Emma Donovan is an Aboriginal Australian singer and songwriter. She is a member of the renowned musical Donovan family. She started her singing career at age seven with her uncle's band, The Donovans. In 2000, she became a founding member of Stiff Gins, leaving the band three years later to release the solo album Changes in 2004. She performs with The Black Arm Band and released a solo EP, Ngaaraanga, in 2009.

Ruby Hunter Australian Aboriginal singer-songwriter

Ruby Charlotte Margaret Hunter was an Aboriginal Australian singer, songwriter and guitarist. She was a Ngarrindjeri woman, who often performed with her partner, Archie Roach AM, whom she met at the age of 16, while both were homeless teenagers. Born near the mouth of the Murray River in the Coorong region of South Australia, Hunter was forcibly taken from her family at the age of eight as part of the Stolen Generation.

Bart Willoughby is an Indigenous Australian musician, noted for his pioneering fusion of reggae with Indigenous Australian musical influences, and for his contribution to growth of Indigenous music in Australia.

Tiddas are a female folk trio from Victoria, Australia.

Richard Frankland Indigenous Australian playwright and musician

Richard Joseph Frankland is an Australian playwright, scriptwriter and musician. He is an Aboriginal Australian of Gunditjmara origin from Victoria. He has worked significantly for the Aboriginal Australian cause.

The Deadlys Awards were an annual celebration of Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander achievement in music, sport, entertainment and community.

Roger Knox is an Australian country singer, known as the Black Elvis and the Koori King of Country.

Bobby McLeod was an Aboriginal activist, poet, healer, musician and Yuin elder. He was from Wreck Bay Village, Jervis Bay Territory. He was involved in the fight for Aboriginal rights in Australia and travelled the world speaking about cultural lore, health and healing.

Blackfire were an Australian Indigenous band. They were formed in late 1992 and disbanded in 1999. The original members were Bradley Brown, Selwyn Burns, Kutcha Edwards, Grant Hansen and Kelli McGuinness. They released two albums, A Time to Dream (1994) and the Paul Hester produced Night Vision (1998).

Grant Hansen is an Australian Indigenous musician and broadcaster who has worked as a host of the Marngrook footy show, broadcast on National Indigenous TV network as well as Channel 31, Foxtel, ABC and SBS. He has worked as a radio announcer / presenter on Melbourne's Indigenous radio station 3KND. Hansen won a Deadly in 2000 for Aboriginal Broadcaster of the Year. He has also worked at 3CR, SBS and SEN sports station.

Tame Impala Australian psychedelic music project

Tame Impala is the psychedelic music project of Australian multi-instrumentalist Kevin Parker. In the recording studio, Parker writes, records, performs, and produces all of the project's music. As a touring act, Tame Impala consists of Parker, Dominic Simper, Jay Watson, Cam Avery, and Julien Barbagallo. The group has a close affiliation with fellow Australian psychedelic rock band Pond, sharing members and collaborators, including Nick Allbrook, formerly a live member of Tame Impala. Originally signed to Modular Recordings, Tame Impala is now signed to Interscope Records in the US and Fiction Records in the UK.

<i>The Loner</i> (Vic Simms album) 1973 live album by Vic Simms

The Loner is a live album by Australian singer-songwriter, Vic Simms, which was recorded when he was incarcerated in Bathurst Gaol in 1973.

References

  1. 1 2 Message Stick, "Once in a Lifetime" the story of Vic Simms
  2. 1 2 Deadly Vibe Archived 7 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine Vic Simms
  3. Mess and Noise "Vic Simms: ‘I Wasn’t In The Position To Make Demands’", 30 July 2013 Retrieved 21 March 2015
  4. 1 2 The Age Jailhouse rocker
  5. Deadly Vibe Archived 20 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine The 2001 Deadlys
  6. National Film and Sound Archive Sounds of Australia registry Archived 11 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  7. Sandman Records website Vic Simms - The Loner Retrieved 18 March 2015
  8. Discogs website Vic Simms - The Loner (CD, Album) at Discogs Retrieved 18 March 2015
  9. "Reviving The Tunes Of Vic Simms". 27 June 2014. Retrieved 16 September 2016.
  10. ABC website Vic Simms album The Loner revived by Australian musicians including Paul Kelly Retrieved 18 March 2015
  11. Painted Ladies website Recording Info Retrieved 18 March 2015
  12. "Musicians Vic Simms and Luke Peacock bring new life to 'The Loner'". 4 March 2016. Retrieved 16 September 2016.