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Sunday 15 September 2013

SLIM NEWTON


Ralph Ernest Newton was born on 22 October 1932 and grew up in Perth with two brothers. At the age of 17 he was an apprentice welder when he started performing country and western music at week-ends. Newton was 19 when he had two motor bike accidents leaving him with "crockery teeth and one leg an inch shorter than the other". He finished his apprenticeship at the age of 21 and while working his trade he continued performing as a musician.

In 1954 he toured Western Australia and followed with a solo northern Australian tour in the next year. By 1957 he was living in Sydney where he performed on the Reg Lindsay Show both on radio and at local venues. Also, that year fellow country artists, Rick and Thel Carey, recorded "You Can Say That Again", which was co-written with Newton. He returned to Perth in 1959. In the mid-1960s he formed a group, The Mavericks, with Mick Kodra. Newton had continued his songwriting and, in 1971, after contact from Eric Scott of Hadley Records, he and his family relocated to Tamworth, so that he could start recording his own material at their studios. His debut release was a four-track extended play, 'The Redback on the Toilet Seat', which appeared by June 1972 and was produced by Scott.

The EP peaked at #3 on the Go-Set National Top 40 Singles Chart, with a run of 15 weeks. According to David Kent in his Australian Chart Book 1970–1992 the EP appeared in the Kent Music Report Singles Chart on 19 June 1972, peaked at #5 for two weeks and remained in the top 100 for 28 weeks. Fellow country music artist, Slim Dusty, recalled in his autobiography, Another Day, Another Town (1996), how he had often been mistaken as the song's author. In August 1972 Newton told Nan Musgrove of The Australian Women's Weekly of an occasion where a visiting friend used his outside toilet in Perth where the light globe had blown.

 The friend reported that he was lucky there were no redback spiders on the toilet seat. The phrase inspired Newton to write the track, "The Redback on the Toilet Seat", which he indicated was "easy to write, that most songs come fairly easy except when you have to write one on demand, then and there". Newton's follow up EP, 'How Did the Redback Die?', appeared in October and continued the theme to explain what happened to the spider. In 1973 Newton was awarded a Golden Guitar Trophy at the inaugural Country Music Awards of Australia for Top Selling Record. Newton received further recognition for his work from the Country Music Association of Australia: in 1977 he was inducted into the Australasian Country Music Hands of Fame, and then in 2009 into the Australian Country Music Roll of Renown. Newton died on 8 January 2023, at the age of 90.




SINGLES
The Redback on the Toilet Seat

19 JUN '72#5





References

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slim_Newton

http://top100singles.blogspot.com.au/


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