Parkinson formed Strings and Things in 1965. At the end of that year, they comprised Parkinson on lead vocals, Helen Barnes on bass guitar, her brother Syd Barnes on drums and David Lee on guitar – they changed their name to the A Sound, an amateur folk music group. The Barnes siblings were children of Australian cricketer, Sid Barnes. That band issued "Talk About That" (1966), which was a "pleasant folk single (in the Seekers vein)." He quit his cadetship in that year as "I was impatient, I was earning more with the band two nights a week than I was at the paper, but I was always having to swap shifts with other cadets and then I finally bit the bullet and left." In 1966 Parkinson joined a professional outfit, the Questions, alongside Bill Flemming on drums (ex- Midnighters, Roland Storm and the Statesmen, Max Merritt and the Meteors), Billy Green on guitar (ex-The Raiders, The Epics), Duncan McGuire on bass guitar (ex-Roland Storm and the Statesmen) and Rory Thomas on piano, organ, woodwind and brass. They had already released an album, 'What Is A Question?' (November 1966) – recorded before Parkinson had joined. The group held a residency at the Canopus Room, colloquially known as "The Can", at The Manly Pacific Hotel in Manly, a Sydney suburb.
Parkinson provided his facility for soul and blues for the line-up. They competed in the Hoadley's Battle of the Sounds in July 1967 to finish second behind The Groop. With Parkinson aboard, the Questions issued a run of three minor psychedelic pop classic singles, "Sally Go Round the Roses" (July 1967), "And Things Unsaid" (October) and "Something Wonderful" (February 1968). In January 1968 they changed personnel with Ray Burton on guitar (ex-Delltones) and Les Young on bass guitar (ex-Chessmen) replacing Green and McGuire respectively. A month later the group broke up.
Doug Parkinson in Focus were formed early in 1968 with Green, McGuire and Thomas joined by Doug Lavery on drums (ex-Andy James Asylum, Running Jumping Standing Still). They released a single, "I Had a Dream", in May and finished third in that year's Hoadley's Battle of the Sounds. That version disbanded in August. In the following month a new line-up comprising Parkinson, Green, McGuire and Johnny Dick on drums (ex-Max Merritt and the Meteors, Billy Thorpe and the Aztecs) formed, which "became one of the most popular outfits on the Melbourne suburban dance/inner-city discotheque circuit" as they were "perfectly in sync with the tempo of the times." The group signed with EMI/Columbia and issued a cover version of the Beatles' track, "Dear Prudence", in May 1969, which peaked at #5 on the Go-Set National Top 40. Also, in that year the group won the Hoadley's Battle of the Sounds.
Their follow up single, "Without You / Hair" (October), also reached #5. In November Green and McGuire left to join Rush while, in the following month, Parkinson and Dick recruited Mick Rogers (ex-Procession) and Les Stacpool (ex-Chessmen, Merv Benton and the Tamlas) each alternating on bass and lead guitars. By February 1970 Green and McGuire had returned and Rogers and Stacpool had left. The group issued another single, "Baby Blue Eyes" (May), which reached #36. The group disbanded when Parkinson and Dick relocated to the United Kingdom where, in June 1970, they joined Fanny Adams with Vince Melouney on guitar and vocals (ex-Billy Thorpe and the Aztecs, the Bee Gees) and Teddy Toi on bass guitar (ex-Max Merritt and the Meteors, Billy Thorpe and the Aztecs). Parkinson "conveyed considerable charisma with his imposing presence and gruff, raspy voice." The group recorded their self-titled album in London and returned to Australia in December but disbanded a month later. Fanny Adams appeared posthumously in June 1971 on MCA Records, which Ian McFarlane described as exemplifying "adventurous, heavy, progressive blues-rock."
In February 1971 he formed another line-up of Doug Parkinson in Focus with Green and McGuire joined by Mark Kennedy on drums (ex-Spectrum, King Harvest). Their new label, Fable Records, had released the single, "Purple Curtains" (1971), which had been recorded by a previous line-up. According to McFarlane after Fanny Adams had disbanded "Such was MCA's dissatisfaction with the split that the label effectively prevented Parkinson from recording for two years." In December 1971 the line-up fractured when Kennedy and McGuire joined their former bandmate, Leo de Castro, in Friends; while Green joined Gerry and the Joy Band. Parkinson started his solo career and, in August 1972, issued the single, "Lonely". In March 1973 he took the role of the Hawker in the Australian music theatre orchestral version of the Who's rock opera, Tommy. Fellow Australian artists were Daryl Braithwaite (as Tommy), Bobby Bright, Linda George, Colleen Hewett, Jim Keays, Ian Meldrum (as Uncle Ernie in Sydney only), Billy Thorpe, Wendy Saddington, Broderick Smith and Ross Wilson. The Sydney performance was filmed and broadcast on Channel 7 in early April.
Parkinson issued his debut solo album, 'No Regrets', in May 1973 on Polydor Records. For the sessions he used John Capek on piano; drummers Russell Dunlop, Peter Figures and Graham Morgan; Tim Partridge on bass guitar; guitarists Billy Green, Kevin Borich, Jimmy Doyle and Ross East; Roger Sellers on percussion; Don Reid on flute and saxophone; and Terry Hannagan on backing vocals. Parkinson co-wrote two tracks with Capek, he co-produced a track with Ray Burton and other tracks with David Fookes. He formed a big band jazz ensemble, Life Organisation, with Morgan and Toi joined by Warren Ford on guitar and piano; Peter Martin on guitar (ex-SCRA); and Bill Motzing on trombone and keyboards. They issued two singles, "In the Mood (Forties Style)" (June 1973) and "Boogie Woogie" (November). In late 1973 he replaced Reg Livermore in the role of Herod in an Australian musical theatre production of Jesus Christ Superstar.
Former bandmate Green composed the soundtrack to the biker film, Stone (1974), with Parkinson singing on two tracks, "Cosmic Flash" and "Do Not Go Gentle". In that year his touring band were Rod Coe on bass guitar, Bruno Lawrence on drums (ex-Max Merritt and the Meteors, BLERTA), Mick Liber on guitar (ex-Python Lee Jackson) and Ray Vanderby on keyboards. In November that year he had a hit with his cover version of "Everlasting Love", which peaked at #22 on the Kent Music Report Singles Chart. He followed with "Love is Like a Cloudy Day" (May 1975) and "Raised on Rock" (September) but they did not chart. From December 1977 to March 1978 Parkinson returned to musical theatre in the stage show, Ned Kelly. For his solo career the touring band were Sanctuary, which included ex-Renée Geyer Band members: Mal Logan on keyboards and Barry Sullivan on bass guitar. He then formed the Southern Star Band with former bandmates, Kennedy and McGuire, and new associates Frank Esler-Smith on keyboards (ex-Marcia Hines Band) and Jim Gannon on guitar (ex-Black Widow, Yellow Dog). Gannon was soon replaced by Tommy Emmanuel on guitar (ex-Goldrush, the Emmanuel Brothers Band).
McFarlane felt the group "played slick, funky jazz over an R&B foundation." They issued four singles with "I'll Be Around" (January 1979) the highest charting, which reached #22 on the Kent Music Report Singles Chart. The album of the same name was "a steady seller but failed to reach the Top 40." In April 1979 he supported Bob Marley's tour of Australia. Parkinson also sang the opening theme song of the short-lived TV soap opera, Arcade (1980), which was issued as a solo single. Early in 1981 Southern Star Band broke up and in March he formed the Doug Parkinson Band with George Limbidis on bass guitar (ex-Highway), Adrian Payne on drums (ex-Pantha, Broderick Smith's Hired Hands), Tim Piper on guitar (ex-Chain, Blackfeather) and Dave Richard on guitar. They issued seven singles from March 1981 to September 1983, including a cover version of "The Sun Ain't Gonna Shine Anymore" in July 1981, originally by Frankie Valli, which peaked at #18. Their album, 'Heartbeat to Heartbeat', appeared in March 1983. Late that year he prepared for another production of Jesus Christ Superstar but this time as Judas, which included a run in Perth during 1984.
From the late 1980s Parkinson "concentrated on musical theatre" with roles in Australian stage productions of Big River: The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (January 1990), The Hunting of the Snark (October) and Buddy – The Buddy Holly Story as the Big Bopper (January and September 1991, April, June, July and August 1992). He continued performing in stage shows, cabaret, club work and recording as of 2016. He told Christian Tatman of The Herald Sun that "My favourite thing is working with a crowd. It's what I'm going to keep doing. I have no plans for retirement." Early 2017 Doug undertook a tour presenting the music of Joe Cocker to sell-out crowds. Doug’s shows were simply brilliant, and he hadn’t lost any edge to that great voice. Highlights of Parkos shows included not only his own hits like Dear Prudence & I’ll Be Around but fantastic performances of songs by Ray Charles, The Beatles. Doug Parkinson died in March 2021.
''Lonely / Takin' It Easy'' 1972 Polydor
''Sweet Rock And Roll / Tell Him I'll Be All Right'' 1973 Polydor
''Love Gun (#99) / Dear Prudence'' 1973 Polydor
''Everlasting Love (#2) / All I Need Is A Song'' 1974
''Love Is Like A Cloudy Day (#95) / One Track Mind'' 1975 Atlantic
''Raised On Rock / I'm Gonna Get You (In The End)'' 1975 Wizard
''The Hungry Years (#88) / Soon As Your Thing Is Done'' 1978 Southern Star
''I'll Be Around (#22) / Riff Raff'' 1979 Southern Star A
''In My Life (Edited Version) / Shuffle Up'' 1979 Southern Star
''You Ain't Going Nowhere Without Me (#70) / Now You're On Your Own (Edited Version)'' 1979 Southern Star
''Arcade'' 1980 ATA
''Under The Influence Of Love / Flying South'' 1980 Southern Star
''Small Talk / Lady Luck'' 1981 CBS
''The Sun Ain't Gonna Shine Anymore (#18) / Gonna Shake It'' 1981 CBS
''Solitaire / Go While The Goings Good'' 1981 CBS
''Better Keep Your Hands Off My (Potential New Girlfriend) (#97) / Lady Luck'' 1982 CBS
''Don't Let Love Go / Can't Live With You (Can't Live Without You)'' 1983 CBS
''It's Your Move / I Don't Unlove You'' 1983 CBS
''Let Sleeping Dogs Lie / Thanks To You'' 1983 CBS
''Sailin' (Sydney-Hobart)'' 1984 Oz
''Willing And Abel / Endlessly'' 1987 Possum
''Jeremiah's Peabody'' 1989 ABC
"Where Would We Be Without A.B." (#100) 1994 Polygram
"Run Wallaby Run" 1995 Festival
"To Love Somebody" [with Marcia Hines, Brian Cadd & Max Merritt) (#96) 2003 Universal
"Run Wallaby Run" 1995 Festival
"To Love Somebody" [with Marcia Hines, Brian Cadd & Max Merritt) (#96) 2003 Universal
'No Regrets' 1973 Polydor
'I'll Be Around' (#37) 1979 Southern Star
'Heartbeat to Heartbeat' (#59) 1983 CBS
'Reflections' 1986 Hammard
'Somewhere After Midnight' 2005 Roy Boy
'Timelines' 2006 Roy Boy
'Not Fade Away' 2010 Roy Boy
References
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doug_Parkinson
http://top100singles.blogspot.com.au/
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