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Tuesday, 10 September 2013

ALISON MacCALLUM



Alison MacCallum was born on 7 April 1951 and began her music career in 1967, at the age of 16, as the singer in a succession of Sydney bands. Her influences include Ma Rainey, Bessie Smith, Clara Ward and Marianne Williams. She began with the Geoff Bull Jazz Band, and the York Gospel Singers. She soon joined the Big Apple Union, a soul band, which evolved into Dr Kandy's Third Eye, in which she shared lead vocals with Gulliver Smith, (later of Company Caine).

In June 1969, MacCallum joined a seven-piece blue-eyed soul band, This Hallelujah Chorus, sharing lead vocals with Ed Mayne. Also during that year she recorded a cover version of The Bee Gees track "To Love Somebody" with Tully for the ABC-TV show Fusions, however it was not released commercially until 1979 on the various artists' compilation album, 'Alberts Archives', selected by Glenn A. Baker. At the end of 1970 MacCallum joined Freshwater, a soul-pop band, which had formed in New Zealand in 1968.

They had achieved notoriety for their controversial May 1970 single, "Satan / Satan's Woman" – about the Sharon Tate murders. Initially sharing lead vocals with Ian Johnson, by September 1971 she was sole lead vocalist alongside Tony Bolton on drums, Rod Coe on bass guitar, David Fookes on keyboards, and Murray Partridge on lead guitar and backing vocals. In November 1971 the band's final single, "I Ain't Got the Time", was issued – featuring MacCallum's first released appearance – which reached the top 20 in the local charts and peaked at #30 on the Kent Music Report Singles Chart.

After the demise of Freshwater in that month, she briefly joined Ray Brown's band, One Ton Gypsy, before going solo in early 1972. In March 1972 Alison MacCallum issued her first solo single, "Superman", on RCA Records which was written by Harry Vanda and George Young (both ex-The Easybeats). It reached #12 on Go-Set '​s National Top 40 and #8 on the Kent Music Report. The B-side was a Ted Mulry composition "Take Me Back".

Also, that month she released her debut solo album, 'Fresh Water', a reference to her former band. It was produced by United Kingdom producer Simon Napier-Bell, who had worked with The Yardbirds and T. Rex. John Tait described Napier-Bell's work as re-invigorating Vanda & Young's songwriting career. Ted Albert assigned him the task of finding artists to record some of the songs Harry and George were sending over from London. The most notable of these demos was a rock tune called ''Superman'' he matched the song up with the soaring voice of session singer Alison MacCallum, added some brass to the original arrangement and suddenly they had a hit on their hands.

Australian musicologist, Ian McFarlane, noted 'Fresh Water '​s' "mix of rock, jazz and blues material proved to be a fine showcase for her expressive voice". In March 1974 it was re-released as, 'Any Way You Want Me'. In August 1972 MacCallum provided lead vocals for "It's Time", which was written and produced by Pat Aulton. The concept and words were by Paul Jones the Creative Director of the campaign. It was used as the theme on Australian Labor Party's TV and radio ads during Gough Whitlam's 1972 federal election campaign, making MacCallum a famous name through saturation radio and TV airplay, despite the single failing to chart.

MacCallum released three more singles on RCA: "Ol' Rock'n' Roll Boogie Woogie Blues" (July 1972), "Would You Believe?", and a cover of Rotary Connection's 1968 single, "Teach Me How to Fly" (1973), previously an Australian hit for local artist, Jeff St John and Copperwine in 1970. In 1973 MacCallum travelled to Europe to perform, she showcased "Superman" at the eighth Midem International Music Trade Fair in Cannes. She returned to Australia and in October 1974 signed to Albert Productions. MacCallum collaborated with two fellow singers, Bobbi Marchini (ex-Duck) and Janice Slater as the Hooter Sisters, to release a cover of the Phil Spector-written single, "To Know Him Is to Love Him", originally performed by his band, The Teddy Bears. In October 1974 MacCallum released her next solo single, "Excuse Me", which peaked at #29 on the Kent Music Report Singles Chart and spent 41 weeks in the top 100.

It was followed by her second solo album, 'Excuse Me', in July 1975 which spent two weeks on the Kent Music Report Top 100 Albums Chart. It provided two more singles, "Her Kind of Guy (Hot Burrito)" (September 1975) and "Love Grows Cold" (February 1976). During the late 1970s she appeared on the satirical comedy, The Naked Vicar Show, both on radio (Series 2 Episodes 1 and 2, November 1976) and on TV (Series 1 Episodes 1 and 9, May and September 1977). In the late 1970s Alison MacCallum concentrated on session work, providing backing vocals on John Robinson's 'Pity for the Victim' and for other artists: Billy Thorpe, Doug Parkinson and Mark Holden. In 1979 her 1972 single, "Superman", was re-released by RCA together with a compilation album of the same name to cash in on the then-popular 1978 Superman movie. According to Ian McFarlane, MacCallum had "disappeared from public view", and that she was "a soul/blues stylist of considerable flair and passion". After the advent of CDs, only two of her solo tracks, "Superman" and "Excuse Me", were released on various artists' CDs, until September 2014 when Sony Music Australia issued a 2× CD compilation album, 'The Essential Alison MacCallum'. It was compiled and annotated by Glenn A. Baker.




SINGLES 
''Superman (#8) / Take Me Back'' 1972 RCA
''Ol' Rock 'n' Roll Boogie Woogie Blues (#87) / Have You Seen Your Mother, Baby'' 1972 RCA
''It's Time / Hippy Gumbo'' 1972 RCA
''Would You Believe / L O N E L Y'' 1972 RCA
''Hello Sunshine / You Can't Have Sunshine'' 1972 Warner Bros. 
''Fire / Teach Me How To Fly'' 1973 RCA
''Excuse Me (#29) / Honk, Honk'' 1974 Albert Productions 
''Her Kind Of Guy (Hot Burrito) / If Your Eyes Could Smile'' 1975 Albert Productions 
''Love Grows Cold / Lunatic Love, Part II'' 1976 Albert Productions 

ALBUMS 
'Fresh Water' (#42) 1972 RCA
'Excuse Me' (#96) 1975 Albert Productions





References

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

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


1 comment:

  1. The album cover for 'Fresh Water' features 'Il Porcellino' (the little pig) statue, which is in the grounds of Sydney Hospital, facing Macquarie Street.

    ReplyDelete