Field replaced Chris Pokorny on bass guitar in pop band, King Fox, which had formed in Sydney in 1967. He also provided vocals and guitar alongside Dave King on lead vocals, guitar and harmonica; Paul Radcliffe on flute, vocals, guitar and Mellotron; and Andy Evans on drums. They were later joined by Peter Muller on vocals, organ and piano. King Fox issued a four-track extended play, 'Unforgotten Dreams', on the Du Monde label in 1969 as well as a single, "I Think You're Fine", on Festival records in 1972. Field played in various pub bands in Sydney during the 1970s and, in 1979, he established his own recording studio, initially called Canteen Studios, in Woolloomooloo. It was later renamed, Paradise Studios, and was re-established in Gosford by November 2003.
Field's first solo album, 'Bad Habits', was released in June 1981 via WEA in Australia and Europe and CBS in the United States. It was arranged by Tom Price and co-produced by Field and Price. It peaked at #1 on the album charts and also reached the top ten on the Official New Zealand Music Chart. The title track had appeared in April, and it reached #4 on the Kent Music Report singles chart, and #1 on the Official New Zealand Music Chart. It was co-written by Field and Price and has been covered by other artists including David Lee Roth on his album 'Diamond Dave' (July 2003), John Farnham/Anthony Warlow on Highlights from The Main Event (December 1998) and Jeff Duff. The single was also released in Ireland, Japan, Netherlands, NZ, Sweden and the UK.
His next single from the same album, "You Weren't in Love with Me", was released in July 1981 and appeared at #1 in Australia, # 22 in New Zealand, and # 67 on the UK Singles Chart (in June 1982). The track was written by Field and has also been performed by Beccy Cole and Marina Prior. At the APRA Music Awards of 1982 Field won Most Performed Australasian Popular Work for that track. As singles, both the title track to the album and "You Weren't in Love With Me" were awarded gold discs in Australia for sales of over 50,000 copies. According to Australian musicologist, Ian McFarlane, "Field was one of the most popular acts on the Australian scene" in 1981, as a "husky voiced singer/piano player." The Australian Women's Weekly's Susan Moore observed, "his music is conducive to a bright mood. He dared to be a little different and got away with it. His breezy, swing style of music is punctuated with refined blasts of orchestration."
Field's second album, 'Try Biology', appeared in 1982 and provided his third Australian hit single, "True Love", which reached # 17. The album was also produced by Price. Lisa Perry of The Canberra Times caught his performance at Queanbeyan in September of that year, "he still has what it takes to entertain even the hardest of audiences. If you are in any way interested in some good jazz, interspersed with some driving rock and roll, you would have had to agree that Field is a unique talent." Her newspaper colleague, Karen Milliner, described how the single did not reflect his style, "it is a commercial number which obviously has succeeded, but it's the only one of its ilk on the album. Apart from two slow songs on side two, the rest of the tracks have that jazz and big-band sound which Field loves — lots of jazz piano, trumpets, trombones and sax... [his] gravel-edged throaty voice is ideally suited to jazz, and there's some great jazz piano and brass arrangements featured."
In November 1985 Field was guest lead vocalist for Warren Daly's band (ex-Daly-Wilson Big Band), The Canberra Times' Michael Foster observed, "Daly is expected to put a tight and exciting band of accomplished musicians on the stage ... and the combination with Field makes the prospect even more fascinating... if Field decides to demonstrate, even beyond his undoubted ability as a composer, lyricist and singer, his skills on bass, piano, drums, guitar or woodwinds." In 1989 he issued a third album, 'Say Yes', on the Agape label. It was produced by Field alone. The Canberra Times' Kathryn Whitfield felt, "his voice is not one that you would describe as versatile, the music on this album does exhibit an interesting variety ranging from love ballads to the raunchy 'Blue Boogie'... This is a pleasant kind of easy-listening album, tailored for the AM radio market. It may put a smile on mum's face, but it will put the more nubile to sleep."
Interest in Field's music was re-generated in November 2004 after a contestant, Courtney Murphy, performed "You Weren't in Love with Me", on TV talent show, Australian Idol. One of the judges, Ian "Dicko" Dickson, indicated that he liked it but had not heard it before. Murphy was also a guest on ABC TV's Spicks and Specks, a celebrity pop music quiz program, in 2005 and revisited his performance. This interest led to the release of a compilation album, 'The Best of Billy Field: You Weren't in Love with Me' (Aztec Music, 2005) on CD. Murphy's performance of the song is credited on the liner notes as the impetus for an increase in interest in the artist's back catalogue. Field's Paradise Studios has been used to record albums by Air Supply, Cold Chisel, INXS, Paul Kelly, Icehouse, the Models, Absent Friends, and the Angels. Field has worked as a record producer.
References
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Billy_Field
http://top100singles.blogspot.com.au/
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