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Thursday, 12 September 2013

ROSS RYAN


Ross Ryan was born on 13 December 1950 in Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. The family moved to Mount Manypeaks near Albany in 1959 where they settled on a sheep farm of 3,000 acres (1,200 ha). By the age of 13-years-old he was writing songs and learning guitar. Ryan attended Albany High, where he took the lead in The Music Man; and he produced a radio program, ''High School Half Hour'', for the local station 6VA. He joined a number of local bands including The Sett and Saffron. Ryan moved to Perth, undertook an electronics course and worked as an audio operator at a TV station, STW 9. He started his musical career in 1968.

From mid-1970 to late 1971 Ryan used the station's facilities to record his debut album, 'Home Movies', which was self-funded on the RR label. The local Perth radio station 6PM played tracks from his album. Early in 1972 Ross Ryan issued a split single with his track, "Sounds of Peppermint", backed by The Troupadores's "Keep on Truckin'". In April it reached the Top 100 on the Kent Music Report Singles Chart. Ryan signed with a manager, Al Maricic, and started regular gigs at Gramps Wine Bar and played at university campuses. In September that year Ryan supported Roy Orbison for the Perth concert on his Australian tour. Ryan got his break when Maricic heard that the proposed support act, comedian Joe Martin, had pulled out in Darwin.

After the Perth gig Orbison's promoter booked Ryan for the remainder of the tour. Ryan signed with EMI Records and commenced his next album, 'A Poem You Can Keep', with Peter Dawkins producing, which was released in May 1973. By that time Ryan had moved to Sydney. The album was arranged by Peter Martin and engineered by Martin Benge; and was issued on Capitol Records in the United States. In July its lead single, "I Don't Want to Know About It", reached the Top 40 on Go-Set '​s Singles Chart. Ryan won Record of the Year and Best New Talent at the Australian Record Federation Awards for 1973.

In September 1973 a new single, "I Am Pegasus", was released and became his highest charting hit, which reached #9 on Go-Set Top 40, staying in the chart from November until May the following year. Over that time, the single reached top 5 in almost every state capital, but not at the same time. APRAP '​s Debbie Kruger interviewed Ryan in 2002, he explained how he had merged two songs to form "I Am Pegasus": One was about the fact that I had just discovered that Ross means horse; I’d looked it up in a baby book, and I thought that was really funny, also at the time I was having a really disastrous attempt at a relationship with an air hostess. It didn't work out, so I was writing a song about that I was writing two songs and getting nowhere with them, so I combined them and got a flying horse. And I came up with Pegasus, I looked up all the things that rhymed with Pegasus and I got Dimitrius and Sagittarius. And of course the Sagittarian's the half-man half-horse.—Ross Ryan, APRAP, March 2002,

The parent album, 'My Name Means Horse', was released in February 1974 and is Ryan's most successful album peaking at #3 on Go-Set Australian Albums. It was certified triple gold. At the 1974 TV Week King of Pop Awards, 'My Name Means Horse' won Most Popular Australian Album. Then-Prime Minister of Australia, Gough Whitlam, presented Ryan's first gold records. Ryan represented Australia at Expo '74 in Spokane, Washington, with Judy Stone and Rolf Harris. During the mid-to-late 1970s, Ryan was a guest on various TV shows, including The Paul Hogan Show and Hey Hey It's Saturday.

He hosted his own pop TV program, Rock Show, and continued to release albums including 'After the Applause' (June 1975) and 'Smiling for the Camera' (April 1977). Singles from 'After the Applause', were "Blue Chevrolet Ballerina", released in March 1975, which reached the Top 40 on the Kent Music Report Singles Chart, and "Sedel (Never Smiled at Me)" (August) which did not chart. 'Smiling for the Camera' provided "Happy Birthday to Me" (August 1976), which did not chart. Ryan left EMI and at the end of 1977, they released a compilation album, 'I Thought This Might Happen 1973 – 77'.

Ross Ryan continued songwriting and released independent singles, some of his tracks were covered by other artists including John Farnham who had recorded "I Must Stay" on his 1975 album 'J.P. Farnham Sings'; and Slim Dusty recorded "Isa" which was also used in the bio-pic Slim Dusty: The Movie (1984). In 1988 he performed at the Australian National University. In 1990, Ryan co-wrote a revue, Les Boys (A Masculine Sensation), with comedians Rod Quantock, Lynda Gibson and Geoff Brooks. In the early 1990s Ryan and Broc O'Connor established a studio, G.I. Recorders, where Ryan was a record producer for acts in a range of music styles including blues with Spectrum, country with Paul Wookey, traditional Irish with The Wren Boys. In 1998 he produced Dale Juner's album, 'Only Burning Me', which won Victorian Country Album of the Year and Male Vocalist of the Year for Juner. In 1990 EMI, through its budget label, Axis Records released another compilation album, 'The Greats of Ross 1973 - 1990', which also included previously unreleased material In October 2003 Ross Ryan issued a new studio album, 'One Person Queue'.

Keith Glass of Capital News felt the album was "finely manicured and honed work with an astounding variety of styles and sounds". In addition to his own solo shows across Australia, Ryan supported Carole King during her Australian tour, and was a member of Idol and Idle with Australian Idol judge Mark Holden. Also in October 2003 "I Am Pegasus' was described as a "national anthem" on ABC TV's pop music series Love Is in the Air.

In May 2007, Aztec Music re-released 'My Name Means Horse' on CD format, additional tracks are "Blood on the Microphone (PiƱa Colada Version)" and "I Am Pegasus" (1974 live version, from Get to Know, an ABC TV show). Plans for future releases include CD versions of the EMI albums, 'A Poem You Can Keep', 'After the Applause' and 'Smiling for the Camera'. Another compilation album appeared in 2008, 'The Difficult Third Compilation', distributed by Aztec Music, it includes new tracks. Ross is generally acknowledged as one of the greatest Australian artists ever, and continues to tour and influence a new generation of up-and-coming musicians. In February 2019, to celebrate 45 years since the release of "My Name Means Horse", Silvan fruit shop 'Carter Bros. Fruit & Veg' ran a social media campaign where they played "My Name Means Horse" on repeat non-stop for 45 days. Ross Ryan appeared in the fruit shop and played a few songs.





SINGLES 
''Sounds Of Peppermint'' (#97) 1972 Peppermint 
''I Don't Want To Know About It (#56) / Making The Same Mistakes'' 1973 EMI
''I Am Pegasus (#2) / Country Christine Waltz'' 1973 EMI 
''Orchestra Ladies (#67) / 606'' 1974 EMI
''Blue Chevrolet Ballerina (#38) / Send Me The Pillow You Dream On (I Want To Start A Coalmine)'' 1975 EMI
''Sedel (Never Smiled At Me) (Edited Version) / Love Song To You All'' 1975 EMI
''Dancing / Anthem'' 1977 EMI
''Chaplin And Harlow / Postmark Paradise'' 1980 Mercury 
''Hello Stranger / The Ballad Of The Double Bay Batman'' 1981 7 Records 

ALBUMS 
'Homemovies' 1972 RR
'A Poem You Can Keep' (#22) 1973 EMI 
'My Name Means Horse'' (#3) 1974 EMI
'After The Applause' (#35) 1975 EMI
'Smiling For The Camera' 1977 EMI 
'One Person Queue' 2003 Sound Vault Records
'Stuff (Rarities & Silliness)' 2008 Coathanger Productions
'The Official Bootleg Vol. 2 - Warning Demos!!' Coathanger Productions




References

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

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


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