The group relocated to Melbourne and were signed to Polydor Records in 1976 upon recommendation from Molly Meldrum, (in turn tipped off by Paul McCartney). In May 1976 they released their debut single, "I Like It Both Ways", which was produced by Meldrum. The song was initially shunned by some commercial radio stations in Sydney because of its controversial lyrics, but promotion on Meldrum's TV pop music show, Countdown, encouraged radio stations to play the track. "I Like It Both Ways" peaked at #16 on the Kent Music Report singles chart.
Randall Murphy left the group in June 1976, "citing mutual disagreement". He was temporarily replaced by Little Russ Silver [Argentino Russo], and more permanently by Philip Foxman (ex-Zygotes, Prothalis) in late August. Murphy returned to Perth. A follow up single, "Too Hot to Touch" was released in September 1976, reaching #14 on the charts. Their self-titled debut album was released in mid-November 1976 and peaked at #13, achieving double gold certification. The group were presented with the TV Week King of Pop Award for Best Australian TV Performer (on Countdown) and for Most Popular New Group of 1976.
By November they had supported gigs by Lou Reed, Suzie Quatro and Sweet. Julie Meldrum of The Canberra Times described their performance in Narrabundah: "Trouble began when Perth rock group Supernaut, which thrives on 'bopper' appeal, came on stage. The crowd made a rush for the group, and many had to be forcibly removed. After the group finished its set organisers had to appeal for the crowd to move back from the stage 'or else someone will get hurt'."
In 1977, the band released two original singles, "Young and Innocent" and "The Kids Are out Tonight", and a cover version of "Let's Spend the Night Together", originally by The Rolling Stones. They worked extensively on recording sessions for a proposed second album, with working titles included 'Exile' and 'Test Pressing'. "The Kids Are out Tonight" came from those sessions. After more than a year, they realised their music style was out of touch and the project was abandoned. In April 1978, they released another single, "Unemployed" before leaving Polydor.
The group relocated to Sydney and were signed to Robie Porter's Wizard Records in mid-1978. They returned to their original pub rock influences and "adopted a quasi-punk/new-wave direction". With the addition of Noel Kennedy on keyboards, they released, "Spies" (December 1978) McFarlane noted that their "live repertoire included cover versions of material by David Bowie, the Stranglers, XTC, and the Doors". They shortened their name to the Nauts in April 1979 and released, "Black Market World" following that with a new album under that name in December 1979, produced by Porter. The group had disbanded by March 1980. Supernaut reformed for the Countdown Spectacular 2 Tour of Australia from late-August to early-September 2007. In 2016 Supernaut commemorated the 40th anniversary of "I Like It Both Ways" with a three-day tour from 16 to 18 June, followed by another show on 25 June at Charles Hotel in Perth.
Members
Gary Twinn (vocals), Chris Burnham (guitar), Randall Murphy (bass), Joey Burnham (drums), Phil Foxman (bass), Noel Kennedy (keyboards), Little Russ Silver [Argentino Russo] (bass)
''I Like It Both Ways (#16) / Lightning'' 1976 Polydor
''Too Hot To Touch (#14) / Lick My Lolly'' 1976 Polydor
''The Kids Are Out Tonight (#44) / Why?'' 1977 Polydor
''Young And Innocent (#40) / Goodbye'' 1977 Polydor
''Let's Spend The Night Together / Space Angel'' Polydor
''Unemployed (#80) / Exile'' 1978 Polydor
''Spies / Misfits'' 1978 Wizard
''Black Market World / I Don't Want To Be Like You'' [as The Nauts] 1979 Wizard
'Supernaut' (#13) 1976 Polydor
'The Nauts' 1979 Wizard
References
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supernaut_%28Australian_band%29
http://top100singles.blogspot.com.au/
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