The Powder Monkeys put considerable effort into live performance and touring during this period. After Jed Sayers left at the end of 1994, the band remained a three-piece. Their next release, in February 1995, was the five-track EP 'Straight Until Morning', which were recordings for a Triple J live broadcast. The band released the single "The Supernova That Never Quits" in December 1995, with the second album 'Time Wounds All Heels' following in February 1996. The second album is considered a much more coherent example of the band's sound. Hemensley and Ray also played with the Peter Wells Band in 1996. There was some music industry interest in 'Time Wounds All Heels', but nothing resulted. The band re-emerged in August 1997 with the single "Get The Girl Straight / Wasn't Born Yesterday" (400 copies, red vinyl) on the Death Valley label.
Most of 1998 was spent touring. A live album, recorded at an April 1998 Melbourne gig, 'Blood Sweat & Beers' came out in early 1999 on Safety Pin Records (Spain) and on CD from Butcher's Hook Records (UK). They then went on a European tour, on which they recorded "Two Tub Man" and "Check This Action", both released as split 7" singles with the Hellacopters. They also recorded a new album with Hellacopters producer Fred 'Atlas' Estby titled 'Lost City Blues', which saw a release on the Hellacopters White Jazz label. The album has never seen an Australian release. A six-track EP was also recorded, 'Talk Softly And Carry A Big Shtick', which was released on Punch records and is now a collector's item, featuring rarely heard songs ''Breakdown Coming'' and ''Positively Crapple Street''.
Timmy Jack Ray departed the group shortly after. His replacement was drummer Todd McNear (ex-Seminal Rats). John Nolan suffered a near-fatal heart attack in 2001, the result of his heroin use, and was left with slightly impaired motor skills. Nolan spent several months recovering, and the group reconvened in 2002, recording a song for the Dirty Deeds soundtrack as well as a cover of legendary Detroit band The Dogs' ''Black Tea''. They played their first gig in over a year at the Tote, supporting punk legends The Dictators, and shortly after supporting Dead Moon. These were to be the last Powder Monkeys gigs.
After a lengthy battle with heroin, Tim Hemensley died from an overdose on 21 July 2003. It was a devastating blow to the Melbourne rock scene, which had been severely depleted in recent years with the deaths of Guy Lucas (The Philisteins, Freeloaders), Mick Weber (Seminal Rats), and Sean Greenway (GOD, Freeloaders, The Yes-Men). The final recordings were compiled on a CD titled 'Outta Control Rock'n'Roll' and released on the Dropkick label in 2005. It featured three new songs recorded live at Sean Greenway's wake in 2001, as well as studio recordings of several cover songs including The Stooges 'Cock In My Pocket', a staple of their live sets for many years. John Nolan died in 2021.
Members
Tim Hemensley (bass, vocals), John Nolan (guitar), Adyn Hibberd (guitar, vocals),
Jed Sayers (harmonica), Timmy Jack Ray (drums), Todd McNear (drums)
References
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Powder_Monkeys
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Powder_Monkeys
I saw The powder monkeys many times including mid 90s supportsat c the Palace (st kilda) to The Aztecs and Radio Birdman
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