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AUDIOCULTURE
AudioCulture is an online celebration of the people who have created the music, the scenes they shaped, and the audiences they played to.HIT THAT BEAT!
Hit That Beat! The roots of electronic sound run deep in New Zealand’s modern music. Contemporary classical composer Douglas Lilburn set up an electro-acoustic music centre in Wellington in the 1960s. Moogs and early synthesisers can be heard EBONY LAMB – A MUSICIAN'S EYE Ebony Lamb – a musician's eye. Ebony Lamb – having experimented with and expressed herself through a variety of disciplines – might be described simply as an “artist”. She is best known as a musician, fronting alternative country band Eb and Sparrow. And now, her profile as a photographer is building to be equally assignificant.
TEN MOMENTS IN NEW ZEALAND GLAMTEN GUITARS
The twin necks of the high-action Sevesi number four. Bill Sevesi Collection. Bridge details of Sevesi number four with star fret markers and roller volume controls. Bill Sevesi collection. The Popularity of Spanish and Hawaiian acoustic guitars duriSHANE - PERSON
16 Apr 2013. Singer Shane Hales, an English immigrant who had found fame as the lead singer of the raucous Pleazers in the mid-1960s, would become one of the more enduring faces of the decade and remains a household name to this day. After the break-up of The Pleazers in June 1967, singer Shane Hales joined the Auckland band The JamestownUnion.
JIM WARREN - PERSON
15 Nov 2014. With a career that spanned the 20th century, a natural ability to swing, and a great sense of humour, it’s no wonder that trumpeter Jim Warren was one of the most popular and respected musicians in the Auckland jazz scene. At his 80th birthday – 18 years ago – his wife Madeline gave him a new trumpet. THE SCREAMING MEEMEES Michael O’Neill just laughed and went back to his scrubbing. Washing dishes out the back of Quays nightclub was a long way from feeling like a rock star. Only a few months earlier The Screaming Meemees had taken the 1983 Sweetwaters festival by storm. Their blinder of a set spotlit them as a band on the brink of greatness.JAN PRESTON
24 Nov 2015. Classically trained pianist and former New Zealand rock musician Jan Preston is one of Australia’s finest exponents of boogie-woogie and rhythm and blues piano and a sought after composer of film and documentary soundtracks. The one time member of the Red Mole theatrical troupe, Midge Marsden ’s Country Flyers, pop groupCoup D
TERRY DEAN AND THE NITEBEATS Terry Dean was the smooth Samoan-American vocalist behind four finger-snapping, hip-shaking 1960s beat singles on Auckland’s Mascot label. Born Terry Fidow in Samoa, he moved to New Zealand at age 8, growing up in Ponsonby, where he spent time with the King Cobras gang. Fidow spent his fiery early 1960s years as a jobbing vocalist inAuckland
AUDIOCULTURE
AudioCulture is an online celebration of the people who have created the music, the scenes they shaped, and the audiences they played to.HIT THAT BEAT!
Hit That Beat! The roots of electronic sound run deep in New Zealand’s modern music. Contemporary classical composer Douglas Lilburn set up an electro-acoustic music centre in Wellington in the 1960s. Moogs and early synthesisers can be heard EBONY LAMB – A MUSICIAN'S EYE Ebony Lamb – a musician's eye. Ebony Lamb – having experimented with and expressed herself through a variety of disciplines – might be described simply as an “artist”. She is best known as a musician, fronting alternative country band Eb and Sparrow. And now, her profile as a photographer is building to be equally assignificant.
TEN MOMENTS IN NEW ZEALAND GLAMTEN GUITARS
The twin necks of the high-action Sevesi number four. Bill Sevesi Collection. Bridge details of Sevesi number four with star fret markers and roller volume controls. Bill Sevesi collection. The Popularity of Spanish and Hawaiian acoustic guitars duriSHANE - PERSON
16 Apr 2013. Singer Shane Hales, an English immigrant who had found fame as the lead singer of the raucous Pleazers in the mid-1960s, would become one of the more enduring faces of the decade and remains a household name to this day. After the break-up of The Pleazers in June 1967, singer Shane Hales joined the Auckland band The JamestownUnion.
JIM WARREN - PERSON
15 Nov 2014. With a career that spanned the 20th century, a natural ability to swing, and a great sense of humour, it’s no wonder that trumpeter Jim Warren was one of the most popular and respected musicians in the Auckland jazz scene. At his 80th birthday – 18 years ago – his wife Madeline gave him a new trumpet. THE SCREAMING MEEMEES Michael O’Neill just laughed and went back to his scrubbing. Washing dishes out the back of Quays nightclub was a long way from feeling like a rock star. Only a few months earlier The Screaming Meemees had taken the 1983 Sweetwaters festival by storm. Their blinder of a set spotlit them as a band on the brink of greatness.JAN PRESTON
24 Nov 2015. Classically trained pianist and former New Zealand rock musician Jan Preston is one of Australia’s finest exponents of boogie-woogie and rhythm and blues piano and a sought after composer of film and documentary soundtracks. The one time member of the Red Mole theatrical troupe, Midge Marsden ’s Country Flyers, pop groupCoup D
TERRY DEAN AND THE NITEBEATS Terry Dean was the smooth Samoan-American vocalist behind four finger-snapping, hip-shaking 1960s beat singles on Auckland’s Mascot label. Born Terry Fidow in Samoa, he moved to New Zealand at age 8, growing up in Ponsonby, where he spent time with the King Cobras gang. Fidow spent his fiery early 1960s years as a jobbing vocalist inAuckland
NEW ZEALAND MADE GUITAR AMPS New Zealand made Guitar Amps. As electric guitars became widespread in popular music, backyard workshops and production line factories emerged to supply the requisite amplifiers and speaker boxes. In the United States, Fender and Gibson were among the early brands. In Britain there were Vox and Marshall. In New Zealand, Concord, Jansen,Holden
ANTHONIE TONNON
Anthonie Tonnon’s musical story sounds familiar enough at first: he formed a band while he was at university in Dunedin and kept at it. But it’s also a story of innovation and reinvention in a changing music industry, and of memorable songs about things most people don’t write songs about.TEN GUITARS
The twin necks of the high-action Sevesi number four. Bill Sevesi Collection. Bridge details of Sevesi number four with star fret markers and roller volume controls. Bill Sevesi collection. The Popularity of Spanish and Hawaiian acoustic guitars duri TEN MOMENTS IN NEW ZEALAND GLAM Ten moments in New Zealand glam. Dr Ian Chapman, music lecturer at the University of Otago and Dr Glam after hours, considers New Zealand's flirtation with glam in the 1970s. Let’s face it, New Zealand and glam rock are not natural bedfellows. At the beginning of the 1970s when the glorious tinsel Brits Marc Bolan (T Rex) and David Bowie (as NEW ZEALAND INVASION OF AUSTRALIA Māori showbands were particularly popular on the cabaret circuit and the Quin Tikis provided a launching pad for Rim D. Paul's subsequent successful solo career over the next two decades.. Spurred on by Devlin’s success, there was a trickle of New Zealand rockers in the early 60s – Red Hewitt, Sonny Day & The Sundowners and Terry Dean and The Nitebeats had a crack in Sydney. ANTHONIE TONNON DISCOGRAPHY Tonnon can’t quite claim to have been born in Dunedin – he moved there from Tauranga in 1986 with his family, when he was three months old. Most of his childhood was spent in the city’s outskirts at Fairfield and Chain Hills, at a physical and cultural dis FANE FLAWS, THE WICKED CONJUROR Over five decades Fane Flaws has been one of the most prolific creative forces in New Zealand music. Perhaps best known as the founder of 1980s pop wonders The Crocodiles and co-writer of their biggest hit ‘Tears’, he also brought his talents to bands from BLERTA to Spats, directed numerous music videos, and was responsible for the memorable animated title sequence for Radio With Pictures.ELSIE NIXON
Elsie Nixon (1913-1996) learned piano from a young age after being inspired by her aunt, renowned classical pianist and politician Dame Hilda Ross. However, when she was about 11 her older brother Arthur fell ill with polio, and the medical costs associateMOTHER GOOSE
Mother Goose were a rock and roll band from Dunedin who had significant success in the late 1970s in Australia. Their unique and quite hilarious video for the 1977 single 'Baked Beans' was amongst the most played clips across the Tasman that decade. The band got started in November 1975 when students Craig Johnston and Steve Youngcompleted
EMMA PAKI - PERSON
An amazing one-off in NZ pop culture, Emma Paki’s ‘System Virtue’ still sounds like nothing else, and its haunting tones still have the capacity to send shivers down the spine. When it was released in 1993, few could decipher the cryptic lyrics, but the searing emotion was undeniable, as was the uniqueness of this Māori singer,born in
AUDIOCULTURE
AudioCulture is an online celebration of the people who have created the music, the scenes they shaped, and the audiences they played to. EBONY LAMB – A MUSICIAN'S EYE Ebony Lamb – a musician's eye. Ebony Lamb – having experimented with and expressed herself through a variety of disciplines – might be described simply as an “artist”. She is best known as a musician, fronting alternative country band Eb and Sparrow. And now, her profile as a photographer is building to be equally assignificant.
JIM WARREN - PERSON
15 Nov 2014. With a career that spanned the 20th century, a natural ability to swing, and a great sense of humour, it’s no wonder that trumpeter Jim Warren was one of the most popular and respected musicians in the Auckland jazz scene. At his 80th birthday – 18 years ago – his wife Madeline gave him a new trumpet. MAPPING AUCKLAND'S VENUES: THE 1980S 1980s venue map. In many ways the 1980s were the beginning of the music scene as we know it now. Licensing laws had sufficiently eased to the point where the main venues were now bars (rather than the cabarets and dancehalls of the 1960s). The Gluepot in Ponsonby was in its heyday, and at the top of the CBD was Mainstreet, where Radio WithSHANE - PERSON
16 Apr 2013. Singer Shane Hales, an English immigrant who had found fame as the lead singer of the raucous Pleazers in the mid-1960s, would become one of the more enduring faces of the decade and remains a household name to this day. After the break-up of The Pleazers in June 1967, singer Shane Hales joined the Auckland band The JamestownUnion.
DIANNE SWANN
Dianne Swann Profile. Dianne Swann. Profile. Playing live to 85,000 people. Signing to two international labels. Recording with Radiohead. Having her song ‘Birthday’ chosen as NME single of the week. These are just some of the highlights of Dianne Swann’s career as a vocalist, songwriter, and performer. They are career highlights thatEYE TV - PERSON
aka Nixons. Gareth Shute. 18 Feb 2014. Eye TV began as The Nixons in 1990 and led the local field in heavy alternative rock. But there was already a band called The Nixons in the USA, so they took the name of their first album and subsequently eased up on the distortion pedals. They signed deals with labels in the States and Australia, and then STU BUCHANAN ON HIS PEERS AND MENTORS Stu Buchanan on his peers and mentors. Saxophonist and bandleader Martin Winiata with Doug Caldwell, backstage after the first Christchurch Jazz Concert at the Repertory Theatre, July 1951 - Jo Jules collection. Martin Winiata appeared to me to be “Mr Personality”. Auckland had Crombie Murdoch, Wellington had Don Richardson and Dunedin hadGARNER WAYNE
Garner Wayne’s ‘Love In A Fowlhouse’ was utterly original, and with its “bwuck bwuck bwuck” chorus, unforgettable. Wayne had served a long apprenticeship since he became hooked on country music in the early 1930s. Born in 1920, he grew up in Canterbury and first became aware of the genre through the cowboy films of Roy Rogers andGene
TERRY DEAN AND THE NITEBEATS Terry Dean was the smooth Samoan-American vocalist behind four finger-snapping, hip-shaking 1960s beat singles on Auckland’s Mascot label. Born Terry Fidow in Samoa, he moved to New Zealand at age 8, growing up in Ponsonby, where he spent time with the King Cobras gang. Fidow spent his fiery early 1960s years as a jobbing vocalist inAuckland
AUDIOCULTURE
AudioCulture is an online celebration of the people who have created the music, the scenes they shaped, and the audiences they played to. EBONY LAMB – A MUSICIAN'S EYE Ebony Lamb – a musician's eye. Ebony Lamb – having experimented with and expressed herself through a variety of disciplines – might be described simply as an “artist”. She is best known as a musician, fronting alternative country band Eb and Sparrow. And now, her profile as a photographer is building to be equally assignificant.
JIM WARREN - PERSON
15 Nov 2014. With a career that spanned the 20th century, a natural ability to swing, and a great sense of humour, it’s no wonder that trumpeter Jim Warren was one of the most popular and respected musicians in the Auckland jazz scene. At his 80th birthday – 18 years ago – his wife Madeline gave him a new trumpet. MAPPING AUCKLAND'S VENUES: THE 1980S 1980s venue map. In many ways the 1980s were the beginning of the music scene as we know it now. Licensing laws had sufficiently eased to the point where the main venues were now bars (rather than the cabarets and dancehalls of the 1960s). The Gluepot in Ponsonby was in its heyday, and at the top of the CBD was Mainstreet, where Radio WithSHANE - PERSON
16 Apr 2013. Singer Shane Hales, an English immigrant who had found fame as the lead singer of the raucous Pleazers in the mid-1960s, would become one of the more enduring faces of the decade and remains a household name to this day. After the break-up of The Pleazers in June 1967, singer Shane Hales joined the Auckland band The JamestownUnion.
DIANNE SWANN
Dianne Swann Profile. Dianne Swann. Profile. Playing live to 85,000 people. Signing to two international labels. Recording with Radiohead. Having her song ‘Birthday’ chosen as NME single of the week. These are just some of the highlights of Dianne Swann’s career as a vocalist, songwriter, and performer. They are career highlights thatEYE TV - PERSON
aka Nixons. Gareth Shute. 18 Feb 2014. Eye TV began as The Nixons in 1990 and led the local field in heavy alternative rock. But there was already a band called The Nixons in the USA, so they took the name of their first album and subsequently eased up on the distortion pedals. They signed deals with labels in the States and Australia, and then STU BUCHANAN ON HIS PEERS AND MENTORS Stu Buchanan on his peers and mentors. Saxophonist and bandleader Martin Winiata with Doug Caldwell, backstage after the first Christchurch Jazz Concert at the Repertory Theatre, July 1951 - Jo Jules collection. Martin Winiata appeared to me to be “Mr Personality”. Auckland had Crombie Murdoch, Wellington had Don Richardson and Dunedin hadGARNER WAYNE
Garner Wayne’s ‘Love In A Fowlhouse’ was utterly original, and with its “bwuck bwuck bwuck” chorus, unforgettable. Wayne had served a long apprenticeship since he became hooked on country music in the early 1930s. Born in 1920, he grew up in Canterbury and first became aware of the genre through the cowboy films of Roy Rogers andGene
TERRY DEAN AND THE NITEBEATS Terry Dean was the smooth Samoan-American vocalist behind four finger-snapping, hip-shaking 1960s beat singles on Auckland’s Mascot label. Born Terry Fidow in Samoa, he moved to New Zealand at age 8, growing up in Ponsonby, where he spent time with the King Cobras gang. Fidow spent his fiery early 1960s years as a jobbing vocalist inAuckland
NEW ZEALAND MADE GUITAR AMPS New Zealand made Guitar Amps. As electric guitars became widespread in popular music, backyard workshops and production line factories emerged to supply the requisite amplifiers and speaker boxes. In the United States, Fender and Gibson were among the early brands. In Britain there were Vox and Marshall. In New Zealand, Concord, Jansen,Holden
TEN GUITARS
The twin necks of the high-action Sevesi number four. Bill Sevesi Collection. Bridge details of Sevesi number four with star fret markers and roller volume controls. Bill Sevesi collection. The Popularity of Spanish and Hawaiian acoustic guitars duri COUNTRY AOTEAROA TIMELINE The noisy library of New Zealand music Te pātaka korihi o ngā puoroo Aotearoa
FANE FLAWS, THE WICKED CONJUROR Over five decades Fane Flaws has been one of the most prolific creative forces in New Zealand music. Perhaps best known as the founder of 1980s pop wonders The Crocodiles and co-writer of their biggest hit ‘Tears’, he also brought his talents to bands from BLERTA to Spats, directed numerous music videos, and was responsible for the memorable animated title sequence for Radio With Pictures. THE HAMILTON COUNTY BLUEGRASS BAND The Hamilton County Bluegrass Band on stage at Putaruru College, 1969. Left to right: Colleen Bain, Paul Trenwith, Dave Calder, Lyndsay Bedogni (obscured), Alan Rhodes. The Hamilton County Bluegrass Band’s 1970 release was their first for EMI. Produced by Peter Dawkins and engineered by Peter Hitchcock.ELSIE NIXON
Elsie Nixon (1913-1996) learned piano from a young age after being inspired by her aunt, renowned classical pianist and politician Dame Hilda Ross. However, when she was about 11 her older brother Arthur fell ill with polio, and the medical costs associateJOHN GRENELL
For a little while he used both names – John Hore Grenell – and he briefly included his birth father’s surname so that he was John Denver Grenell, but in the country music world that was just a little confusing. Whether he is known as John Hore or John GrAL HUNTER - PERSON
Al Hunter. Profile. Chris Bourke. 21 Jan 2014. After over a decade making a name for himself in Auckland clubs as a singer of blues, R&B, and rock and roll, Al Hunter made a crucial decision. In 1980 he decided to devote himself to his first love, country music.GARTH YOUNG
Garth Young was everywhere in the 1960s and 1970s, as our music industry came to life, amped by the black-and-white TV sets flickering in a quarter of a million lounges. The TV sound studio later became his second home. Wellington was the hub: the showbiz scene was then mostly headquartered in the capital.DEREK LIND - PERSON
Derek Lind and band at Roundhead Studios, Auckland, 2015. Derek Lind - Brunelleschi's Dome. Performed at Kumeu Live, 3 August 2019. Derek Lind is joined by Miller Yule (drums), Andrew Horst (bass), Guy Wishart (guitar), Glenn Ross CampbellAUDIOCULTURE
AudioCulture is an online celebration of the people who have created the music, the scenes they shaped, and the audiences they played to. TEN MOMENTS IN NEW ZEALAND GLAM EBONY LAMB – A MUSICIAN'S EYE Ebony Lamb – a musician's eye. Ebony Lamb – having experimented with and expressed herself through a variety of disciplines – might be described simply as an “artist”. She is best known as a musician, fronting alternative country band Eb and Sparrow. And now, her profile as a photographer is building to be equally assignificant.
MAPPING AUCKLAND'S VENUES: THE 1980S 1980s venue map. In many ways the 1980s were the beginning of the music scene as we know it now. Licensing laws had sufficiently eased to the point where the main venues were now bars (rather than the cabarets and dancehalls of the 1960s). The Gluepot in Ponsonby was in its heyday, and at the top of the CBD was Mainstreet, where Radio WithJIM WARREN - PERSON
15 Nov 2014. With a career that spanned the 20th century, a natural ability to swing, and a great sense of humour, it’s no wonder that trumpeter Jim Warren was one of the most popular and respected musicians in the Auckland jazz scene. At his 80th birthday – 18 years ago – his wife Madeline gave him a new trumpet.THE MAGICK HEADS
From 1991 to 1997, he also devoted his considerable energies to The Magick Heads – a band conceived by Scott, and 3Ds members David Mitchell and David Saunders, as a vehicle for the striking voice of Jane Sinnott. The band’s debut single The Back of her Hand was released by Flying Nun in 1991 and saw Mitchell in the uncustomaryposition of
STU BUCHANAN ON HIS PEERS AND MENTORS Stu Buchanan on his peers and mentors. Saxophonist and bandleader Martin Winiata with Doug Caldwell, backstage after the first Christchurch Jazz Concert at the Repertory Theatre, July 1951 - Jo Jules collection. Martin Winiata appeared to me to be “Mr Personality”. Auckland had Crombie Murdoch, Wellington had Don Richardson and Dunedin hadEYE TV - PERSON
aka Nixons. Gareth Shute. 18 Feb 2014. Eye TV began as The Nixons in 1990 and led the local field in heavy alternative rock. But there was already a band called The Nixons in the USA, so they took the name of their first album and subsequently eased up on the distortion pedals. They signed deals with labels in the States and Australia, and thenAUDIOCULTURE
AudioCulture is an online celebration of the people who have created the music, the scenes they shaped, and the audiences they played to. TEN MOMENTS IN NEW ZEALAND GLAM EBONY LAMB – A MUSICIAN'S EYE Ebony Lamb – a musician's eye. Ebony Lamb – having experimented with and expressed herself through a variety of disciplines – might be described simply as an “artist”. She is best known as a musician, fronting alternative country band Eb and Sparrow. And now, her profile as a photographer is building to be equally assignificant.
MAPPING AUCKLAND'S VENUES: THE 1980S 1980s venue map. In many ways the 1980s were the beginning of the music scene as we know it now. Licensing laws had sufficiently eased to the point where the main venues were now bars (rather than the cabarets and dancehalls of the 1960s). The Gluepot in Ponsonby was in its heyday, and at the top of the CBD was Mainstreet, where Radio WithJIM WARREN - PERSON
15 Nov 2014. With a career that spanned the 20th century, a natural ability to swing, and a great sense of humour, it’s no wonder that trumpeter Jim Warren was one of the most popular and respected musicians in the Auckland jazz scene. At his 80th birthday – 18 years ago – his wife Madeline gave him a new trumpet.THE MAGICK HEADS
From 1991 to 1997, he also devoted his considerable energies to The Magick Heads – a band conceived by Scott, and 3Ds members David Mitchell and David Saunders, as a vehicle for the striking voice of Jane Sinnott. The band’s debut single The Back of her Hand was released by Flying Nun in 1991 and saw Mitchell in the uncustomaryposition of
STU BUCHANAN ON HIS PEERS AND MENTORS Stu Buchanan on his peers and mentors. Saxophonist and bandleader Martin Winiata with Doug Caldwell, backstage after the first Christchurch Jazz Concert at the Repertory Theatre, July 1951 - Jo Jules collection. Martin Winiata appeared to me to be “Mr Personality”. Auckland had Crombie Murdoch, Wellington had Don Richardson and Dunedin hadEYE TV - PERSON
aka Nixons. Gareth Shute. 18 Feb 2014. Eye TV began as The Nixons in 1990 and led the local field in heavy alternative rock. But there was already a band called The Nixons in the USA, so they took the name of their first album and subsequently eased up on the distortion pedals. They signed deals with labels in the States and Australia, and then TEN MOMENTS IN NEW ZEALAND GLAM Ten moments in New Zealand glam. Dr Ian Chapman, music lecturer at the University of Otago and Dr Glam after hours, considers New Zealand's flirtation with glam in the 1970s. Let’s face it, New Zealand and glam rock are not natural bedfellows. At the beginning of the 1970s when the glorious tinsel Brits Marc Bolan (T Rex) and David Bowie (as COUNTRY AOTEAROA TIMELINE The noisy library of New Zealand music Te pātaka korihi o ngā puoroo Aotearoa
FANE FLAWS, THE WICKED CONJUROR Over five decades Fane Flaws has been one of the most prolific creative forces in New Zealand music. Perhaps best known as the founder of 1980s pop wonders The Crocodiles and co-writer of their biggest hit ‘Tears’, he also brought his talents to bands from BLERTA to Spats, directed numerous music videos, and was responsible for the memorable animated title sequence for Radio With Pictures.CREATION - PERSON
29 Jan 2017. In provincial New Zealand in the early 1970s AM radio was king and popular music was popular music. Local releases sat easily amongst the latest from overseas, and Wellington-based band Creation had two of the biggest radio hits of the first half of the decade. Led by bass-playing vocalist Greg Christensen, Creation scored withDIANNE SWANN
Dianne Swann Profile. Dianne Swann. Profile. Playing live to 85,000 people. Signing to two international labels. Recording with Radiohead. Having her song ‘Birthday’ chosen as NME single of the week. These are just some of the highlights of Dianne Swann’s career as a vocalist, songwriter, and performer. They are career highlights thatJOHN GRENELL
For a little while he used both names – John Hore Grenell – and he briefly included his birth father’s surname so that he was John Denver Grenell, but in the country music world that was just a little confusing. Whether he is known as John Hore or John GrGARTH YOUNG
Garth Young was everywhere in the 1960s and 1970s, as our music industry came to life, amped by the black-and-white TV sets flickering in a quarter of a million lounges. The TV sound studio later became his second home. Wellington was the hub: the showbiz scene was then mostly headquartered in the capital. REMEMBERING MALCOLM HAYMAN Remembering Malcolm Hayman. In 1986, when I tracked Malcolm Hayman down to his home in the stark, windswept Wellington suburbia of Karori, this seminal figure of NZ music seemed to have been all but forgotten. For me, it was a personal pilgrimage to meet and interview one of my New Zealand music heroes. Unable to muster any interest fromlocal
AL HUNTER - PERSON
Al Hunter. Profile. Chris Bourke. 21 Jan 2014. After over a decade making a name for himself in Auckland clubs as a singer of blues, R&B, and rock and roll, Al Hunter made a crucial decision. In 1980 he decided to devote himself to his first love, country music.THE KEIL ISLES
The Keil Isles (without Herma), 1967. L to R: Roger Skinner, Brian Henderson, Billy Karaitiana (AKA Billy Kristian), Jimmy Hill. The Keil Isles in the early 1960s. Clockwise from bottom left: Bill Fairs, Olaf Keil, Lou Miller, Brian Henderson and Klaus Keil. In the centre isHerma.
AUDIOCULTURE
AudioCulture is an online celebration of the people who have created the music, the scenes they shaped, and the audiences they played to. TEN MOMENTS IN NEW ZEALAND GLAM EBONY LAMB – A MUSICIAN'S EYE Ebony Lamb – a musician's eye. Ebony Lamb – having experimented with and expressed herself through a variety of disciplines – might be described simply as an “artist”. She is best known as a musician, fronting alternative country band Eb and Sparrow. And now, her profile as a photographer is building to be equally assignificant.
MAPPING AUCKLAND'S VENUES: THE 1980S 1980s venue map. In many ways the 1980s were the beginning of the music scene as we know it now. Licensing laws had sufficiently eased to the point where the main venues were now bars (rather than the cabarets and dancehalls of the 1960s). The Gluepot in Ponsonby was in its heyday, and at the top of the CBD was Mainstreet, where Radio WithJIM WARREN - PERSON
15 Nov 2014. With a career that spanned the 20th century, a natural ability to swing, and a great sense of humour, it’s no wonder that trumpeter Jim Warren was one of the most popular and respected musicians in the Auckland jazz scene. At his 80th birthday – 18 years ago – his wife Madeline gave him a new trumpet.THE MAGICK HEADS
From 1991 to 1997, he also devoted his considerable energies to The Magick Heads – a band conceived by Scott, and 3Ds members David Mitchell and David Saunders, as a vehicle for the striking voice of Jane Sinnott. The band’s debut single The Back of her Hand was released by Flying Nun in 1991 and saw Mitchell in the uncustomaryposition of
STU BUCHANAN ON HIS PEERS AND MENTORS Stu Buchanan on his peers and mentors. Saxophonist and bandleader Martin Winiata with Doug Caldwell, backstage after the first Christchurch Jazz Concert at the Repertory Theatre, July 1951 - Jo Jules collection. Martin Winiata appeared to me to be “Mr Personality”. Auckland had Crombie Murdoch, Wellington had Don Richardson and Dunedin hadEYE TV - PERSON
aka Nixons. Gareth Shute. 18 Feb 2014. Eye TV began as The Nixons in 1990 and led the local field in heavy alternative rock. But there was already a band called The Nixons in the USA, so they took the name of their first album and subsequently eased up on the distortion pedals. They signed deals with labels in the States and Australia, and thenAUDIOCULTURE
AudioCulture is an online celebration of the people who have created the music, the scenes they shaped, and the audiences they played to. TEN MOMENTS IN NEW ZEALAND GLAM EBONY LAMB – A MUSICIAN'S EYE Ebony Lamb – a musician's eye. Ebony Lamb – having experimented with and expressed herself through a variety of disciplines – might be described simply as an “artist”. She is best known as a musician, fronting alternative country band Eb and Sparrow. And now, her profile as a photographer is building to be equally assignificant.
MAPPING AUCKLAND'S VENUES: THE 1980S 1980s venue map. In many ways the 1980s were the beginning of the music scene as we know it now. Licensing laws had sufficiently eased to the point where the main venues were now bars (rather than the cabarets and dancehalls of the 1960s). The Gluepot in Ponsonby was in its heyday, and at the top of the CBD was Mainstreet, where Radio WithJIM WARREN - PERSON
15 Nov 2014. With a career that spanned the 20th century, a natural ability to swing, and a great sense of humour, it’s no wonder that trumpeter Jim Warren was one of the most popular and respected musicians in the Auckland jazz scene. At his 80th birthday – 18 years ago – his wife Madeline gave him a new trumpet.THE MAGICK HEADS
From 1991 to 1997, he also devoted his considerable energies to The Magick Heads – a band conceived by Scott, and 3Ds members David Mitchell and David Saunders, as a vehicle for the striking voice of Jane Sinnott. The band’s debut single The Back of her Hand was released by Flying Nun in 1991 and saw Mitchell in the uncustomaryposition of
STU BUCHANAN ON HIS PEERS AND MENTORS Stu Buchanan on his peers and mentors. Saxophonist and bandleader Martin Winiata with Doug Caldwell, backstage after the first Christchurch Jazz Concert at the Repertory Theatre, July 1951 - Jo Jules collection. Martin Winiata appeared to me to be “Mr Personality”. Auckland had Crombie Murdoch, Wellington had Don Richardson and Dunedin hadEYE TV - PERSON
aka Nixons. Gareth Shute. 18 Feb 2014. Eye TV began as The Nixons in 1990 and led the local field in heavy alternative rock. But there was already a band called The Nixons in the USA, so they took the name of their first album and subsequently eased up on the distortion pedals. They signed deals with labels in the States and Australia, and then TEN MOMENTS IN NEW ZEALAND GLAM Ten moments in New Zealand glam. Dr Ian Chapman, music lecturer at the University of Otago and Dr Glam after hours, considers New Zealand's flirtation with glam in the 1970s. Let’s face it, New Zealand and glam rock are not natural bedfellows. At the beginning of the 1970s when the glorious tinsel Brits Marc Bolan (T Rex) and David Bowie (as COUNTRY AOTEAROA TIMELINE The noisy library of New Zealand music Te pātaka korihi o ngā puoroo Aotearoa
FANE FLAWS, THE WICKED CONJUROR Over five decades Fane Flaws has been one of the most prolific creative forces in New Zealand music. Perhaps best known as the founder of 1980s pop wonders The Crocodiles and co-writer of their biggest hit ‘Tears’, he also brought his talents to bands from BLERTA to Spats, directed numerous music videos, and was responsible for the memorable animated title sequence for Radio With Pictures.CREATION - PERSON
29 Jan 2017. In provincial New Zealand in the early 1970s AM radio was king and popular music was popular music. Local releases sat easily amongst the latest from overseas, and Wellington-based band Creation had two of the biggest radio hits of the first half of the decade. Led by bass-playing vocalist Greg Christensen, Creation scored withDIANNE SWANN
Dianne Swann Profile. Dianne Swann. Profile. Playing live to 85,000 people. Signing to two international labels. Recording with Radiohead. Having her song ‘Birthday’ chosen as NME single of the week. These are just some of the highlights of Dianne Swann’s career as a vocalist, songwriter, and performer. They are career highlights thatJOHN GRENELL
For a little while he used both names – John Hore Grenell – and he briefly included his birth father’s surname so that he was John Denver Grenell, but in the country music world that was just a little confusing. Whether he is known as John Hore or John GrGARTH YOUNG
Garth Young was everywhere in the 1960s and 1970s, as our music industry came to life, amped by the black-and-white TV sets flickering in a quarter of a million lounges. The TV sound studio later became his second home. Wellington was the hub: the showbiz scene was then mostly headquartered in the capital. REMEMBERING MALCOLM HAYMAN Remembering Malcolm Hayman. In 1986, when I tracked Malcolm Hayman down to his home in the stark, windswept Wellington suburbia of Karori, this seminal figure of NZ music seemed to have been all but forgotten. For me, it was a personal pilgrimage to meet and interview one of my New Zealand music heroes. Unable to muster any interest fromlocal
AL HUNTER - PERSON
Al Hunter. Profile. Chris Bourke. 21 Jan 2014. After over a decade making a name for himself in Auckland clubs as a singer of blues, R&B, and rock and roll, Al Hunter made a crucial decision. In 1980 he decided to devote himself to his first love, country music.THE KEIL ISLES
The Keil Isles (without Herma), 1967. L to R: Roger Skinner, Brian Henderson, Billy Karaitiana (AKA Billy Kristian), Jimmy Hill. The Keil Isles in the early 1960s. Clockwise from bottom left: Bill Fairs, Olaf Keil, Lou Miller, Brian Henderson and Klaus Keil. In the centre isHerma.
AUDIOCULTURE
AudioCulture is an online celebration of the people who have created the music, the scenes they shaped, and the audiences they played to. TEN MOMENTS IN NEW ZEALAND GLAM EBONY LAMB – A MUSICIAN'S EYE Ebony Lamb – a musician's eye. Ebony Lamb – having experimented with and expressed herself through a variety of disciplines – might be described simply as an “artist”. She is best known as a musician, fronting alternative country band Eb and Sparrow. And now, her profile as a photographer is building to be equally assignificant.
MAPPING AUCKLAND'S VENUES: THE 1980S 1980s venue map. In many ways the 1980s were the beginning of the music scene as we know it now. Licensing laws had sufficiently eased to the point where the main venues were now bars (rather than the cabarets and dancehalls of the 1960s). The Gluepot in Ponsonby was in its heyday, and at the top of the CBD was Mainstreet, where Radio WithJIM WARREN - PERSON
15 Nov 2014. With a career that spanned the 20th century, a natural ability to swing, and a great sense of humour, it’s no wonder that trumpeter Jim Warren was one of the most popular and respected musicians in the Auckland jazz scene. At his 80th birthday – 18 years ago – his wife Madeline gave him a new trumpet.THE MAGICK HEADS
From 1991 to 1997, he also devoted his considerable energies to The Magick Heads – a band conceived by Scott, and 3Ds members David Mitchell and David Saunders, as a vehicle for the striking voice of Jane Sinnott. The band’s debut single The Back of her Hand was released by Flying Nun in 1991 and saw Mitchell in the uncustomaryposition of
STU BUCHANAN ON HIS PEERS AND MENTORS Stu Buchanan on his peers and mentors. Saxophonist and bandleader Martin Winiata with Doug Caldwell, backstage after the first Christchurch Jazz Concert at the Repertory Theatre, July 1951 - Jo Jules collection. Martin Winiata appeared to me to be “Mr Personality”. Auckland had Crombie Murdoch, Wellington had Don Richardson and Dunedin hadEYE TV - PERSON
aka Nixons. Gareth Shute. 18 Feb 2014. Eye TV began as The Nixons in 1990 and led the local field in heavy alternative rock. But there was already a band called The Nixons in the USA, so they took the name of their first album and subsequently eased up on the distortion pedals. They signed deals with labels in the States and Australia, and thenAUDIOCULTURE
AudioCulture is an online celebration of the people who have created the music, the scenes they shaped, and the audiences they played to. TEN MOMENTS IN NEW ZEALAND GLAM EBONY LAMB – A MUSICIAN'S EYE Ebony Lamb – a musician's eye. Ebony Lamb – having experimented with and expressed herself through a variety of disciplines – might be described simply as an “artist”. She is best known as a musician, fronting alternative country band Eb and Sparrow. And now, her profile as a photographer is building to be equally assignificant.
MAPPING AUCKLAND'S VENUES: THE 1980S 1980s venue map. In many ways the 1980s were the beginning of the music scene as we know it now. Licensing laws had sufficiently eased to the point where the main venues were now bars (rather than the cabarets and dancehalls of the 1960s). The Gluepot in Ponsonby was in its heyday, and at the top of the CBD was Mainstreet, where Radio WithJIM WARREN - PERSON
15 Nov 2014. With a career that spanned the 20th century, a natural ability to swing, and a great sense of humour, it’s no wonder that trumpeter Jim Warren was one of the most popular and respected musicians in the Auckland jazz scene. At his 80th birthday – 18 years ago – his wife Madeline gave him a new trumpet.THE MAGICK HEADS
From 1991 to 1997, he also devoted his considerable energies to The Magick Heads – a band conceived by Scott, and 3Ds members David Mitchell and David Saunders, as a vehicle for the striking voice of Jane Sinnott. The band’s debut single The Back of her Hand was released by Flying Nun in 1991 and saw Mitchell in the uncustomaryposition of
STU BUCHANAN ON HIS PEERS AND MENTORS Stu Buchanan on his peers and mentors. Saxophonist and bandleader Martin Winiata with Doug Caldwell, backstage after the first Christchurch Jazz Concert at the Repertory Theatre, July 1951 - Jo Jules collection. Martin Winiata appeared to me to be “Mr Personality”. Auckland had Crombie Murdoch, Wellington had Don Richardson and Dunedin hadEYE TV - PERSON
aka Nixons. Gareth Shute. 18 Feb 2014. Eye TV began as The Nixons in 1990 and led the local field in heavy alternative rock. But there was already a band called The Nixons in the USA, so they took the name of their first album and subsequently eased up on the distortion pedals. They signed deals with labels in the States and Australia, and thenDYLAN DOWN UNDER
Dylan Down Under. Few songwriters have heard their music covered as widely as Bob Dylan, who turns 80 on 24 May 2021. When local Dylanologist Bill Hester set out to log every New Zealand cover version of a Dylan song, starting in 1963, his database quickly exceeded a hundred commercial recordings, and it has kept growing. COUNTRY AOTEAROA TIMELINE The noisy library of New Zealand music Te pātaka korihi o ngā puoroo Aotearoa
FANE FLAWS, THE WICKED CONJUROR Over five decades Fane Flaws has been one of the most prolific creative forces in New Zealand music. Perhaps best known as the founder of 1980s pop wonders The Crocodiles and co-writer of their biggest hit ‘Tears’, he also brought his talents to bands from BLERTA to Spats, directed numerous music videos, and was responsible for the memorable animated title sequence for Radio With Pictures.CREATION - PERSON
29 Jan 2017. In provincial New Zealand in the early 1970s AM radio was king and popular music was popular music. Local releases sat easily amongst the latest from overseas, and Wellington-based band Creation had two of the biggest radio hits of the first half of the decade. Led by bass-playing vocalist Greg Christensen, Creation scored withGARTH YOUNG
Garth Young was everywhere in the 1960s and 1970s, as our music industry came to life, amped by the black-and-white TV sets flickering in a quarter of a million lounges. The TV sound studio later became his second home. Wellington was the hub: the showbiz scene was then mostly headquartered in the capital.DIANNE SWANN
Dianne Swann Profile. Dianne Swann. Profile. Playing live to 85,000 people. Signing to two international labels. Recording with Radiohead. Having her song ‘Birthday’ chosen as NME single of the week. These are just some of the highlights of Dianne Swann’s career as a vocalist, songwriter, and performer. They are career highlights thatJOHN GRENELL
For a little while he used both names – John Hore Grenell – and he briefly included his birth father’s surname so that he was John Denver Grenell, but in the country music world that was just a little confusing. Whether he is known as John Hore or John Gr REMEMBERING MALCOLM HAYMAN Remembering Malcolm Hayman. In 1986, when I tracked Malcolm Hayman down to his home in the stark, windswept Wellington suburbia of Karori, this seminal figure of NZ music seemed to have been all but forgotten. For me, it was a personal pilgrimage to meet and interview one of my New Zealand music heroes. Unable to muster any interest fromlocal
AL HUNTER - PERSON
Al Hunter. Profile. Chris Bourke. 21 Jan 2014. After over a decade making a name for himself in Auckland clubs as a singer of blues, R&B, and rock and roll, Al Hunter made a crucial decision. In 1980 he decided to devote himself to his first love, country music.THE KEIL ISLES
The Keil Isles (without Herma), 1967. L to R: Roger Skinner, Brian Henderson, Billy Karaitiana (AKA Billy Kristian), Jimmy Hill. The Keil Isles in the early 1960s. Clockwise from bottom left: Bill Fairs, Olaf Keil, Lou Miller, Brian Henderson and Klaus Keil. In the centre isHerma.
AUDIOCULTURE
AudioCulture is an online celebration of the people who have created the music, the scenes they shaped, and the audiences they played to. TEN MOMENTS IN NEW ZEALAND GLAMJIM WARREN - PERSON
At his 80th birthday – 18 years before he died in 2016 – his wife Madeline gave him a new trumpet. In the years that followed, Warren gave his “lip” a rest, and preferred to play Duke Ellington standards on his upright piano. Warren had a phenomenal memor EBONY LAMB – A MUSICIAN'S EYE Ebony Lamb – having experimented with and expressed herself through a variety of disciplines – might be described simply as an “artist”. She is best known as a musician, fronting alternative country band Eb and Sparrow. And now, her profile as a photograph MAPPING AUCKLAND'S VENUES: THE 1980S Explore Auckland nightlife in the 1980s with AudioCulture’s interactive venue map (below). For each venue, we have provided an image and a “Read More” link to further reading on either the venue or one of the musicians associated with it. Click on the lAUDIOCULTURE
AudioCulture is an online celebration of the people who have created the music, the scenes they shaped, and the audiences they played to. TEN MOMENTS IN NEW ZEALAND GLAMJIM WARREN - PERSON
At his 80th birthday – 18 years before he died in 2016 – his wife Madeline gave him a new trumpet. In the years that followed, Warren gave his “lip” a rest, and preferred to play Duke Ellington standards on his upright piano. Warren had a phenomenal memor EBONY LAMB – A MUSICIAN'S EYE Ebony Lamb – having experimented with and expressed herself through a variety of disciplines – might be described simply as an “artist”. She is best known as a musician, fronting alternative country band Eb and Sparrow. And now, her profile as a photograph MAPPING AUCKLAND'S VENUES: THE 1980S Explore Auckland nightlife in the 1980s with AudioCulture’s interactive venue map (below). For each venue, we have provided an image and a “Read More” link to further reading on either the venue or one of the musicians associated with it. Click on the lDYLAN DOWN UNDER
Rod MacKinnon – To Ramona (1966) During what has been referred to as the Great Folk Scare of the Sixties, Rod MacKinnon was one of a number of Wellington folk singers to wind up with prestigious record deals. The West Coast-born MacKinnon was a frequent performer at the Monde Marie, the capital’s chief bohemian coffee bar and folk music haunt.One night HMV’s A&R man, Nick Karavias COUNTRY AOTEAROA TIMELINE The noisy library of New Zealand music Te pātaka korihi o ngā puoroo Aotearoa
FANE FLAWS, THE WICKED CONJUROR Over five decades Fane Flaws has been one of the most prolific creative forces in New Zealand music. Perhaps best known as the founder of 1980s pop wonders The Crocodiles and co-writer of their biggest hit ‘Tears’, he also brought his talents to bands from BLERTA to Spats, directed numerous music videos, and was responsible for the memorable animated title sequence for Radio With Pictures.CREATION - PERSON
Led by bass-playing vocalist Greg Christensen, Creation scored with gold-selling singles ‘Carolina’ in 1972 and ‘Tell Laura I Love Her’ in 1973; with ‘Carolina’ they won the 1972 Loxene Golden Disc.One of Universal Booking Agency’s premier artists, they played pubs, nightclubs, town centres, schools and dance halls everywhere from Bluff to Whangarei.AL HUNTER - PERSON
It may not have seemed a good career move at the time, when post-punk bands were filling inner-city venues. But by staying true to his instincts, Hunter became one of New Zealand’s most respected singers. He also started writing his own material and quicSHANE - PERSON
After the break-up of The Pleazers in June 1967, singer Shane Hales joined the Auckland band The Jamestown Union. After a few months Shane formed his own band called Shane with ex-Pleazer Gus Fenwick (bass), Mike Wilson (guitar) and Glen Absolum (drums) anGARTH YOUNG
Garth Young was everywhere in the 1960s and 1970s, as our music industry came to life, amped by the black-and-white TV sets flickering in a quarter of a million lounges. The TV sound studio later became his second home. Wellington was the hub: the showbiz scene was then mostly headquartered in the capital.JOHN GRENELL
For a little while he used both names – John Hore Grenell – and he briefly included his birth father’s surname so that he was John Denver Grenell, but in the country music world that was just a little confusing. Whether he is known as John Hore or John GrDIANNE SWANN
Playing live to 85,000 people. Signing to two international labels. Recording with Radiohead. Having her song ‘Birthday’ chosen as NME single of the week. These are just some of the highlights of Dianne Swann’s career as a vocalist, songwriter, and performer. TERRY DEAN AND THE NITEBEATS Born Terry Fidow in Samoa, he moved to New Zealand at age 8, growing up in Ponsonby, where he spent time with the King Cobras gang. Fidow spent his fiery early 1960s years as a jobbing vocalist in Auckland (including a period fronting Freddie Keil's band) and inAUDIOCULTURE
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subscribe to mailing list FANE FLAWS ON SCREEN As Ian Pryor writes on AudioCulture's sister site NZ On Screen, "When Fane Flaws fills out an airport arrivals card, it must be hard to picka prof...
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