GLASS/HAMILTON/YOUNG: Songs The Radio Taught Us

Glass/Hamilton/Young

Songs The Radio Taught Us

© 1995 Glass Corporation

CD IN STOCK. ORDER NOW. Will ship immediately.

Tribute to rock/country roots by three Australian performers with illustrious musical pedigree's.

tracks

1 Songs The Radio Taught Us
2 Walk On By
3 Battle Of New Orleans
4 Midnight Bus
5 The Wayward Wind
6 Hey Little Girl
7 Lover Please
8 What In The World's Come Over You
9 You're The Reason
10 El Paso
11 Dreamin'
12 Soul Deep
13 Eighteen Yellow Roses
14 Fool Such As I
15 High Noon
16 You Can Have Her

notes

Second release album from three performers who individually and collectively are living legends on the Australian music scene.
This time they pay tribute to their boyhood memories by reprising songs they heard growing up. The result is an entirely enjoyable and fresh musically experience.

MORE ABOUT KEITH GLASS
During an action packed career, Keith survived the 60's (and lately found his first recordings prized collectors items now re-released on CD), became a music icon in hometown Melbourne, was responsible for instigating a goodly slice of 70's/80's Australian music history, prior to building a 100 song recorded catalogue initially spurred by US country chart success for a song in the 1980's leading to him being signed to the Virgin label late in the decade for two solo albums. These were followed by three albums as one third of Glass/Hamilton/Young.
He produced stuff for US artists Billy Joe Shaver, Jimmie Dale Gilmore & Butch Hancock in Australia then travelling to Los Angeles to mix US players from Dwight Yoakam's band with Keith Urban's trio for actor/singer Cameron Daddo's pop/country album. Further production duties were John Wibberley's critical rave 'Heart's On The Run' and Wayne Law's similarly afflicted debut 'Small Town Dreamer'. His own 'Smoke & Mirrors' made critics end of year lists in 1998 and garnered many nominations and more than a few awards, with the song 'Larrikin Town' becoming a staple of ABC Radio and featuring on three compilation albums.
1999's 'Southerly Buster' gained a 'Best Independent Release' for the duet with Lyndsay Hammond 'Standing In The Way Of Love' and continued the critical raves.
Together with Mick Hamilton he won The Australian Heritage Commission's initial 'Songs Of Place' award in April 2000.

ABOUT MICK HAMILTON
Mick Hamilton became a professional rock musician at the age of fifteen, hanging out with the big boys, playing with them on stage and even getting paid. Over 35 years later he is still doing it and his life and career have taken him to the far flung regions of the world.
During that time he has survived a raft wreck in Northern Thailand, a bus crash in an isolated mountain region area of Venezuela, detention in and deportation from Brazil, a mugging by three knife wielding assailants in Rio De Janiero and a hurricane destroying the stage on which he was performing in New York State.
Far from taking it easy Mick has just done possibly the most dangerous thing in his life - released his first ever solo recording.
His recording career began with The Moods, a quasi-Rolling Stones band who managed to produce a highly sought after track called 'Rum Drunk' which has become a favourite of contemporary grunge bands worldwide, even inspiring cover versions.
The Moods even performed on The Stones second Australian tour, bottom of the bill but on the same stage no less. The Stones remain a group Mick has great admiration for.
In fact the Jagger/Richards song Salt Of The Earth is one of only two covers to appear on his new album, complete with a guest vocal from Lyndsay Hammond who uncannily bears more than a passing vocal resemblance to Marianne Faithfull.

Mick's Australian rock 'n' roll fame entry rests squarely on time spent in two seminal outfits.
Sixties hitmakers The Vibrants and the later rock 'n' roll trio he spearheaded called The Mighty Guys. Between the two came his first foray overseas as a sideman with the manufactured pop band The Springfield Revival.
When the group supported The Osmonds on a huge tour taking in such venues as The London Palladium and New York's Madison Square Garden, Hamilton's wanderlust was baited.
It wasn't the bright lights he lusted for but out of the way places and in the intervening years he resolved to travel to them even at the expense of a musical career.
Last count he has been to 60 countries and had many adventures.
.

NO MORE ABOUT GARY YOUNG

reviews

Please log in to review this album.

email

Please log in to email this artist.