Current Traffic

Saturday 28 September 2024

Post 785 - XL CAPRIS - The Singles

 

XL Capris were an Australian indie-punk band formed in Sydney in 1978 by Julie Anderson (aka Nancy Serapax), Tim Gooding (aka Errol Cruz), Johanna Pigott (aka Alligator Bagg), and Kimble Rendall (aka Dag Rattler).

Their best known single was a punk version of Tommy Leonetti's "My City of Sydney" (1979). This single was the only Australian disc found in legendary UK DJ John Peel's "battered wooden box" of 142 favourite records when, following his death in 2004, the contents of the box were revealed to the public in a Channel 4 television special. XL Capris made two albums, Where Is Hank? (March, 1981) and Weeds (October, 1981) both produced by Todd Hunter of New Zealand/Australian band Dragon and released on their own label Axle Records. Hunter later joined XL Capris as guitarist and subsequently married Pigott; they became a successful songwriting team: cowriting "Rain" for Dragon and "Age of Reason" for John Farnham. Their first single was a punk version of Tommy Leonetti's "My City of Sydney" (1979), arranged by Gooding. The promo video, recorded at the Sheraton Hotel in a room The Beatles had occupied during their Australian tour, featured the four band members in bed together! The single received much independent radio airplay but was not a commercial success. "Skylab (Son of Telstar)", written by Gooding and Rendall, received radio airplay as a tape in mid 1979. It was never released as a single and did not appear on either of the XL Capris' two albums. The song does feature on later compilation albums featuring independent bands of the period. Prior to forming the XL Capris, Gooding was a film and television screenwriter.(The Aunty Jack Show; Wollongong The Brave/Kev Kevanagh: Beyond The Infinite; Heatwave). He and Pigott worked together creating the 1984 ABC-TV series Sweet and Sour which chronicled the activities of a fictional band, The Takeaways, and their efforts to succeed in 1980s Sydney Pop music scene. Thanks Henry DeRooy for the art work. Flac


Post 784 - Various - Generation Records

 

Generation Records was founded by Consolidated Press/GTV-9 Melbourne around 197O involving musician Gus McNeil.

 There were only seven singles released on Generation Records all produced by Gus McNeil.


Aesop's Fables - a Sydney band '68-'71 mixed covers & original songs but suffered from many lineup changes. Les Stackpool presents his song "Sandman" while Cheryl Blake gives a stirring cover of Jackie Lomax "Little Yellow Pills". (GE 001).


Company Caine - Melbourne progressive rock band '72-'76 was the brainchild of singer Gulliver Smith & Russell Smith. They released two singles "Trixie Stonewall's Wayward Home For Young Women" & "Dear Carolyn". (GE OO2 (GE 006).


Al Head - Sydney based singer, his version of "Mammy Blue" gained little airplay while "Walk The World Away" charted in the top 20. Al penned the B sides of his singes, sadly little was known of him till his passing in 2018. (GE 004) (GE OO7).


Jeff Phillips - Phillips had a number of singles between '68 - '81 in Oz & overseas. His Generation single 

"I Want To Be Famous Like My Dad" is a pop orchestrated song, there was a second single from the same recording session but remains unreleased. (GE 003).


Les Stackpool - Ex-Aesop's Fables guitarist used his previous band for a cover of Neil Young's "Down By The River" with a country self-penned tune on the B side. Besides Aesop's Fables he played with numerous bands such as Country Radio, Doug Parkinson In Focus, Chessmen ect. (GE 005).

Thanks to Henry DeRooy for the art work.Flac