The Masters Apprentices
Adelaide/Melbourne/London
1965-1972 |
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Mick Bower [gtr, vocals]
1965-67
Colin Burgess [dr]
1969-72
Dennis Burgess [bs]
1972
Doug Ford [gtr, vocals]
1968-72
Rick Harrison [gtr]
1967
Steve Hopgood [dr]
1967-68
Jim Keays [lead vocals,
harmonica]
1965-72
Rick Morrison [gtr]
1965-67
Tony Sommers [gtr]
1967-68
Peter Tilbrook [gtr]
1968
Brian Vaughton [dr]
1965-66
Gavin Webb [bs]
1965-68
Glen Wheatley [bs, vcls]
1968-72
The Masters Apprentices are bona-fide Australian
rock legends. If The Easybeats were "Australia's Beatles", then there is
no doubt that, as Stan Rofe said, The Masters Apprentices were Australia's
Rolling Stones. They left an indelible mark on Australian music, and along
with the Easybeats and the
Twilights,
they were one of the"could-have-been" bands, who tried valiantly to break
into the British and international charts. Like both those bands they were
ultimately unsuccessful in their attempts, but one of the later members
of the band, Glenn Wheatley, learned valuable lessons from their mistakes
and has played a major role in the music industry and the media over the
last 30 years.
The Masters were hugely popular throughout Australia,
releasing hit after hit in their seven-year career, and they were consistently
hailed as one of Australia's best live and recording acts. Their career
encompassed all the changes in Australian music from 1965 to 1972; they
started out as an instrumental band, rose to prominence during the beat
boom, moved through psychedelia and "bubblegum' pop, finally became one
the first and best progressive hard rock groups of the early Seventies.
They survived numerous lineup changes, with vocalist Jim Keays being the
only constant, and their membership also illustrates the intricate interconnections
between so many Australian bands of that era.
Their career can be divided into three main phases:
-
the original '65-'67 lineup, headed by Mick Bower
-
the transitional period of '67-'68
-
the classic '69-'72 lineup of Ford/Keays/Wheatley/Burgess.
The original lineup, ca. 1966;
Morrison, Vaughton,Webb, Bower,
Keays
|
The 1969-72 lineup
Wheatley, Keays, Burgess, Ford
|
More
Photos >>
1965
The Masters' story began in the South Australian capital of Adelaide
in early '65, with The Mustangs, a dance band formed by four Adelaide
teenagers: Mick Bower, Brian Vaughton, Gavin Webb and Rick Morrison. The
Mustangs were a typical example of an early-60s instrumental band, playing
the obligatory Shadows and Ventures covers. The cataclysmic visit by the
Beatles in 1964 rendered all that passe overnight. The Mustangs were canny
enough to realise that the surf/instrumental craze was past its 'use-by'
date, and they decided to change their style to incorporate the new "beat'
music, so they placed a "singer wanted" ad on the noticeboard at a local
music centre. On his third (and last) visit there, the ad was spotted by
a young would-be bass player called
Jim Keays, whowas taking lessons
from musician and guitar teacher John Bywaters (who was a member
of one of Adelaide's most popular and accomplished beat groups,
The
Mustangs began to established themselves on the dance circuit around Adelaide,
in suburban halls and migrant hostels. They built up a strong following
with the local teenagers, many of whom were, like Jim, migrants from the
UK (Adelaide was a major destination for UK migrants in the 50s and 60s.
Their audiences were also an important influence for the band - some of
these kids were very recent arrivals, who had seen the top UK bands in
action only weeks before, and they had a strong effect on the band's "look",
since they were directly in touch with current 'mod' fashions, a trend
which was still not very well known in Australia. The next step
was a name change, and because they regarded themselves, at least for a
while, as apprentices to those musical "masters" like Muddy Waters, Chuck
Berry and Bo Diddley, their
new name (suggested by Bowers) paid homage to these heroes.
They decided early on to dispense with the apostrophe.
Towards the end of 1965 they found their home-base
at an Adelaide club called The Beat Basement. Before long they were
they regularly packing out the club, and they graduated from the less prestigious
spots to the prized Saturday afternoon residency. They also became a prime
attraction at the
Octagon Ballroom in the Adelaide suburb of Elizabeth
(The Twilights' home turf) which was located near another large migrant
hostel. Keays recalls that the regulars included two young Scots migrant
boys,
John "Swanee" Swan and his brother Jimmy Barnes. The
band also played at a dance in Salisbury, promoted by a young
Doc Neeson,
later the lead singer of The Angels.
1966
By early in the new year the Masters were one of the most popular bands
in town and regularly packed out gigs across the city, as well as making
mini-tours to outlying towns and cities like Murray Bridge, Mt Gambier
and Whyalla. The Masters' first big break was their appearance on the Channel
7 Good Friday telethon hosted by Adelaide TV celebrity Ernie Sigley.
The Masters played four songs, to a rousing reception, and by the next
day they were the talk of the town.
As their popularity grew they set their sights on Melbourne, then the
hub of the Australian pop scene. The Masters even got a mention in the
Adelaide column of the newly-established national music weekly, Go-Set,
as Adelaide's hottest band. The next break came unexpectedly from a gig
at Murray Bridge, where they supported
Bobby
& Laurie, Unknown to the Masters, singer Bobby Bright (an
Adelaide boy himself) was greatly impressed with them, and when he returned
to Melbourne he recommended that his record company, Astor, should
check them out. A few weeks later they were contacted by Astor, who requested
a four-track demo. The band piled into Max Pepper's two-track studio
in Moger Lane, Adelaide, and were immediately faced with the problem that
they had only three songs that they felt confident of recording. To solve
this, Bower and Morrison wrote a new song on the spot, in about 15 minutes,
and the backing track was cut in about the same time. As Keays tells it,
the title came from the fact that they were simply "undecided" about the
name when quizzed by Pepper, so that ended up on the tape label. (Well
maybe ...) .The biting fuzz tone of Bower's guitar was another happy
accident - it came not from an effects box but from a malfunctioning valve
in his amplifier. They liked the sound and kept the faulty valve in until
after the session.
In August the Masters felt sufficiently confident to try a week-long
trip to Melbourne. Despite the hassles - they stayed in a dismal, boggy
caravan park in an outer Melbourne suburb, where their manager Graham Longley
lost their takings in the mud - they made a strong impression with showcase
gigs at leading discos The Thumpin' Tum and The Biting Eye.
The first single Undecided / Wars or Hands Of Time was released
in October and gradually climbed the Adelaide charts, thanks to strong
support from local DJs. Both songs are undisputed classics, and the b-side
is notable as the first Australian pop song to directly address the Vietnam
conflict, which was touching the lives of many Australians because of the
controversial introduction of compulsory military service in 1965. The
Masters were not immune, and 20-year old Keays was one of hundreds of potential
conscripts whose birthday (9 September) was picked in one of the 1966 ballots.
Fortunately, he was able to legally avoid the draft by signing on for a
term with the Citizens' Military Force, and he even managed to avoid the
compulsory short-back-and-sides hair cut by craftily pinning his long hair
up under his slouch hat!
The second Melbourne trip late in the year was timely. By then, leading
Melbourne DJ Stan "The Man" Rofe had picked up the single and was
playing it regularly. The Masters was one of many new Australian groups
Rofe championed during the 60s; he became a strong supporter of the band
all through their career and Keays is unstinting in his praise of him.
Another crucial connection was
Ian "Molly" Meldrum. Keays met the
young Go-Set writer and rabid pop fan on the set of the pop show Kommotion,
where they appeared miming to Undecided; Meldrum was one of the
regular mimer/dancers on the show. Molly and Keays became lifelong friends
and Molly was instrumental in promoting the band through
Go-Set.
The Masters gained more exposure with appearances on
Kommotion,
the Go!! Show, another article in
Go-Set and packed-out gigs
at the top Melbourne discos, appearing alongside leading groups like The
Purple Hearts, The Loved Ones
and The Groop (where they first met
Brian
Cadd, who was to play an important part in their career the next year).
Returning to Adelaide, they fulfilled Astor's request for more songs,
cutting the hard-driving, proto-punk classic Buried & Dead,
which became their second single, plus other tracks which eventually wound
up on their debut LP. By now, the success of the second trip hand made
it obvious that they should turn professional and relocate to Melbourne.
Sadly this meant bidding farewell not only to family and friends, but to
their original drummer Brian Vaughton, who decided to remain in Adelaide
to work in the family pub. The aforementioned tracks were to be his last
recordings with the Masters, but his outstanding playing on Buried &
Dead was a fitting swan song. He was replaced by Steve Hopgood from
Adelaide pals The Others and Fahrenheit 451.[For
more information about Brian Vaughton please see our Related
Articles section.]
(Trivia note: another Angels/Masters connection
came via the drummer who replaced Hopgood's in Fahrenheit 451 - Graham
"Buzz" Bidstrup, later of The Angels and GangGajang. Interestingly,
a later version of The Others, which reformed in 1979, had a lineup which
included two former Masters, Mick Bowers and Brian Vaughton).
1967
In February '67 the Masters relocated to Melbourne permanently, as
Undecided
raced up the charts. The
group quickly established themselves as one of Melbourne's top attractions,
performing regularly at discos like Catcher, Sebastians, Thumpin'
Tum and The Biting Eye, and the multitude of suburban dances.
Ironically,
their growing popularity didn't rescue them from their hand-to-mouth existence.
For
the first year or so they were virtually vagrants, dependent on the hospitality
of fans and friends. It was months before they could even afford to rent
permanent lodgings. The disparity between their apparent success and the
lack of any material reward became a familiar scenario, and one which had
important implications in later years.
In May Buried and Dead was released, and to promote it they they
made a promotional film clip, one of the first such films ever made in
Australia. They also undertook their first trip to Sydney and took the
town by storm, packing out leading venues like Caesar's Palace,
The
Bowl, Beethoven's and Ward Austin's Jungle and the suburban
dance circuit. While in Sydney they made a chaotic live appearance, amidst
total fan hysteria, on the ABC's
Saturday Date pop show; Keays'
book hilariously recounts how the group was caught and chased by fans on
their way into the studio and had their clothes almost ripped to shreds
before they could get in!
In June, Astor released the group's self-titled debut LP, featuring
the singles, several more fine originals by Bower, a cover of Bo Diddley's
Dancing
Girl and a great version of The Beatles' I Feel Fine. (Subsequent
versions, including the 1996 CD release, dropped the Beatles cover and
added their late '67 / early '68 singles, Elevator Driver and Brigette).
The photos, shot at historic Como House in Melbourne, depicted the group
resplendent in newly-acquired velvet, satin and floral-print psychedelic
gear, designed by Jim Keays, who chose the group's stage outfits. Always
on the lookout for eye-catching gear, Jim neatly side-stepped the problem
of the conservative nature of men's fashions by shopping at Miss Myer,
the young ladies' section of the famous Melbourne department store! Still,
it was a thankless task, since Jim's carefully-chosen outfits rarely lasted
more than few days, routinely shredded by the grasping talons of fans always
on the lookout for a piece of their idols.
By now they were assimilating musical influences from the burgeoning
psychedelic scene. Whether the band had actually tried acid by then is
unclear, and Keays maintains that it wasn't until some time afterwards
that they began to experiment with LSD. There was already a strong pointer
to this new direction in the striking, raga-like middle section of Buried
& Dead, but it really bore fruit on Mick Bower's masterwork, Living
in A Child's Dream - one of their best songs, and one of the all-time
great Australian pop songs. This
classic tab of psychedelia is distinguished by great performances all round
from the group - notably Rick Morrison's indelible guitar solo. It has
all the requisite flower-power lyrical flourishes (candy, clowns and children)
without being cutesy or contrived, because it's undercut with a real sense
of sadness and nostalgia for lost youth - a theme charged with irony in
the light of events over the following months.
Living in A Child's Dream was recorded
at Bill Armstrong's famous South Melbourne studio at 100 Albert
Park Rd, and as with all their Astor cuts, it was (nominally) produced
by staff producer Dick Heming - although his input, says Keays,
was limited to watching the clock to ensure sessions started and finished
on time! Most of the real production was done by Armstrong's renowned house
engineer Roger Savage, who before leaving England had recorded Dusty
Springfield, the Rolling Stones' debut single Come On, and produced
the backing track for The Easybeats'
breakthrough hit She's So Fine. Another important factor was the
presence of
Molly Meldrum - Keays' book reveals that Molly attended
the session and had quite an influence on the eventual outcome; in fact
this single might be considered his first production. Released in August,
at the peak of the "Summer Of Love" psychedelic explosion, it became one
of their biggest successes, reaching No.9 in the national charts. Both
Living In A Child's Dream and
Undecided ranked in the Top 5
Australian singles of 1967,
and Living In A Child's Dream
was voted Australian Song of the Year.
It was the height of the so-called "scream era" in Australia, and the
success of the new single - aided by consistent support from
Go-Set
(where
Molly lauded them as "the second Easybeats"), DJs like Stan Rofe,
and regular appearances on TV and radio - made the Masters national teen
idols in short order. It was, as Keays recounts, the start of a wild ride,
with all the attendant thrills, pills and spills - and groupies galore
(or "band molls" as they were called in those days). But with such rapid
and huge success, pressures began to mount, soon threatening to end the
band altogether. The first victim was lead guitarist Rick Morrison,
who was forced to quit due to illness. He had only one lung, and his fragile
health finally gave out when he passed out on stage during a gig at Catcher
in June 1967, suffering a collapsed lung. Rick was ordered to give up performing,
and he was replaced by
Tony Summers (ex-Johnny
Young's Kompany).
Meanwhile the endless round of gigs and tours (up to fifteen gigs per
week) continued. There was another tour of NSW in July 1967, including
some of the last pop shows staged at the the famed
Sydney
Stadium, at Rushcutter's Bay (July 30th) and The
Trocadero. Heading to Queensland they toured extensively for Ivan Dayman's
Sunshine organisation, and while in Brisbane Jim had a memorable meeting
with Johnny O'Keefe, who praised the Masters as the most "Australian"
new band in the country. Also in July, the Masters made it into the finals
of the Hoadleys National Battle of The Sounds, coming in as runners-up
to The Groop.
Then in September the major bombshell fell during their first tour of
Tasmania. Although there were no apparent warning signs, pressure was building
on the group's leader, Mick Bower. Always a shy, sensitive and meticulous
character, he was finding it increasingly hard to cope with the pressure
and the chaotic lifestyle in which the band had been caught up. The crunch
came just before a gig in Hobart: as show time approached, and Mick didn't
appear, Keays and Hopgood investigated, and found him cowering in his room
in a state of extreme distress. Oblivious to his predicament, the heartless
promoter insisted that the group had to perform; faced with the prospect
of going unpaid and being stranded in Hobart, the Masters had no choice
but to comply. Bower was dressed, taken to the gig and pushed on stage
with his guitar slung around his neck. It must have been an awful experience,
with the stricken Bower standing motionless all through the gig, arms hanging
limp, in a near-catatonic state. He was hospitalised immediately after
the gig, suffering a severe nervous breakdown, and was ordered to give
up performing. He was sent home to Adelaide to recuperate, only returning
to live performance years later, in the late '70s.
The loss of Mick Bower was a comparable blow to Pink Floyd's loss of
their leader Syd Barrett - it could easily have meant the end for the Masters,
just as their career was really taking off. Like Barrett in the Floyd,
Bower was crucial to the Masters' success, having composed all their singles,
and all the original tracks on their debut album. It left the band floundering
for some time, as they tried to decide how to proceed. When they met back
in Melbourne, it was decided to continue, and de-facto leadership passed
to Keays, who was by now the "face" of the band anyway. At the end of the
September Keays and Gavin Webb chose Bower's on-stage substitute, guitarist
Rick
Harrsion (a Brian Jones look-alike and also a member of Adelaide band
The Others), but it was to be another year before a real replacement was
found. It's a sad irony that while the Masters scrambled to cope with Bower's
loss, their popularity exploded, and
Living In A Child's Dream shot
to the top of the charts. As Jim Keays succinctly puts it "...nothing
was together, and everything was working."
Just how huge they had become in the wake of the new single was made
plain when they were invited to play a free concert in Hyde Park in October,
as part of the Sydney Waratah Spring Festival on 14 October 1967. After
parading down George St in a limousine, they were greeted by an estimated
50,000 frantic fans who had packed into the park, but after only a few
songs the concert degenerated into a riot. Dozens were injured as thousands
of kids crushed forward, with the force of the surging mob lifting some
people bodily off their feet. When the makeshift stage threatened to topple
over, police were forced to pull the plug. In the ensuing chaos, the band
was hustled through one car and into another, just as the first of the
two limos hired to carry them was overturned and wrecked. With fans pummeling
their car and faces blocking every inch of window, the band barely escaped,
their panic-stricken driver crashing through garden beds until they lurched
out onto William St, where hundreds of fans pursued them up the hill towards
Kings Cross.
That same evening, still dazed by the afternoon's events, they headlined
a university dance named in their honour. Jim's account of the"Living In
A Child's Dream" Ball, held at the University of NSW in Kensington, gives
a vivid picture of what an surreal climax to the day it must have been:
"The ball itself was a
psychedelic experience of the highest order. Because of its theme, everyone
was dressed as a schoolgirl or boy, some licking lollipops and others playing
with yo-yos. There were people frolicking in huge cages filled with Minties
and Jaffas
[popular Australian sweets]
and everyone seemed suitably spaced. The band was taken backstage, whereupon
we climbed into a giant dice which had been specially constructed. The
dice was then wheeled out on a cue from the stage manager and pushed through
the audience up to the stage. At this point the lid of the dice flew open
and up we popped. Someone from the university then presented me with the
key, to thunderous applause by the vast crowd, and we jumped out, slung
on our guitars and blasted into the most acid-inspired sounds we could
muster. The audience went out of their minds - probably because most of
them already were - and pandemonium broke out when we ended the set with
Living In A Child's Dream. The psychedelic light show was as magnificent
as as had been seen anywhere in the country, with 'trippy' oil lights,
the first mirror balls I'd ever seen, smoke machines and the full range
of state-of-the-art psychedelia."
In a subsequent newspaper article about the concert
and the ball, new guitarist Rick Harrison was quoted as saying: "I have
never never had to work so hard in my life , and after Sydney I have never
been so scared, but overall it's a great life". Evidently it wasn't
great enough - Harrison quit immediately afterwards. When the band returned
to Melbourne they recruited a new lead player, Peter Tilbrook, another
Adelaide connection from The Bentbeaks, whose single
Caught Red
Handed had been banned by Melbourne radio in March that year for alleged
obscenity.
(Around this time, Jim Keays also tried LSD for
the first time, and his hilarious account of his first trip is alone worth
the cost of his book!)
With Astor pressing for a new single, the band
turned to their friend Brian Cadd, of The Groop, who had already written
a number of successful songs for his own band and for other artists, including
Johnny
Farnham. He presented them with the song, Silver People. After
an makeover by the Masters it was recorded and released in February '68
as their fourth single Elevator Driver.
As the year ended the Masters' career reached
a critical juncture. On the 'down' side, they still had no songwriter,
and both drummer Steve Hopgood and lead guitarist Tony Sommers were becoming
disenchanted with the band's fortunes - or lack thereof. According to Keays
they were making few creative contributions, leading him towards the decision
to replace them. The band also sacked their second manager Tony Dickstein.
On the 'up' side, they found their first permanent roadie, Neil McCabe,
in Brisbane and he soon became an indispensable part of the band. Returning
to Melbourne via Sydney, Jim met brothers Denny and Colin Burgess who played
with support band The Haze at a gig in suburban Ashfield, NSW. Both
musically and personally, Jim was impressed and immediately earmarked Colin
as a possible new drummer.
Back in Melbourne and now set on rebuilding the
band, Keays approached Ross East, lead guitarist with Jeff St John's
band Copperwine. Although East declined his invitation, another
piece of the puzzle was about to fall into place. Keays moved to a new
flat in St Kilda. Many groups lived in the area, and two of Jim's neighbours
were about to play vital parts in the Masters' continuing story
1968
1968 was a year of major changes for the group,
but it also provided some of the lowest points of their career. The exact
chronology is rather unclear, and while Glenn Wheatley and Jim Keays' books
are generally in accord, there are some specific points where their accounts
of this year differ markedly.
In January 1968 Jim Keays began to reorganise
the band in earnest, and Summers and Hopgood were given their marching
orders.
Impressed by his energy and his ability to hustle up gigs,
Keays approached Glenn Wheatley, who played guitar with blues band
Bay
City Union, as well as their drummer Tony Buettel; their
band even lived in the same St Kilda street as Keays. At that time, Bay
City Union also featured lead guitarist Phil Manning and singer/harp
player
Matt Taylor, who of course went on to form thelegendaryChain.
According to Wheatley, Keays' initial approach
was just bad timing. After months of discouraging hard slog, Bay City Union
were about to call it quits when they were offered a single deal with Festival,
only two days before Keays contacted them - so at that stage Wheatley and
Buettel opted to stay with their band. Jim immediately arranged for Colin
"Doggie" Burgess to be flown to Melbourne and he was installed as the Masters'
new drummer.
Next into the band was Doug Ford, who as it turned
out, also lived only about 100 metres down the road from Keays' St Kilda
flat. Doug was already recognised as one of the strongest and most innovative
electric guitarists on the scene. He had made his name in the second lineup
of pioneering Sydney garage-punk-R&B legends The
Missing Links, and its offspring, Melbourne's feedback kingsRunning
Jumping Standing Still. His recruitment helped to revitalise the Masters
in many ways: he was a proficient songwriter, a good singer, his mastery
of the guitar brought a new breadth to the band's sound and - most importantly
for Keays - he was "keen as mustard". He agreed to join as soon as he had
fulfilled his obligations to RJSS, and once in the band, Doug and Jim worked
on developing as a writing team. Ford's presence was crucial to filling
the gap left by Mick Bowers' departure and making the transition
to from pop band to rock group. As the partnership developed, Keays and
Ford created a repertoire of memorable songs which balanced heavy guitar
rock with lyrical acoustic touches.
Elevator Driver was released in February, accompanied by a another
film clip and a full-colour promotional poster, both featuring the Doggie
and Doug. Incredibly, the band had to pay for both items themselves - Astor
were too stingy to fork out money to promote their own product! Although
not as original an effort as
Living In A Child's Dream (a hard act
to follow, to be sure) and rather reminiscent of The Stones' Get Off
My Cloud,
Elevator Driver was perfect for the moment - it delivered
another Top 10 hit, and most importantly it kept the momentum going as
they rebuilt the band.
In March Gavin Webb's wedding was covered widely in the local press,
but sadly it was to be one of his last media events as a member of the
Masters, and the final break with the origins of the group came soon after.
Webb, the last remaining member of the original The Mustangs, was forced
to quit (in April?), suffering from agonising stomach ulcers. Ironically,
this can now often be cured by a simple course of antibiotics, but the
true nature of the disease -(bacterial infection, discovered by an Australian
scientist) was unknown until quite recently. Back then, extreme cases were
often treated by the surgical removal of the affected portion of the stomach!.
Jim set about finding a new bassist; despite the supposed rivalry between
the two bands, his first choice was Beeb Birtles of Zoot.
Keays flew to Adelaide to talk to him, but Beeb opted to stay with Zoot.
The trip was not a total waste however - on the flight home, Keays found
himself seated next to manager Daryl Sambell, who was then enjoying
huge success with his young protege Johnny
Farnham. Keays and the "flamboyant" (i.e. overtly gay) Sambell hit
it off, and it was agreed that Sambell investigate taking over the Masters'
management (although in the light of subsequent events one has to question
just how coincidental the meeting actually was).
Sambell - now known as "Sadie", thanks to the success of Farnham's breakthrough
hit - took over the Masters' management, but it turned out to be a mixed
blessing. He was a master networker and great at getting publicity, he
freed them from Astor and got them signed to EMI. He was also a partner
in the newly-formed AMBO booking agency, a cartel put together by a group
of leading managers including Gary Spry, Bill Joseph, Jeff Joseph and Don
La Roche, and this proved very helpful for concert bookings. But in the
long run Sambell was more interested in promoting Farnham's career; he
kept the Masters at arm's length, so the day-to-day management duties often
fell to Glenn Wheatley. Sambell's pop tastes were also were at odds with
the developing progressive direction of the Masters' music.
Glenn Wheatley joined the band sometime during the first months of 1968,
probably March or April, just after Gavin Webb had to leave. Exactly when
is unclear, but he was definitely in the band by May, when they entered
the Adelaide heats of the Hoadley's Battle Of The Sounds. According
to Keays, Peter Tilbrook had switched to bass after Gavin Webb's departure,
so Jim approached Wheatley and brought him in as the second guitarist.
According to Wheatley however, he was approached by Doug Ford, and brought
in as their new bass player. The evidence of the Battle photographs,
however, shows that both Wheatley and Tilbrook were in the group right
through to the finals and probably for some time after.
Their next single, Brigette, released in June, was their last
single for Astor and it also marked the debut of the Ford/Keays writing
partnership. Keays reckons the song was partly inspired by Keays love of
Donovan's Mellow Yellow, although it bears a suspicious resemblance
to some of The Move's earlier singles, particularly Night Of Fear.
The chintzy, go-for-baroque arrangement included a string section scored
by The Strangers'
John Farrar, and while it's hardly their best
single it made the Top 40, proving at least that the band was still in
business.
Mid-year, they topped the annual Go-Set Pop Poll - they were
voted Most Original Group, and came second after
The
Twilights as Most Popular Australian Group. Buoyed by that result,
the band entered the South Australian heats of the 1968 Hoadleys Battle
Of The Sounds, beating local rivals Zoot in a tense contest, but ultimately
they were again runners-up in the national final. It was held in Melbourne
in July, and they were beaten this time by The
Groove, with Doug Parkinson In Focus coming third.
Interestingly, Glenn Wheatley recounts that the disappointment of their
loss in the finals was alleviated after the show, when the Masters were
approached by the manager of the Sitmar cruise line (who were the other
major sponsor of the contest). He told the band that he had voted for them
in the final, thought they should have won, and offered them a working
trip to England, with free passage in exchange for their performing for
the passengers during the voyage.
At a meeting the week after the Hoadleys finals, the Masters took Sambell's
advice, and decided not to renew their contract with Astor. Sambell indicated
that he would be able to negotiate a new contract with EMI, which he duly
did. At the same meeting, Sambell announced that he was "poaching" their
faithful roadie Neil McCabe to work in his office and take care of his
No.1 act, Johnny Farnahm. Although disappointed to lose him, the band soon
found an able replacement in the equally loyal and capable Adrian "Ada"
Barker.
The gigs continued throughout the year and in the second half of 1968
they went back into Armstrong's Studios to cut their first single for EMI,
although it was not released until early 1969. Having lost the Masters
to EMI, Astor attempted to milk the last drops from the cash-cow by releasing
But
One Day (an old track from their debut LP) as a single in August, but
the band urged fans not to buy it and it failed to chart. Right through
'68 the band played a welter of gigs, touring around country Australia
in their battered van, trundling up the Hume Highway to Sydney, on to Brisbane,
and dashing from dance to dance around greater Melbourne. Typically they
were playing three gigs a night on Fridays and Saturdays. and then dragging
themselves into the Channel 0 TV studios on Saturday morning for the obligatory
Uptight!
appearance. Money was undoubtedly pouring in, but the fact was that the
Masters saw almost none of it - by year's end they were stony broke.
In the first two weeks of December there were more setbacks. Peter Tilbrook
received an offer from the new Sweet Peach label, and he left the
band to form the duo Paradise with his friend Richard Hay. Glenn
Wheatley moved to bass, the classic lineup of The Masters Apprentices fell
into place and the stage was set for some of their greatest successes -
but there were still tough times ahead. The next big disappointment came
after they got back to Melbourne from gigs in Brisbane in the second week
of December. Wheatley returned to find a message from Sitmar and when he
called back he found himself on the receiving end of a blast from Sitmar's
furious entertainment manager. It turned out that Sitmar had arranged for
the group to leave on a London-bound cruise liner the previous week, but
of course the Masters were in Brisbane. Unable to locate them, the liner
had been delayed for an entire day while Sitmar found a group to replace
them. After this tirade, the Sitmar executive declared that they would
have nothing further to do with the Masters and hung up on Glenn. Dumbfounded,
they confronted Darryl Sambell, who denied the whole affair, but a further
check with Sitmar confirmed that the whole deal had been arranged with
Sambell. Caught up in Johnny Farnham's affairs, he had apparently forgotten
to tell them about it.
By Xmas, finances and morale had both hit rock bottom. Despite the constant
gigging, the group were hundreds of dollars in debt. Tension within the
band had increased, notably because of Glenn's situation. The Masters had
originally rented two flats in the same St Kilda block, downstairs from
Darryl Sambell, who had the penthouse apartment. When Tilbrook and McCabe
left, the second flat was let go. Short of cash, Wheatley was obliged to
move into the spare room in Sambell's flat, and soon found himself in the
uncomfortable position of becoming the "middle man" between Sambell and
the rest of the band. By the end of the year, friction between Sambell
and the group was at an all-time high, exacerbated by the Sitmar affair
and his recent management takeover of their rivals Zoot. They also
blamed Sambell for the long delays in the release of the Masters new single,
which was made more irritating by the success of Zoot's Xmas single One
Times, Two Times, Three Times, Four.
Both Keays and Wheatley recount a bleak Christmas Day. Broke, without
even enough money for food, Ford, Keays and Burgess went upstairs to Sambell's
flat, where he was entertaining Wheatley, Frank Thring and Molly Meldrum
at a Xmas lunch. Sambell dismissively handed them a two dollar note, and
the band slunk off to the local shop to buy their Xmas dinner -
cold pies. Poor Glenn Wheatley was mortified and spent the rest of the
day in his room.
Their final gig of the year was on New Year's Eve, but between sets
the band members talked through their problems, patched up their differences,
and decided that Sambell had to go. Wheatley offered to take on the day-to-day
tasks of bookings and promotions, leaving Jim and Doug free to concentrate
on writing.
1969
With their differences settled, the new lineup jelling and the Ford/Keays
writing team hitting its stride, the band now moved into its best-remembered
and most successful phase. The long-awaited first EMI single was moderately
successful, even if it was something of a false start artistically. The
schizophrenic Linda Linda / Merry-Go-Round (March) marked the beginning
of their collaboration with noted producer Howard Gable. The corny
A-side catered to Sambell's vision of the band as a bubblegum pop group,
and falls into the same faux-musical-hall category as songs like
Winchester
Cathedral. But the rocky B-side was the track to watch, with strong
hints of how they were really developing. (Although not included on any
of the original albums or the CD reissues, Merry-Go-Round can be
found on several of the later "Best Of" compilations.) The single missed
out on the Top 40 by one place (although one imagines the band were not
too
disappointed) but it got them back on the radio and the charts, and their
popularity continued to soar.
The Masters continued to tour across the country, and it helped to weld
them them into a close-knit unit. Meanwhile articles, profiles, pinups
and TV appearances kept them plastered all over the media; indeed they
were so overexposed, Jim Keays claims, that they began to turn down appearances
on Uptight! for fear of becoming too familiar to audiences. They
needn't have worried - when they played at that year's Moomba pop concert
in March at the Myer Music Bowl, they pulled a huge crowd of nearly 200,000
- second only to the Seekers' record-breaking draw back in 1967.
Musically they got back to business with their next single, the rollicking
5:10
Man in July. It was a major step forward and kicked off a string of
Top 20 hits. Although Keays claims that he "didn't understand" the group
properly, this too was produced by Howard Gable. It was a deliberate move
towards a heavier sound by the band, who were keen to distance themselves
from the current bubblegum craze - a direction in which they felt that
both Sambell and/or Gable were pushing them - and it put the Masters back
on the map in no uncertain terms. The '50s pastiche opening of the song
sounds like it's about to head off into the a rendition of The Great
Pretender but then dives head first into gritty fuzz-toned blues rock,
with a theme (perhaps influenced by The Kinks' Plastic Man?) of
youth culture vs. the boring straights - a sure-fire winner with young
audiences.
Also in July, with 5.10 Man climbing the charts, they had their
third - and last - stab at the Hoadley's Battle of the Sounds, but once
again they were runners-up - although this time they ran such a close second
to Doug Parkinson's In Focus that they were reportedly also offered
the coveted winner's prize - a trip to England with the Sitmar line. According
to Keays, the Masters won 'on points', but he claims that the judges may
have felt that their 'bad boy' image did not make them suitable candidates
to take first place.
While substantially true, this image was deliberately played up by the
band, fuelled by press reports like the infamous Go-Set 'expose'
headlined "Sex is thrust upon us...". Written by Go-Set's
Lily Brett with Jim's full cooperation, the article and its follow-up lifted
the lid on some of the milder aspects of the bacchanalian groupie scene
that had surrounded the band for the last three years. (The outside wall
of their first group flat in Melbourne had famously been daubed with the
slogan "Band Moll's Paradise" in three-foot high letters, and a continuous
string of groupies passed through the flat day and night). But as another
means of frustrating Sambell's plans to market them as a wholesome teenybop
combo, the 'bad-boy' publicity was undoubtedly a success.
About this time the band also switched to wearing leather stage outfits.
This nicely enhanced the 'bad-boy' image, of course, but as they discovered,
it had a much more practical side-effect. The cost of buying expensive
stage clothes which were being shredded on a nightly basis was sending
them broke, and of course leather - which didn't tear - provided then with
their longest-wearing outfits in years. Jim Keays reckons it saved them
thousands of dollars.
In August the Masters headed off around Australia on the remarkable
Operation
Starlift, an historic all-Australian package tour, the largest of its
kind ever attempted, featuring some of the top groups and solo artists
of the day - The Masters, Johnny Farnham, Ronnie Burns, Russell Morris,
Johnny Young, Zoot, and The Valentines. Although the tour was a apparently
a financial disaster, it was a promotional success for the Masters. The
Brisbane Festival Hall concert was a highpoint of the tour. That night,
they drew a record crowd of over 7000 people - breaking The Beatles' 1964
attendance record. Glenn was dragged offstage by the audience and had his
pants and coat literally torn to shreds, with the result that one of the
police on hand threatened to stop the show and arrest Glenn for indecent
exposure if the did not finish playing immediately!
But back in his hotel room after the hectic gig, Wheatley had time to
reflect on the event, and it became the turning point in his life and career,
because it finally drove home just how badly they were being ripped off.
He figured that the crowd had paid $5 per ticket, so the gross must have
been at least $30-35,000 - yet the Masters, like all the other acts, were
on a fixed fee, and received a miserable $200 for the gig; according
to Wheatley, top-paid act Johnny Farnham probably only got about $1000.
Something was seriously wrong, and Wheatley was determined to fix it.
The next step was obvious - they had to take over their own management
from Sambell, who by then was totally preoccupied with Farnham and Zoot,
so the plans were put in place. Over the closing months of 1969 Wheatley
became more and more involved in choosing venues, booking gigs and promoting
the group, placing them with far more care to avoid over-exposing them,
cutting down on appearances and increasing their fee. They closed the year
in promising style with December's aptly-named single, the bluesy Think
About Tomorrow Today, which provided another Top 20 hit nationally
and went to #1 in Melbourne.
1970
Early in the year the Masters officially
parted with Daryl Sambell and set to work on their new venture. Wheatley
was playing an integral part in bookings and management, and they managed
themselves for the rest of their career. (It's interesting to speculate
on what might have happened if this had happened earlier). They were certainly
enjoying the taste of handling their own affairs - especially being able
to actually keep some of the money they were generating.
They set up their own booking agency,
Drum,
established in January by Glenn Wheatley and "Ada" Barker.
Despite
initial resistance from Sambell, they successfully took over their own
bookings from the AMBO agency and they were on their way. Based in a terrace
house office in Drummond St Carlton, Drum handled the Masters' own management
and within a few months (as documented by a June ad in Go-Set) they
were also booking and promoting gigs for The Sect, Ash, Lovers Dream, Big
Daddies, Thursday's Children, Looking Glass, Daisy Clover, Nova Express,
Co.
Caine, Plastic Tears, Little Stevie, Tamam
Shud, Jeff St John,
Flying Circus
and 14 others, as well as promoting tours by overseas acts The Four
Tops and
Paul Jones (ex-Manfred Mann). Wheatley was rapidly
finding his niche, as his later career would conclusively prove.
The Masters had been stockpiling tracks since they signed with EMI back
in 1968, and in February '70 their long delayed second LP
Masterpiece
was finally issued. It's an interesting album, albeit something of a hodgepodge
(as Keays freely admits) but it clearly shows the band developing a much
broader range. It includes the single tracks Linda Linda, 5:10
Man and A Dog, A Siren & Memories, and How I Love You,
although it regrettably omits the excellent Merry-Go-Round. Side
One also showed them beginning to come to grips with the album format,
and they emulated the current fad for concept albums by linking the songs
with a short guitar-and-string arrangement, crossfaded between tracks.
The title track is a live recording of what of a 12-bar instrumental; the
presence of two guitarists indicates that it dates from the period that
Peter Tilbrook was still in the band, and possibly from even before Doug
Ford joined. It's certainly provides a vivid aural snapshot of a Masters
live show ca. 1968, and the wall of screaming never lets up. Who Do
You Think You Are sounds like a sly dig at Daryl Sambell ("..it
means so much to you to be a socialite queen .."); the rocky Barefoot
When I Saw Her is musically very strong - including a ripper solo from
Doug - but it's hampered by rather inconsequential lyrics and some incongruous
double-speed vocals (a la The Small Faces). Isabella is also a bit
clumsy lyrically, although its Latin edge shows Ford's early interest in
the style, which reappeared later in Rio De Camero, and it features
is some nimble acoustic guitar work. The album also includes the Masters'
own version of St John's Wood, a track Jim and Doug gave to Brisbane
band The Sect, who released it as a single on Columbia during the
year.
April
saw the release of their new single, a
raucous, anthemic
celebration of rock'n'roll that would see off the 1960s in fine style.
Turn
Up Your Radio was recorded it was recorded in a boozy late-night session
at Armstrong's, again produced by Howard Gable, and engineered by Ern
Rose. (Not a bad effort for someone who "didn't understand" the group's
sound!) Keays barely remembers the session, and was so drunk by the time
had had to do the vocal that he had to be held up to the mike! (The single
was all the better for it, if you ask me). The song was deliberately designed
to be as loud and offensive as they could make it, thus providing the final
nail in the coffin to their ill-conceived teenybopper image. The title
also makes a link to Doug Ford's years in The
Missing Links - specifically the spoken line in the Links' Driving
You Insane, when singer Andy James shouts "Your radio's too low
- turn it up!" just before Doug rips into his incendiary solo. Turn
Up Your Radio has become one of the icons of Australian rock. In spite
of being released in the middle of the infamous radio band in early 1970,
and receiving little airplay on commercial radio, the song burned up the
charts and peaked at #7 nationally.
The Masters now had their sights set firmly on the UK, and over the
previous months they had been stashing money to pay for their stay in England
(including the small fortune they reputedly saved thanks to the leather
gear!), and in April-May they set off on the national Farewell tour. It
was a timely move for the band, since it also farewelled an entire era
of Australian pop. The pub-rock boom in Melbourne (which would launch the
careers of new bands like the "new" Billy Thorpe & The Aztecs) was
about to get into full swing, and the golden days of the "scream era",
the Battle of the Sounds, suburban dances and the inner city disco circuit
that established the Masters career was drawing to a close.
Exactly how the Masters got their ticket to England is unclear. The
accepted version is that they were awarded the trip to England because
they came so close to beating Doug Parkinson In Focus in the Hoadleys Battle
of the Sounds. However Glenn Wheatley says that he contacted Sitmar himself
in April. Their new entertainment manager apparently knew nothing about
the debacle of the previous arrangement and offered to give them free passage
to England on the Fairsky, leaving in late May, in return for providing
entertainment.
According to Jim Keays, The Masters played their final show at Camberwell
Civic Centre, supported by Zoot, Russell Morris and Music Express and the
show was compered by Stan Rofe (although according to Glenn it was at Berties
disco). On 25 May 1970, following in the footsteps of The Easybeats and
the Twilights, they boarded ship for England with high hopes of breaking
into the British music scene. They left Drum in the hands of "Ada" Barker,
and were given a rousing send-off by a crowd of fans and friends including
Stan Rofe, Daryl Sambell, Molly Meldrum, Ross D. Wylie, Johnny Young and
Ronnie Burns.
The 6-week ocean voyage aboard the line Fairsky was a more-than-welcome
break for them after years of constant gigging, and free at last from hassles
and distractions of life on the road, they used the time to good advantage,
writing and rehearsing new material and trying out the new songs each night.
Here again, the recollections of Keays and Wheatley differ. According to
Keays, it was arranged for them to play three spots per night in one of
the liner's entertainment lounges, but these performances rapidly dwindled
to zero as the mostly middle-aged passengers were driven off by the band's
free-form jams, on-stage rehearsals and 20-minute guitar solos. However,
Wheatley recalls that the band played on average "every second night".
They did not mix much with other passengers, but they did make friends
with two young young Australian travellers, Daryl Peters and Joey Powers.
(Song For Joey, on the Choice Cuts LP was written
for Powers). They arrived in London in early July, unscathed, in spite
of the disgusting food (incredibly, the Fairsky had no refrigeration) and
some hair-raising misadventures during a stopover in Panama, where they
were ripped off while trying to score some of the legendary local dope.
(Curiously, Jim's vivid recollection of their Panama escapade is somewhat
at odds with Glenn Wheatley, who described the voyage as "largely uneventful".
Arriving in beautiful weather, at the height of a glorious English summer,
the band began what was perhaps their happiest and most productive period.
They were met at Southampton by their old mate Brian Peacock (ex-Procession),
now living in London. They initially moved into a hotel in Bayswater, but
it quickly ate into their savings, so together with Daryl and Joey, who
were now part of the 'family', they moved into a house in North Harrow
in London, where they continued to write and rehearse, and also made contact
with other Aussie expats like the Cook sisters from Marcie
Jones & The Cookies, Dennis Wilson and Dannie Davidson of Kahvas
Jute, and Ronnie Charles (ex-The
Groop). Freed from the grind of constant gigging, they gleefully immersed
themselves in the cultural life of the capital, going on shopping sprees
for clothes on the famous Kings Rd, Cheslea, ploughing through scores of
new records and doing the rounds of clubs and concerts, seeing the best
music on offer. Glenn Wheatley continued work on a manuscript which he
had begun during the ocean voyage. Called Who the Hell is Judy In Sydney?,
which recounted his experiences with the group. His memoir was apparently
too hot for any publisher at the time and was never printed, but it became
the basis for Glenn's recent autobiography, Paper Paradise. The
one thing they did not do was play live, lacking adequate equipment and
a solid set of road-worthy material.
Having only been advanced $500 by EMI Australia, Wheatley started knocking
on doors in hopes of getting the band established in London, and (hopefully)
to secure a recording deal. His first contact was with expatriate Australian
impresario Robert Stigwood, who was by then managing Eric Clapton
and The Bee Gees. Stigwood had been an 'associate' of Darryl Sambell but
Wheatley's plea for assistance fell on deaf ears, and he hints that Stigwood
was more interested in Wheatley himself than in the band., Wheatley next
made contact with EMI in London, and was fortunate to find an ally in 18
year-old Trudy Green, secretary to EMI staff producer
Jeff
Jarratt. (Trudy went on to become a leading artist manager with clients
including Heart, Janet Jackson and Mick Jagger). Trudy took a liking to
the band and was instrumental in getting Jarratt interested in the Masters
and in the end he agreed to produce them. From there, the pieces rapidly
fell into place - the band was thrilled to get the news that EMI Australia
had agreed to pay for the recording of an album, that EMI England would
provide artwork and best of all, that the recording would be at the legendary
Abbey
Road studios. It was a dream come true for the group - Jeff Jarratt
had worked on some of the later Beatles recordings, and engineer
Peter
Bown was renowned for his work on Pink Floyd's classic LPs
Ummagumma,
A
Saucerful Of Secrets and Atom Heart Mother.Just before
the scheduled start of recording, Jim Keays made a quick trip to the continent,
and he was in Copenhagen when he heard the news of the death of Jimi Hendrix,
one of the Masters' biggest idols. On his return to London, Jim and Doug
penned Song For A Lost Gypsy, which they immediately added to the
list of songs to record.
In September they entered the studio, to record the tracks that would
form their next LP, the legendary Choice Cuts. They revelled
in the Abbey Rd ambience, and the relaxed and quietly disciplined approach
of the EMI staff. The facilities were superior to anything available at
the time back home and allowed them a far greater range of expression on
record. The songs they brought to the sessions - many written during
the voyage over - were the most original and distinctive they had yet written,
distilling all their recent musical influences. There were the heavier
sounds of people such as Hendrix, King Crimson and Free, as well as the
acoustic touches of Donovan, the Small Faces and Van Morrison (whoseAstral
Weeks LP was on constant rotation at their North Harrow house).
They brought in outside musos to augment some tracks, and even made use
of Paul McCartney's famous white grand piano on a few cuts, including Because
I Love You. During the sessions they bumped into a 'who's who' of British
music including The Moody Blues, Floyd, Barclay James Harvest, Ringo Starr
and Roy Harper. Towards the end of the sessions, they found themselves
one song short of the optimum LP length, so at Jarratt's suggestion they
quickly knocked together a new song, built up from from a Latin-flavoured
instrumental shuffle that Doug Ford had been playing around with. Jim wrote
lyrics for the piece overnight, they cut it the next day and it became
the album' s popular opening track Rio De Camero (later released
as a single in 1974).
The entire LP was recorded, mixed and mastered within a month, and the
band were justifiably thrilled with the results. The choice of the first
single was obvious - Because I Love You, a beautiful song of love,
separation and independence, which has long since become their most popular
and enduring recording. To promote it back home they called on another
Aussie ex-pat, Timothy Fisher to make a promotional clip
for them. Filmed on a chilly autumn morning on Hampstead Heath, it was
simple but effective and is now the most often-seen clip of the band. Although
most Australians will know the clip from the b/w print shown many times
on GTK and eslewhere, it was in fact shot in colour, and this can now finally
be seen on the Masters' Turn Up Your Video!, along with several
other previously unseen clips for tracks from Choice Cuts.)
The album's iconic cover photo has since become as much of a classic
as the record itself. It depicts an elegant, overstuffed chair in a panelled
room, with a mysterious disembodied hand holding a cigarette floating above
it. The cover was created for them by the famous English design house Hipgnosis,
who were responsible for world-famous covers for Pink Floyd, 10CC, Led
Zeppelin and many others. The Australian LP had the full photo, but the
UK release on EMI's Regal Zonophone imprint inexpliclably used a heavily
cropped version, showing only the bottom left-hand corner of the picture.
As 1970 drew to a close, they had a fine new LP in the can, and everything
looked rosy, so the band were caught by surprise when Glenn Wheatley revealed
that they were almost broke. They were determined to stay in London and
keep trying for the big break, but they desperately needed more cash. A
phone call to EMI Australia to plead for assistance proved futile (of course),
so they put together an emergency plan - a return home and an Australian
tour which would raise the needed funds. Wheatley was keen to do at least
one performance in London before they headed home, so he arranged a gig
at the ultra-trendy Blaises in West Kensington. Unfortunately, on the night
they were the victims of a double-booking; although the other band didn't
show, the marquee out front billed the no-show, instead of the Masters.
So, for that night only they played two sets to about 50 people, while
the marquee outside read "The Dog That Bit People"!
Wheatley headed home first to organise the tour so that they could recharge
their coffers and return to the UK as soon as possible. In spite of the
many difficulties he faced, he arranged the tour, and even secured a sponsor,
the Marchants soft drinks company. He was learning fast. They returned
to Australia at the end of December 1970, just as Because I Love You
was released. It provided them with their fourth consecutive Top 20 hit,
reaching #12 nationally, and it became one of the touchstone songs of the
new era of Australian rock.
1971
Once home the Masters immediately began the wide-ranging Australian
tour, beginning immediately on their arrival in Perth. The day they returned,
Howard Gable joined them with portable four-track equipment and recorded
their first show at the Nickelodeon Theatre, a former cinema in Perth,
which had been converted to a live music venue. Although they had only
just stepped off the boat from England, and were tired and under-rehearsed,
the band dutifully went through their hastily-prepared set, and although
they were never really satisfied with the outcome, these recordings became
the live album Nickelodeon. It is reputed to be only the
second live album ever recorded in Australia, and was released in June
that year. Two tracks - the powerful, brooding Future of Our Nation,
backed by the non-album cut New Day - were put out as a single,
also in June. Keays and others have been somewhat dismissive of the LP,
writing most of it off as an under-rehearsed jam. There are some slow moments
to be sure, and Keays' vocals are perhaps not the best he ever recorded.
In fact, it's really Doug Ford's album, and worth the price for his fiery
playing throughout. Future Of Our Nation and Evil Woman are
both superb pieces of '70s heavy rock, as good as anything overseas bands
were putting out. It may not be the greatest live album ever made, but
it's an important document of the band, and it certainly leaves you wishing
more performances from that tour had been taped. It's also a great pity
that they never got to record full studio versions of these songs. (Incidentally,
it was in Perth that Glenn Wheatley met his first wife, Alison Sunde.)
In their absence they had been voted top group in the 1970 Go-Set
Pop Poll, and both their 1970 singles had been major hits. Nevertheless,
they had been away for some time, both they and the music scene had changed
dramatically - not least because of the radical changes brought about by
the 1970 radio ban, the end of the old suburban dance circuit, and the
rise of the pub-rock scene. It was slow going at first winning over audiences
to the 'new' Masters, beards and all. Gradually though, things picked up,
and after a breakthrough gig at Chequers in Sydney the tour began to pick
up steam. They were greatly helped by a lengthy profile in the magazine
POL, written by freelance journalist Howard Lindley. He became one
of the group's most ardent supporters, and later on he also started work
on a film about the band. He shot several performances in the weeks before
they returned to England, but sadly the project foundered when Lindley
committed suicide, just before the Masters were due to return to England.
Like so many of the Masters' screen appearances, only fragments of his
film survive.
While they were still touring Australia, the group received word that
EMI England liked the new album, and in February EMI released
I'm Your
Satisfier as the first UK single. In April
Choice Cuts
was released in Australia to widespread acclaim, and it went to #11. They
made numerous TV appearances, including a three-song live set for the ABC's
GTK
program which included Future of Our Nation. In Melbourne they played
a major gig at the Town Hall, supported by Billy Thorpe & The Aztecs
(one of the series of Town Hall concerts at which the Aztecs' famous Live
at The Town Hall LP was recorded).
When Choice Cuts was released in the UK it was well-received
- but the band were stuck back in Australia, still short of money, and
they could have done little to exploit the opportunities even if they had
known about them. As the tour dragged on into months, they made little
headway; in fact it seemed like a return to the bad old days, and they
endured several ripoffs at the hands of unscrupulous promoters. By early
1971 they had reached their lowest ebb. Frustrated, with hopes of returning
to England all but gone and seeing no other way out, the Masters reluctantly
decided to call it a day.
Then, on the verge of the split, a phone call came out of the blue from
London. EMI's John Halsall informed them that Choice Cuts
was getting great notices in the English music press, including a rave
review in Melody Make.He told them it was selling well in England
and starting to make an impression in Europe too - I'm Your Satisfier
had
been released in France and had gone into the Top 10 there. Halsall urged
them to return as soon as possible. This renewed their hopes, and from
near disaster, everything suddenly picked up as they began to organise
their return to the UK. They decided to take the boat rather than fly (to
save money) so Glenn Wheatley again approached the Sitmar Line. To their
delight, Sitmar offered them another complimentary trip. Even more importantly,
EMI agreed to finance another LP when they got back to London.
They left for England on 15 May 1971, this time aboard the
Fairstar,
this time accompanied by Glenn's girlfriend Alison, and Jim's wife Vicky
and baby son James. They again stopped off in Panama, and on this trip
they were successful in scoring some the legendary local smoko - which
made for a far more enjoyable voyage than their first. Unfortunately, by
the time they arrived back almost three months had passed since Halsall's
phone call, and interest was already waning. Resigning themselves to the
inevitable, they contacted EMI and set up the recorded, slated for about
three months ahead. They employed an outside PR agent, Jim Haswell, who
managed to get some small reviews for them, but Wheatley was unable to
find an agency that would book them, and although Doug Ford insisted on
keeping up the regime of regular rehearsals, they had no live work at all.
Then the new UK label Bronze - who had just signed
Slade
and Uriah Heep - made an approach to the Masters to become their
third act. Although they were hesitant, being still signed to EMI, they
decided use the offer to as leverage in hopes of getting a better deal
out of their record company. Wheatley delivered an ultimatum to EMI Australia,
demanding that they either release the Masters from their contract or match
Bronze's offer of £90,000. Predictably, EMI did neither, responding
with a laughable advance of $1000. Fearing the repercussions, they declined
Bronze's offer, but in retrospect, one can't help but agree with Jim Keays'
rueful assessment that the best course of action would have been to "...sign
with Bronze and let the lawyers work it all out later."
Meanwhile, back in Australia, their Drum agency, which had been managed
by roadie Adrian "Ada" Barker, finally closed its doors. Following an approach
by a young entrepreneur, Michael Gudinski, Drum merged with two
other Melbourne agencies to create
Consolidated Rock, which would
become a foundation stone for Gudinksi's famous Mushroom label.
Returning to Abbey Rd at last in the autumn of 1971, the Masters were
reunited with Jarratt and Bown - plus engineer (and Sgt Pepper's
veteran)
Richard Lush - and set about recording the new album. It
was made at the same time that John Lennon was making his epochal John
Lennon/Plastic Ono Band LP. The album title, A Toast to Panama
Red, was the band's unsubtle homage to the potent variety of Central
American marijuana. Panama has been lauded as one of the
best progressive releases of the period, but it was largely ignored at
the time. According to Wheatley, one of the tracks (Games We Play)
was recorded at George Martin's Air Studios, with Martin himself
conducting the children's choir which features on the second part of the
track. Sales were perhaps not helped by the cover, which even Jim admitted
was not an ideal choice, being as garish as Choice Cuts was
tasteful. Designed and painted Keays, it was evidently a dig at the British,
and featured a grotesque psychedelic caricature of a bulldog's head, wearing
a Union Jack eye patch. Its ears are skewered by an arrow from which dangles
a tag, emblazoned with the album's title.
The Masters played sporadic gigs to support the album, which was well-reviewed
in England, but EMI Australia did nothing to assist them. Without the necessary
backing, it was clear by the end of 1971 that they were not going to achieve
the success they had dreamed of, fought for and so richly deserved. Although
Keays is more positive about it, Wheatley's own account of the album sessions
is that they were an unhappy experience for him. He had a bad LSD trip
the night before they went into the studio, so he began the recording in
a pretty negative frame of mind, and the tensions mounted steadily during
the recording. In fact Wheatley did not play on some of the tracks, and
his parts were played by Doug Ford. According to Keays, Glenn had been
working part-time at a management agency over the previous few months and
apparently had insufficient time to rehearse because of his day job.
1972
Early in 1972 EMI issued the Panama album, and lifted
a single from it in February - the soaring, anthemic Love Is one
of their best songs, and one which had been recorded using a twelve-string
acoustic specially loaned to Doug Ford for the occasion by one of
his heroes, The Shadows' Hank Marvin. In spite of their excellence,
both LP and single tragically sank without trace back home. Now firmly
locked into the new high-rotation pop formats, Australian radio wouldn't
touch it with a bargepole. The era of DJs like Stan Rofe and Ward Austin,
who had championed the band in the 60s, was over, and the new moguls of
commercial pop programming (led by 2SM's Rod Muir) had no interest
in such progressive explorations.
They went out in style though: A Toast to Panama Red
was
as big an advance as Choice Cuts had been over its predecessor.
Ian McFarlane has eloquently described it as:
"... a ground-breaking
album of rarefied skill and tremendous scope ... too musically advanced
for the local industry of the day to comprehend.
A Toast to Panama
Red
is one of the great lost treasures of the Australian progressive
rock era."
Their valedictory was album's closing track, the beautiful
Thyme To
Rhyme. Fittingly, it was also the very last track they recorded together,
and it provided a delicate and poignant farewell to this legendary group.
Without adequate support, the album predictably failed to take off,
so Glenn tried to convince the rest of the band that they should break
up while they were still on top. They disagreed, so Glenn announced he
was leaving to work full-time for the management agency. Jim Keays saw
the writing on the wall and not long afterwards he announced his own departure
and his intention to return to Australia immediately. Although a seemingly
impossible task, Ford and Burgess decided to keep going.Doug sent for Colin's
brother Denny, who took over on bass. This final trio lineup of the Masters
soldiered on valiantly for a few months, and made one recording (unerleased
at the time) before finally calling it a day in mid-1972.
Now That It's Over ...
Back in Australia, Keays did some final promotional duties for the Love
Is single (including a TV clip in which he appeared alone, playing
12-string guitar. He then set about establishing himself as a solo artist,
began writing songs, and also wrote for Go-Set. In 1974 he compiled
the tracks and designed the cover for EMI's "Best Of ..." collection Now
That's It's Over, to which he added liner notes written by his
friend, the late Howard Lindley. To promote it EMI released Rio De Camero/Thyme
To Rhyme as a single in August 1974, and remarkably, the A-side garnered
quite a bit of airplay.
In 1975 Keays struck out at last as a solo artist, recording an excellent
solo LP Boy From The Stars in 1975 (now released on CD).
He premiered the album at Sunbury '75, where his all-star backing group
was joined by Glenn Wheatley, recently returned from the UK. It was to
be the last time they played together in public for over ten years. (Ironically,
after all the ripoffs of the Masters years, Jim and his band were also
the only group who got paid, having wisely arranged an outside sponsor.
Because of that year's low attendance and the whopping $60,000 fee paid
to headliner Deep Purple, none of the other Australian acts who appeared
at Sunbury '75 were every paid, and the organisers, Odessa Promotions,
went into liquidation immediately after the festival.)
Most successful of all was Glenn Wheatley. As he moved into a long and
successful career in management, he applied the lessons learned and contacts
made with the Masters to manage other bands. He spent several years in
England and America learning the trade, as he recounts in his book. On
the eve of his return home he was invited to manage the reformed Mississippi.
After the name change to Little River Band they set about cracking
the American market, and Wheatley was instrumental in their historic breakthrough
there in 1976-77. In the 80's he was at the helm for the career revival
of the Masters' old mate John Farnham. For more information, seek
out Glenn's memoir, Paper Paradise, which documents the highs and
lows of his life in the Masters and his extraordinary career as Australia's
most successful rock manager.
As the years passed, the the Masters' legend grew. In the early 80s
there was a revival of interest thanks to Glenn A. Baker, who put together
a major feature on the band for his Rock & Roll Trivia Show
on Sydney radio 2JJJ, which gave rise to the definitive Raven compilation
album. The Masters finally reformed in August 1987 for a "Back to the
60s" special on Hey Hey It's Saturday with the classic Keays/Ford/Burgess/Wheatley
lineup - the first time all four had played together since Glenn left the
group in late 1971. Buoyed by the reaction, they undertook a reunion tour
during 1988 and released an album featuring new material and new versions
of their classic songs, from which they lifted the single Birth of the
Beat. The perennial Because I Love You also gained new prominence
around that time via its use in a series of advertisements for a well-known
brand of jeans.
The group (minus Wheatley, who only participated in the TV reunion and
a few early gigs) have have since undertaken occasional concerts, and in
September 1995 they released a new version of Turn Up Your Radio,
recorded with the Hoodoo Gurus. Glenn, Doug and Jim recently got
together again - for perhaps the last time - in Melbourne to perform 'unplugged'
at the launch of Jim's book. With this, it seems, the Masters' live career
has finally run its course, and Keays has signalled in his book his intention
not to participate in any further reunions.
In October 1998, the Masters Apprentices finally received long-overdue
formal recognition for their achievements from the Australian record industry,
when they were inducted (along with the Angels) into the ARIA Hall Of
Fame. The same year they were also honoured in Australia Post's "Rock
& Roll" series, with a stamp commemorating Turn Up Your Radio.
Only a month after their ARIA induction, Colin and Denny Burgess narrowly
escaped death, when a car in which they were passengers was struck by a
semi-trailer in inner-city Sydney. Both men - who were being driven to
a party after the launch of the debut CD by their new band Good Time
Charlie - were severely injured. Colin suffered multiple fractures
and internal injuries, was trapped in the wreck for some time and
was by all acounts lucky to survive. Denny also received serious injuries
and had to undergo several hours of plastic surgery. Fortunately are recovering,
and we wish them well. According to the Masters' website, a documentary
about the brothers is currently in the works.
Interest in the band continues unabated. 1999/2000 has seen the long-awaited
release of all the Masters' original albums on CD, the publication of both
Jim and Glenn's memoirs, and the establishment of official web sites for
Jim Keays' and The Masters Apprentices' (see
Links),
and in June 2000 (after months of delays) ABC-TV finally screened an edited
version of the documentary, Turn Up Your Video, which
was accompanied by the release of the full-length home video.
Masters
Apprentices have made the grade
Ian Meldrum, Go-Set,
Wed. 8 March, 1967
Star
Cheats Death
Murray Johnson, Sunday Herald
Sun, December 6 1998
The
Life Of Brian
Brian
Vaughton talks to Jeff Crawford about his rock'n'roll apprenticeship
Adelaide
Matters, June 2000
Happily, after years of being scarcer
than hen's teeth, all the Masters' original LPs are now available
on CD from Ascension Records. This includes the expanded version of the
first album, including the various tracks like their cover of I Feel
Fine (which were removed from earlier LP and CD releases) plus rare
live tracks and alternate takes.
The Raven compilation
Wars,
or Hands of Time is a excellent overview of the band's career and
of course includes Glenn Baker's usual fine liner notes (thanks, Glenn!).
Now
That It's Over is a great lower-priced compilation put together
by Jim Keays, includes the best of the '69-'72 recordings, and can be found
in the discount bins in most Australian record stores. Both albums were
originally released on LP and are now available on CD. Since the reformations
of the band there have been several new compilations, some featuring or
re-recorded versions of the classic hits like Because I Love You.
The original LPs (especially
Nickelodeon)
and most of the singles are exceedingly hard to find and worth a small
fortune. If you see them, grab them!
In June 2000 the Masters documentary,
Turn
Up Your Video, was released as a long-form home video through ABC Enterprises.
It includes interviews with band members, rare and never-before-seen archival
footage of the group, including the full-length film clips for songs like
Buried & Dead and Because I Love You. The long-form version runs for
about 98 minutes, but the documentary was trimmed down to about 50 mins
for screening on ABC TV in June 2000.
Singles
10/66 Undecided / Wars, or Hands of Time
[Astor A7071] No 13 16 wks
5/67 Buried & Dead / She's My Girl [Astor
A 7075] No 26 8 wks
8/67 Living In A Child's Dream / Tired Of Just
Wandering [Astor A7081] No 9 16 wks
2/68 Elevator Driver / Theme for a Social Climber
[Astor A7087] No30 8 wks
6/68 Brigette / Four Years Of Five [Astor
A7102] No 32 6 wks
8/68 But One Day / My Girl [Astor A7126]
3/69 Linda Linda / Merry-Go-Round [Columbia
DO8677]
7/69 5:10 Man / How I Love You [Columbia
DO8826] No 16 11 wks
12/69 Think About Tomorrow Today / A Dog, A Siren
& Memories [Columbia DO8995] No 14 11 wks
4/70 Turn Up Your Radio / Jam It Up [Columbia
DO9104] No 7 15 weeks
2/71 Because I Love You / I'm Your Satisfier [Columbia
DO934] No12 11 wks
6/71 Future Of Our Nation / New Day
[HMV EA9525]
2/72 Love Is / Southern Cross [Columbia
DO9821]
8/74 Rio De Camero / Thyme To Rhyme [EMI
10560]
88/10 Because I Love You / I'm Your Satisfier
(new version) [Virgin VOZ 039]
88/11 Birth Of The Beat / Birth Of The Beat
[Virgin VOZ 043] (shared with The Groop)
?/89 Cortina Jungle/ Mandrake Wine
[From The Vault VOL 2 #1]
9/95 Turn Up your Radio / Turn Up Your Radio (with
Hoodoo Gurus) [EMI 8740782] |
EP's
Undecided [Astor AEP4012] 1967
Undecided / Hot Gully Wind // Buried & Dead /
She's My Girl |
Volume 2 [Astor AEP4059] 1968
Living In A Child's Dream / War Or Hands Of Time //
Elevator Driver / Tired Of Just Wandering |
Turn Up Your Radio [Columbia Sego
70190] 1970
Turn Up Your Radio / 5:10 Man // Merry Go Round /
Think About Tomorrow Today |
Albums |
6/67 The Masters
Apprentices [Astor ALP 1025]. Later reissued as Summit SRA
250-524 |
Undecided [Bower-Morrison]
Wars or Hands Of Time [Bower]
Buried and Dead [Bower]
Poor Boy [Bower-Keays]
Living In A Child's Dream [Bower]
Elevator Driver [Cadd-Ross]
Brigette [Ford-Keays]
But One Day [Bower]
Hot Gully Wind [Bower]
She's My Girl [Bower]
Dancing Girl [Elias McDaniels]
Theme For A Social Climber [Bower]
Tired Of Just Wandering [Bower]
4 Years Of 5 [Keays-Tilbrook] |
 |
2/70 Masterpiece LP Columbia
SCXO1915 |
Masterpiece*
Who Do You Think You Are
Barefoot When I Saw Her
St John's Wood
5:10 Man
A Dog, a Siren & Memories
Linda Linda
Isabella
Captivating Voice
Piece of Me
Titanic
How I Love You
[all songs by Ford-Keays]
Produced by Howard Gable
Engineered by Roger Savage & John Sayers
Recorded at Armstrong's Studio, Melbourne except *live
recording |
 |
4/71 Choice Cuts
LP [Columbia SCX 7983] No11
2 wks |
Rio de Camero [Ford-Keays]
Michael [Ford]
Easy to Lie [Ford-Keays]
Because I Love You [Ford-Keays]
Catty [Ford]
Our Friend Owsley Stanley III [Ford-Keays]
Death of a King [Ford]
Song for a Lost Gypsy [Ford-Keays]
I'm Your Satisfier [Ford-Keays]
Song for Joey - Part II [Master's Apprentices]
Produced by Jeff Jarratt
Engineered by Peter Bown
Recorded at Abbey Rd Studios, London,
September 1970
Sleeve design by Hipgnosis
Released as Masters Apprentices
[Regal
Zonophone SLRZ 10106] in UK, [Pathe Marconi
2C06204714Y] with a cropped version of the cover photo
Also released 9/88 as Raven RVLP 036 (with New Day
added) |
 |
6/71 Nickelodeon [Columbia SCXO7992
LP] |
Future Of Our Nation
Evil Woman
Because I Love You
Light A Fire Within Yourself
When I've Got Your Soul
Fresh Air By The Ton
[Ford/Keays]
Recorded live in concert by Howard Gable
Nickelodeon Theatre, Perth, December 1970
Cover painting by Marc Piel |
 |
A Toast to Panama Red
1/72 [Columbia SCXO7998] [Regal Zonophone SLRZ 1022 (UK)]
?/99 [Ascension ANCD 088 (CD)] |
Answer Lies Beyond
Beneath the Sun
Games We Play I
Games We Play I I
The Lesson, So Listen
Love Is
Melodies of St Kilda
Southern Cross
Thyme to Rhyme
[Ford-Keays]
Recorded at Abbey Rd Studios, London, 1971 Producer: Jeff
Jarratt
Engineers: Peter Bown, Richard Lush, Nicky Webb
Brass on Love Is and choir on Games We Play
II arranged by Andrew Jackman
Childrens' choir conducted by George Martin
Cover art by Jim Keays
Insert lettering by Vicki Keays
Cover photography by Peter Vernon |
 |
Now That It's Over (Best Of)
10/74 [EMI EMC 2517 (LP)] [EMI 8320032 (CD)] |
Answer Lies Beyond
Beneath the Sun
Games We Play (1 & 2)
The Lesson, So Listen
Love Is
Melodies of St Kilda
Southern Cross
Thyme to Rhyme
[Ford-Keays]
Producer: Jeff Jarratt
Recorded at Abbey Rd Studios, London, 1971 |
 |
1/81 Hands of Time* Raven
RVLP01 1981 [LP] Raven RVCD13 [CD] |
5:10 Man [Ford-Keays]
Because I Love You [Ford-Keays]
Bourke & Wills & Me [Ford-Keays]
Brigette [Ford-Keays]
Buried & Dead [Mick Bower]
But One Day [Mick Bower]
A Dog, A Siren & Memories [Ford-Keays]
Elevator Driver [Brian Cadd-Max Ross]
Future of Our Nation [Ford]
Hot Gully Wind [Bower]
Living in a Child's Dream [Bower]
Love Is [Ford-Keays]
Merry Go Round [Ford-Keays]
Rio de Camero [Ford-Keays]
Think About Tomorrow Today [Ford-Keays]
Turn Up Your Radio [Ford-Keays]
Undecided [Morrison-Bower]
Wars or Hands of Time [Bower]
Bonus
tracks on CD
Dancing Girl [Bower]
Freedom Seekers [Ford/Burgess]
I'm Your Satisfier [Ford/Keays]
Linda Linda [Ford/Keays]
New Day [Doug Ford]
Poor Boy [Bower]
Tired Of Just Wandering [Bower]
The CD omits the track Bourke & Wills & Me
that appears on the LP version.
Cover design by Paul Fullbrook |
 |
?/87 Jam it Up (A Collection Of Rarities)
[Raven RVLP 27] |
Black Girl (in the Pines) [Huddie Ledbetter]
Bye Bye Johnny [Chuck Berry]
Dancing Girl [Bo Diddley]
Four Years of Five [Tilbrook-Keays]
Freedom Seekers [Burgess-Ford]
Jam it Up [Ford-Keays]
Johnny B Goode [Chuck Berry]
New Day [Ford-Keays]
Piece of Me [Ford-Keays]
Poor Boy [Bower]
She's My Girl [Bower]
St John's Wood [Ford-Keays]
Tears of Sorrow [Ford-Keays]
Tired of Just Wandering [Bower]
Willie & the Hand Jive [Johnny Otis] |
 |
3/88 The Very Best of ... [Virgin VOZ 2008
(LP)] |
5:10 Man [Ford-Keays]
Because I Love You [Ford-Keays]
Brigette [Ford-Keays]
Buried & Dead [Bower]
Elevator Driver [Cadd-Ross]
I'm Your Satisfier [Ford-Keays]
Linda, Linda [Ford-Keays]
Living in a Child's Dream [Bower]
Love Is [Ford-Keays]
Merry-go-Round Ford, D-Keays, J
Rio de Camero [Ford-Keays]
Think About Tomorrow Today [Ford-Keays]
Turn Up Your Radio [Ford-Keays]
Undecided [Morrison-Bower]
Wars or Hands of Time [Bower] |
 |
11/88 Do What You Wanna Do Virgin
VOZ 2022 [LP] 432069-2 [CD] |
Because I Love You [Keays-Ford]
Bedtime Girl [Keays-Ford]
Birth of the Beat [Keays-Ford]
Crossroads [Robert Johnson]
Future of Our Nation [Ford]
HIghway 61 Revisited [Dylan]
Howlin' at the Moon [Keays-Ford]
I'm a Man [Elias McDaniels]
Spoonful [Willie Dixon]
Tobacco Road [Loudermilk]
Turn Up Your Radio [Keays-Ford] |
 |
?/95 30th Anniversary Greatest Hits EMI
814836-2 [CD] |
Poor Boy
Undecided
Wars or Hands of Time
Buried and Dead
Living in a Child's Dream
Elevator Driver
Brigette
Linda, Linda
Merry Go Round
5:10 Man
Think About Tomorrow Today
Turn up Your Radio
Future of Our Nation
Because I Love You
I'm Your Satisfier
Rio De Camero
Love Is
Southern Cross
Because I Love You '88
Turn Up Your Radio '95 |
 |
5/96 Masters Apprentices/Choice Cuts
(2CD) EMI 7243-814806-2 |
2CD re-release of Choice Cuts plus a version
of the debut album. The first CD includes most of the the original Astor
album, but omits I Feel Fine and Johnny B. Goode, and adds
a selection of the '65-68 singles.
CD1- New Day
Undecided
War or Hands of Time
Buried and Dead
Poor Boy
Living in a Child's Dream
Elevator Driver
Brigette
But One Day
Hot Gully Wind
She's My Girl
Dancing Girl
Theme For A Social Climber
Tired of Just Wandering
4 Years of 5
CD2 - Choice Cuts |
 |
|
-
Glenn A. Baker (1980) - liner notes to the Raven album Wars, Or Hands
Of Time
-
Jim Keays - His Master's Voice (1999) Allen & Unwin
-
Ian McFarlane - Freedom Train (1996); Encyclopedia
of Australian Rock & Pop (1999) Allen & Unwin
-
Noel McGrath - Encyclopedia of Australian Rock
& Pop (1978) Outback Press
-
Glenn Wheatley - Paper Paradise (1999) Bantam Books
-
Chris Spencer / Zbig Nowara - Who's Who of Australian Rock & Roll
(1993)Five
Mile Press
Masters
Apprentices/Jim Keays - theofficial
website. Pics, bio, online sales, press and more
Simon
Wilson's Masters Apprentices Page
Bryan
Forbes' Tabs, Lyrics, Samples site - incl. the Masters and Jim
Keays
"Because
I Love You" guitar tab
Updated
12 July 2000