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John Capek [keyboards, vocals]
1970
Mal Capewell [sax]
1972-73
Gary Clarke
[bass] 1971-73
Paul Enery
[piano] 1970
Ian "Fingers" Ferguson [bass,
vocals] 1970-71
'Sleepy' Greg Lawrie [guitar,
slide guitar, dobro] 1970-73
Paul Lever [guitar. vocals,
hamonica] 1970
Mal Logan [kbds]
1971-73
Tony Lunt [drums]
1970-73
Broderick Smith [vocals,
harmonica] 1971-73
Barry Sullivan
[bass] 1971
Ian "Willy" Winter [guitar]
1971-72
Carson's career was relatively short - almost exactly three years
- but in that time the "Kings of Boogie" built a reputation as a
powerful live act, and they were one of the most popular Australian
blues bands of the early 70s. Together with acts such as Bulldog,
Chain, The Aztecs. Company Caine and Pirana, Carson was one of the
stable of acts handled by Consolidated Rock, the Melbourne agency founded by
young entrepreneur Michael Gudinski. Carson was also an important
stepping stone for several of its members, including singer Broderick
Smith, and original keyboard player John Capek.
The original 4-piece lineup formed in in January 1970. Guitarist
"Sleepy" Greg Lawrie
(ex-The
Creatures, Chocolate) was already considered one of the best
slide players in the country; John Capek was
ex-Leo De
Castro and Friends; Ian "Fingers" Ferguson's career had started
way back in 1961 with Shepparton rockers Tony & The Shantels, and
completing the lineup was drummer Tony Lunt. Originally called The
Carson County Band, they dropped the "...County Band" part of the
name by the end of 1970 because they were being mistakenly tagged as
country rock group. They were strongly influenced by Chicago blues,
and by the emerging "boogie" style being popularised by bands like
Canned Heat and, later, ZZ Top.
(According to Who's Who of Australian Rock, Paul Lever and
Tony Enery were also members during this year, but details of their
role in the band are not known at this stage.)
The first Carson single On The Highway / Resting Place was
issued on the Rebel label around May 1970; at about the same time
Lawrie and Capek got together with Matt Taylor, Tim Piper and Yuk
Harrison from Genesis, plus Trevor Courtney (ex-Chants
R&B, Cam-Pact) in a one-off recording project called
The Meating. The single they recorded together, Bad Luck
Feeling / Back Home was released on Rebel in August 1970.
John Capek left Carson in late 1970 or early 1971, moving on to
King Harvest, Flite and Hannagan. To replace him, Carson recruited
singer and harp player Broderick Smith, formerly of
Adderly Smith Blues Band and
Sundown, and second guitarist
Ian "Willy" Winter (ex-Brothers Grimm, Five Just Men,
Pigface). The new lineup recorded a single for the Havoc label,
Travelling South / Moonshine, which was issued in August 1971.
Meanwhile, Ian Ferguson left in July to join Island, and he was
replaced by ex-Chain bassist
Barry "Big Goose" Sullivan. Sullivan left after about three
months to join Flite so he was replaced by Garry Clarke
(ex-King Harvest). In November they added a new keyboard player, Mal
Logan (ex-Healing Force), and they also augmented the band
even further for concerts, adding a three-piece horn section.
Ian Winter left in March 1972, when he was invited to join
Daddy
Cool as second guitarist, but after Daddy Cool split in August he
returned to Carson. Broderick Smith also branched out during the year
- Carson's manager, Rhett Walker (who was also the program manager
for Melbourne radio station 3AK) decided that Smith could be promoted
as a solo artist (along similar lines to Rod Stewart's parallel solo
career with his work with The Faces). Broderick cut two singles for
the Image label, and all four sides of which were written and
produced by Brian Cadd.
Sometime during this period, Broderick was also called in to sing
on the soundtrack to Albie Falzon's surfing movie Morning Of
The Earth. Oddly enough, the track he appeared on, First Things First, was actually by
Tamam
Shud. Singer Lindsay Bjerre was having voice problems when they
cut the song, so the original vocal was done by lead guitarist Tim
Gaze. However, producer G. Wayne Thomas was evidently not
satisfied with the result so he erased Tim's vocal, and he brought in
Broderick Smith to lay down a new track. Although this has previously been reported as having been done without the Shud's knowledge or permission, recent information from Brod himself contradicts this.
This is at odds with Lindsay Bjerre's claim that Tamam Shud didn't find out about the substitution until the night of the film's premiere, later in the year, and they were understandably furious about it. (Bjerre acknowledged, however, that Brod's vocal was a good effort in its own right, despite the circumstances.)
By September 1972 Carson had signed with EMI/Harvest, and their
first single for the label, Boogie, Parts I & II also gave
them their first taste of chart success in September, going to #30
nationally. They followed up in November with their very successful
debut album, Blown, produced by Rod Coe (former
bass player with Freshwater and Country Radio); its memorable cover was another
fine design by Melbourne artist Ian McCausland. Blown fared even
better than the single, reaching #14 nationally in December.
(Meanwhile, Havoc cashed in on Carson's new prominence by reissuing
Travelling Home the same month.)
Late in the year Carson expanded yet again, when sax player Mal
Capewell (ex-Dr Kandy's Third Eye,
Company
Caine, Dada, Graham Bond's Holy Magick) joined the touring
lineup. In January they appeared at the second Sunbury Festival over
the Australia Day long weekend; their set was recorded and the song
Friday Night Groove was included on Mushroom's inaugural
release, the ambitious triple-album The Great Australian Rock
Festival (April 1973). Unfortunately, Sunbury was to be
Carson's last major performance: Winter and Logan left just
afterwards and in February it was announced that Carson had split up.
Their final record was On The Air, the full recording
of their Sunbury set, which was released in April 1973.
Various band members moved on to successful careers in other
bands. Brod Smith of course became the lead singer of
The
Dingoes, and went on to a successful solo career; he still
performs regularly in an acoustic duo. Greg Lawrie played on Chain's
Two Of A Kind LP, as well as Matt Taylor's solo LPs
Straight As A Die and Magic, and featured
prominently on Matt's 1973 hit single I Remember When I Was
Young. Mal Logan formed Altamira before rejoining Smith in
The Dingoes, and he featured on their famous debut LP. In later years
he worked with Renee Geyer.
John Capek was perhaps the most successful of all. He moved to the
US around 1973 and established himself as a songwriter. Since that
time he has had songs recorded by some of the world's biggest names,
including Rod Stewart, Chicago, Toto, Manhattan Transfer, Don
Johnson, Olivia Newton- John, Dan Hill, Marc Jordan, LRB, John
Farnham, Patty Austin and Diana Ross. He has also provided music for
the Hollywood films Cocktail and Youngblood, as well as the
Australian features Boulevard of Broken Dreams, Heaven
Tonight and What The Moon Saw.
Singles
5/70 On The
Highway / Resting Place [Rebel]
8/71 Travelling
South / Moonshine [Havoc]
11/72 Boogie,
Part I / Boogie, Part II [EMI
Harvest]
|
Albums
12/72 Blown [EMI/Harvest]
|
Producer: Rod Coe
|
12/72 The Great Australian Rock Festival -
various artists [Mushroom]
|
One track only:
Friday Night Groove
|
4/73 On The Air [EMI/Harvest]
|
(live at Sunbury 1973)
|
|
- Paul Conn - 2000 Weeks: The First Thirty Years of
Australian Rock
- Ian McFarlane - The Encylopedia of Australian Rock &
Pop
- Noel McGrath - Australian Encylopedia of Rock
- Chris Spencer & Zbig Nowara - Who's Who of Australian
Rock