The MILESAGO Interviews
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Tony Worsley
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Tony Worsley (TW) former lead singer of
Tony
Worsley & The Fabulous Blue Jays, reminisces with
David Kilby (DK), on ABC Radio 2CN-666,
"Sundays" program, 31/8/99. We pick up this thoroughly delightful
interview (I only wish I could adequately convey here in text, the
happy, laughter-spiced mood of the chat) as they discuss
Tonyís passage across from UK to Australia with his family in
the late fifties...
DK: How old were you (when you came out to Australia)?
TW: Fifteen! I was 15 on Christmas day as we crossed the
equator and I got tarred and feathered by King Neptune! [laughs]
DK: [laughing]
TW: Iíll never forget it!
DK: And came out with your parents, I presume?
TW: Yeah, four sisters, another brother, my mum & dad,
and luckily we didnít have to go to a hostel, we kinda were
sponsored by my Auntie in Brisbane and we lived at her place for a
while. So it was good, down at Wooloongabba, around there.
DK: So how did you get into music? Did you come,
yíknow, equipped with music, had you started a music career in
England?
TW: Yeah that's right. I used to sing all the time. At
school, my reports were always "daydreaming"! I was always
daydreaming, you know, I was always dreaming of being a movie-star or
a singer...I didnít like reading so I didnít become a
movie star [laughs]. But I sang when I was fourteen in London in a
talent quest and I won it, I won a contract with Decca records, and,
er...
DK: Did you?
TW: Yeah! Tommy Steele and Lonnie Donegan were the judges
and, er, but my dad said "you're migrating and that's it!", y'know?
DK: So it was at that crucial time, when youíre
heading out, that you won that?
TW: Yeah so I mean, I didnít get on with my parents
too much on the ship for the first few weeks!
DK: I bet you didn't! What did you sing for the contest?
TW: Um, Whadda You Wanna Make Those Eyes At Me For?
[sings a bit of it]
DK: Good heavens, the old Emile Ford!
TW: Yeah, and a handful of songs by Tommy Steele
DK: Oh yes, well that was good, to pick a Tommy Steele song
when he was the judge
TW: I know, it's scary, but when youíre fifteen, you
donít think like that! [laughs]. You like a song and you sing
it! [lots of laughter]
DK: So Tony, when you got out here, what sorts of things
did you do before you got in the music business proper?
TW: I was a rigger, but not in the sense riggers are today.
We used to splice wire ropes and do all the splicing, and doing all
the big, y'know, the dry docks that used to pump the water out. We
used to go down to splice the ropes for the big pumps; and my dad was
doing that so, I was 15, I had to go to work to support the other
kids and the family, yíknow? It was good, it was good, I got
along, I often spliced rope for the people down the wharf when I took
the boat in [laughs]. That came in handy!
DK: But still always dreamed of a career still?
TW: Yeah, yup! Always, always, yeah.
DK: So how did you get into it?
TW: Er, I used to go down to all the dances, and chat to
the bands and, "Oh no, not you again -- get lost!" you know? And one
time, in the School Of Arts there, or the Police Club - I can't
remember - and Lonnie Lee & the Leemen were there! And some
people in the crowd were yelling out for "Little Sister", by Elvis,
'cos it was big hit at the time
DK: Yeah!
TW: And um, I knew the words, so I got up. And the next
minute I was on there for an hour, and that all sorta started from
there! And they called me "Brisbane's Beatle" and all that sort of
stuff
DK: Why did they do that - because you had the haircut at
the time?
TW: Yeah, I'd just come out from England and I was singing
Beatles songs, ëcos I had tapes from England and stuff like
that, from Liverpool. And Iíd just get up and sing these
songs, they hadn't heard ëem before... I grew my hair long - got
bashed up a few times
DK: Did you? Yes, all part of the procedure back then
TW: Youíre not wrong! [laughs]
DK: Now, in fact I think the original group who did this,
Tony, were the Mighty Avengers?
TW: Which one was that?
DK: This is the song called So Much In Love
TW: Yeah, So Much In Love With You, yeah
DK: Which has definitely got a very British sound,
hasnít it?
TW: Well we were sorta more influenced by the Mersey sound,
more so than the American. The American was kinda like the fifties
guys, you know, like Little Richard and Chuck Berry and stuff like
that, and if we did a Chuck Berry song it was probably 'cos The
Beatles did it, you know?
DK: Yeah well we started off with Talkin' 'Bout You
which was the Chuck Berry song, wasn't it?
TW: Yeah
DK: But done by British groups
TW: Yeah, I think the Searchers did a version of that too
DK: Yeah, it was one of those songs that everyone seemed to
tackle at the time, wasnít it?
TW: Yeah but it's funny, I didn't even realise that, I just
heard it and I liked it. So I wasnít too much in tune with
what was happening anywhere else. Most of the stuff - I liked it and
we did it, but I had no power over the songs that were released,
yíknow
DK: Well, weíre about to hear a little but of So
Much In Love - a song you donít hear too much these days,
it was a big hit for the Mighty Avengers and a great version from my
special guest on "Sundays", Tony Worsley (and the Blue Jays)
"So Much In Love" plays
DK: Was that song, Tony, written by Jagger & Richard?
TW: Yeah, Mick Jagger and Keith Richard, thatís
right. I was just listening to that, and I remember we recorded that
in Adelaide, I think one night on tour they said "come in and record
a few songs" - we did it at 5AD studios. And Terry Britten played the
12-string Rickenbacker
DK: Did he really?!
TW: Yeah, that nice sound. Like a telegraph pole, you know
"dow dow dow dow dow"
DK: Why is it that everyone on the show this morning is
imitating... we were just talking to Jim McLeod the jazz-man; he was
imitating drummers
TW: Was he? [laughs]
DK: Yeah, you're not bad on guitar either, I gotta tell you
too, Tony. Now listen, you're from Brisbane, how did you team up with
the Blue Jays who were a great band, and weren't they from Melbourne?
TW: Thatís right, they were. They were a combo that
had records of their own out at the time, and ëcos I had long
hair I guess... [clears throat] ...'scuse me, bit croaky after last
night! Er, Ivan Dayman who had the bowl circuit starting up all over
Australia - one in Melbourne, one in Sydney and so on - he said to me
"How would you like to go to Melbourne for 32 pound a week?" And I
went "Wow! That sounds good". I was gettin' 4 pound a week as an
apprentice [laughs]. 32 pound, gor, gee! I donít remember
getting paid but I had a good time! [laughs]. And we joined up and
our first gig was at a sharpie dance. I never knew what a sharpie
was!
DK: A sharpie dance - this is great!
TW: Yeah, they're all golden gloves and ex-fighters and
stuff. It was at Canterbury Ballroom in Melbourne, and it killed
ëem, went really well. You know, doin' the Hippy Hippy
Shake and shakiní me hair. Theyíd never seen
anything like it I guess, and it took off from there
DK: Right, and there were a few sort of, er, members came
and went in that too. I mean, Mal Clarke was in it wasnít he?
TW: Yeah, Mal stayed to the end, and so did Royce
[Nicholls]. Bobby Johnson and Ray Eames left... they were married and
when Beatlemania spread to Australia, of course weíd be
gettiní publicity with girls in your rooms and all that -
their wives called ëem home so they left the band [laughs]. And
so the single guys were left.
DK: [laughs] And was it right that John Farrar was with
them for a while?
TW: John Farrar? No
DK: He wasn't?
TW: He might have been with the boys...
DK: Before you came upon them?
TW: Yeah, but I remember John as in the Strangers
DK: Yes, of course
TW: Heís going really well you know
DK: Oh he certainly is
TW: I was speaking to Pat Carroll two weeks ago; we were
down for Peter Doyleís 50th birthday and the poor man's got
throat cancer - he's got like a hole in his throat and talks real
raspy, but he was a wonderful singer too... and Pat was saying that
[Johnís] doing a remake of "Gidget" and he's writing all the
songs for it
DK: "Gidget" as a musical, or a movie?
TW: Well, like "Grease", but itís gonna be "Gidget".
So thatís coming in the pipeline. Heís writing and
recording all the songs for it at the moment, so thereís a
scoop for ya!
DK: Good, I like it! And that's proving very popular, that
style of thing with, er, Happy Days and Grease
TW: I think it's because people who were there in the
sixties, they're grown up, their kids have grown up, their mortgage
is paid for and they wanna go out to what they gave up, not to what
they donít know... And thatís the way I run the
restaurant, like we kinda sell memories. You know, their memories and
my memories...
DK: Pretty much coincide
TW: Yeah, and I think to be a teenager at the latter part
of your life is great! [much mutual laughter]... 55 with a smile on
our face!!!
DK: Hey youíre a good person to have on on Sunday
morning here Tony! I like this! Now, the hit that set you up, I
suppose, that rocketed you to almost instant stardom, was a vocal
version of an instrumental song by the Megatrons. How did Velvet
Waters come about?
TW: Well, we were going to leave the studios in Sydney, at
Festival at Pyrmont and weíd just recorded an album, and oh,
about 20 songs and we thought, "Oh, we're gonna go home now". And
Jimmy Cerezo, the guitarist said "What about this?" And we did it in
about ten minutes and of course the rest is history. You could spend,
like, days on a song - now they tend to spend years - but in those
days we spent days on a song and it went nowhere, and youíd do
something in ten minutes and it just catches the public ear,
yíknow? It just took off; we were really thrilled about that!
DK: Well, not only that, I mean you had a competing vocal
version with Bruce Gillespie too, didn't you?
TW: Yeah, that was a decade beforehand, and when it was
number one in Perth or somewhere, Bruce rang me and said "I like your
version", so I felt quite good ëcos I was only a kid and he was
an experienced singer, so... very nice man
DK: That's nice, isn't it?
TW: Oh it's great
DK: We might hear a bit of that. This is Tony Worsley, our
special guest here this morning on "Sundays on 2CN", and his big hit
version, Top 5 it was, in many places in Australia, and top tune,
called Velvet Waters
Velvet Waters plays
DK: And of course, Tony, that's the name of your restaurant
now, isn't it?
TW: Thatís right, I thought I would do that because
Queensland was my best state I guess (not knocking the others of
course), but there was always that "state of origin" feel in those
days - like, Sydney wouldnít play Brisbane [records], and
Brisbane wouldnít play Melbourne and I thought, well, coming
home and calling it "Velvet Waters" and itís sorta worked for
me, so... it was a good move, I didn't think I had that much brains!
[laughs]... weíve had a lotta fun!
DK: [cracking up] Now, just tell me Tony, was that, I mean
it was written by William Plunkett for The Megatrons, but I notice on
the credits that Dodd is the other writer. Now, is that Dorothy Dodd,
was that an Australian writer who did the lyrics?
TW: Yeah, and she was the president of APRA [Australian
Performing Rights Association] for a long time - she just retired in
the last five years, I rang and spoke to the lady. But, she wrote
Granada!
DK: Thatís right!
TW: A real big hit, and she said it was no good anyway 'cos
the Americans ripped her off and all that sorta stuff. In the
sixties, yíknow, no-one knew much about royalties and
copyrights and stuff... but yeah, she wrote some great songs
DK: So she's still alive then?
TW: She's still alive, yeah. I had to ask - I wanted to use
the song in a commercial for the restaurant and I had to, er, hire it
off her!
DK: Well, youd have to do the right thing if she was
[APRA's] president, wouldnít ya?
TW: Yeah! [laughs]
DK: What about tours? Did you appear on any big line-ups,
when overseas artists visited?
TW: Yeah, I guess the highlight of our career - the Blue
Jays - was with Manfred Mann, The Kinks and The Honeycombs and a guy
called Tommy Quickly!
DK: Oh yeah, and the Remo Four!
TW: Yeah. And so, er, that was the first time weíd
seen a girl drummer, like outta The Honeycombs; and it was a
fantastic tour. Um, Manfred didn't like me too much - his band liked
me - but Manfred, I remember one time in the aeroplane, he turned
around and said "I don't need a suntan or long hair" [laughs]
DK: Really?
TW: Yeah! [laughing].... Well, in the early days, I got
really mad at some of the bands because they'd come over here and
treat us like we were still bringing out prisoners, you know what I
mean?
DK: Pretty much the colonial feel were they?
TW: Yeah, that sorta thing, and they kinda rubbished disc
jockeys a lot and had a bit of fun with everyone, yíknow, now
they take it pretty seriously, but...
DK: What, you got the feeling they felt they were a bit
superior?
TW: Yeah, a little bit like that, but we certainly showed
them. I mean, itís like a boxing match. When youíre on
stage, youíve gotta beat the guys who will follow ya! [laughs]
You gotta do it good! Bring out all stops! Wreck the hall!!!
[laughing uncontrollably]
DK: [also laughing uncontrollably] Well I reckon you woulda
wrecked it with this one, Tony Worsley, this is your great version of
"Sure Know A Lot About Love"
TW: [still chuckling] Thank you
Sure
Know A Lot About Love plays
DK: Oh yes! Sure Know A Lot About Love - Tony
Worsley & the Blue Jays; and Tony Worsley is my special guest
this morning. Always had a great, thick sound, the Fabulous Blue
Jays, didnít they?
TW: They were very, er, unusual. I thought they were
probably one of the better bands around at the time, yíknow?
When they played the harmonies or the unison with the sax and guitar
it just gives it a weird sound and also a fatter sound. They were a
very phat band!
DK: It was, yeah
TW: Very good musicians, I mean, Bobby Johnson, he could
crush-roll on the drums with one hand, yíknow - they were very
very clever musos, very very good
DK: How'd you wind up on the Sunshine label?
TW: Er, well that was Ivan Dayman's...
DK: He was your manager?
TW: Yeah, and he started, like, a little branch of Festival
in Queensland, called Sunshine, which is probably, y'know...
DK: Makes sense
TW: Ha ha, not today it doesn't! It did back then before
the ozone! [laughs]... and of course there was Marcie Jones & the
Cookies, Normie Rowe, Peter Doyle, Robbie Snowden, Marty Rhone, a
lotta people on that label
DK: But you did very well for it though, didn't you?
TW: Yeah, I had a good four or five years. It was really
wonderful. Saw a lot of, certainly saw all of Australia and [other]
parts of the world, and, ah, had a good time!!
DK: So did you travel overseas then?
TW: Yeah, I went to Germany for a little while, about
three-weeks' tour, and, er, that was in the late sixties
DK: How'd you go over there?
TW: It went really well with the audiences but it didn't
seem to take off. I dunno if Ivan stepped on anyone's toes, but
nothing sorta came of it
DK: But you were hopeful?
TW: Yeah, always, I mean...
DK: The idea was to perhaps get across there and stay
across there for a bit longer, and sell records I presume?
TW: Yeah, and I was also a bit scared on my own, y'know, I
went to the States but I didn't wanna stay there, it's just scary on
your own, y'know? Um, to move into a big thing and....
DK: Yeah... When did you try the States then?
TW: Oh that was about '70 or summat like that...I
canít remember the years, I can remember the songs that were
hits, hah! [laughing].... I can remember it was the same year Mac
Davis had, er, "Baby Don't Get...
DK: ...Hooked On Me"! Oh, we're certainly talking seventies
now then!
TW: [chuckling]
DK: Yeah. And so you came back home?
TW: Yeah. And then I did the club circuit, and, um, then I
came up to Queensland, bought a yacht and lived on the Barrier Reef
for a little while... got healthy... so yeah, but I've always done
what I wanted to do. Iíve never - I don't regret anything, and
ah, I'm still dreaming now! I'm gonna make it even if I'm 70!
DK: [laughs] Wouldn't surprise me! Look, I have to say too,
that Festival have just put out a double-CD of Tony Worsley & the
Blue Jays with, gee, between 50 and 60 tracks!... pretty much the
entire output I would think?
TW: I think it is. I don't think there's anything lost in
there somewhere that we couldn't remember doin'! [laughs]
DK: And the range is eclectic! From Louie Louie to,
er, you mentioned Chan Romero 'cos you did Hippy Hippy Shake
but on here you do Humpy Dumpy, that Iíve never heard
Chan Romero doing, so er, and some left-field ones, like this for
heavenís sake! I never thought Tony Worsley and his Blue Jays
would have cut this track...
short snippet of Do You Mind? plays
DK: Yeah, Tony Newley wasn't it?
TW:Yeah, I admired that guy, I mean for a guy to do a
one-man show on Broadway and last that long, I thought was just
incredible talent
DK: And he only passed away a couple of months ago, didn't
he?
TW: Did he? Oh, I never heard that
DK: Yes he did, he died of cancer, I think it was, only
about a month ago I think, Tony. And Do You Mind, well, I
think it was a number one hit for him
TW: Yeah, and plus being a Pom, I guess, yíknow, you
have your little roots back there, y'know?
DK: And he recorded for Decca as well!
TW: Yeah, yeah
DK: It all adds up, doesn't it really?
TW: Oh it does, you don't kinda move far from home do ya?
DK: No, well you did and then you came back! Well, your
second home in any case isnít it?
TW: For sure!
DK: Do you go back to [birthplace] Hastings?
TW: Well, my parents went back. I havenít been back
there. But, you go back there, but all your friends when
youíre like 14 or 15, theyíre all married, oneís
in the army, oneís gone there, one there, so itís never
exactly the same, when you go back
DK: No it isnít
TW: You remember how it is, also you think, oh geez, I
didn't realise the place was so big! Cos you were little, y'know? Cos
youíve grown a bit [laughing]. But I've seen all the castles;
we used to go on school outings, I mean we used to go to France,
Germany, Holland on school excursions for 15 pound, I mean 'cos we
were so close to everything
DK: Of course!
TW: Yeah, like here, they don't realise. My uncle's coming
over from England next year and he said "I wanna pop up to the
Barrier Reef for a day"... I mean - a-ha-ha-ha-hah!!!
DK: Did you put him straight?
TW: Go out and drive back on the same day! They just don't
realise how big Australia is.
DK: No, thatís true. Mind you, in England, the place
is so close together, it takes you so long because there's so many
interesting things to see on the way in England
TW: That's right, and you drive the distance, like from,
say, Adelaide across to Perth across the Nullabor - you don't see too
much but if you did that in England youíd see Scotland, Wales,
the whole spectrum [laughs]
DK: Thatís right, precisely. Tony, have you got any
other... when you say you still dream and that sorta thing, and
youíll be making it when youíre 70, what other areas -
have you got plans to record any more, or are you going into some
other, er, live music?
TW: I just lined up with Jon Blanchfield who used to manage
Mondo Rock, and heís an old - Iím not sure, I think he
was on Sunshine...
DK: He was, wasnít he. He was just under "Jon", I
think, for a while?
TW: J-O-N.
DK: J-O-N, yeah
TW: And so he's looking after me, and I just got hold of
this CD that he wants to me to listen to which is Trini Lopez
Live at PJ's!
DK: Oh heavens above, yes!
TW: It's like a big band sound and itís live and
itís probably a little bit Ricky Martin-ish in the sense that
itís from that same area. So I dunno what heís up to,
but he wants me to have a listen to it, and all the songs are so
diverse - 'cos I guess when you look at this album thereís so
many ranges of different voices, different things
DK: Certainly is
TW: So, ah, and next year weíre gonna record again,
so I'm really looking forward to that!
DK: Great! Now, when youíre singing at your
restaurant there, what sort of backing do you use, what sorta songs
and what backing?
TW: 'Cos itís a small restaurant, I go into the
studios and use a band, then I put it onto MIDI, onto Mini-Disk, and
I use the disk, and I do everything from, like Drifters, er, Julio
Iglasias, er, whatever actually
DK: Really?
TW: Yeah, Stand By Me, My Girl, Dock Of
The Bay, Velvet Waters, Missing You, Raining In
My Heart, er, Mustang Sally, Midnight Hour, and all
the rock & roll stuff!
DK: Thatís a huge range then, innit?
TW: Yeah last night we had an 18th birthday and I mean
those guys weren't even born, you know, and, uh, uh, all these young
girls, like, with navel rings and stuff dancing in front of me and
[chuckles self-effacingly], and it must have looked like, uh, "I'm in
heaven, Iím in heaven!!!"... you could say I'm having a
flashback here, y'know?! [mutual laughter]... we have a lotta fun, we
have a lot of fun!
DK: Ooh, Tony! Do you ever do Something's Got A Hold On
Me?
TW: Ah, no, um, I can't get bands - itís like when I
can't get bands to do Velvet Waters. Because of the Echolette,
the tape echo, and the Fender guitar, you canít get that,
yíknow, arpeggio sound, like the pizzicato kinda thing like
the violins do... and so it comes out a bit heavier, you know what I
mean?
DK: Doesnít work
TW: No, and I think you have to use the same equipment to
get to get that sound unless you really know your equipment.... A
lotta the other stuff is sorta synthesised sound, like, not a true
guitar sound!
DK: Not like it was back in the days of the fabulous Blue
Jays!
TW: Nup!
DK: What a pity... I think we might go out with that one
though Tony; such a great song from Etta James
TW: David, I want to thank you very much mate [chuckles]
DK: Oh, it was a pleasure! Been good fun
TW: Mate, if you ever come up, please come in!
DK: I shall do that!
TW: Okay! Thank you all your listeners, thank you
DK: Alright, thanks Tony, cheers mate, bye bye... Tony
Worsley from the Blue Jays...I hope you enjoyed that... and
thatís, er, that album's just out now, double-CD full of good
stuff, and includes of course Tonyís hits, and a welter of
other gear too, so it's well worth seeking out. And we'll track down
some of the others that have come out too! They've
[Festival/Spin] released about five or six in the
last week or so, that are worth tracking down and we might do that
for ya too! Here's a little bit of "Something's Got A Hold On Me"....
Somethingís Got A Hold
On Me plays...
Thanks to
David Kilby, of ABC Radio 2CN, for
permission to use the interview, and to Paul Culnane for the
transcription.