Cold Chisel
Cold Chisel were a rock band from Adelaide, Australia. They are regarded as the canonical example of Australian pub rock, with a string of hits throughout the 1970s and 1980s, and they are acknowledged as one of the most popular and successful Australian groups of the period, although this success and acclaim was almost completely restricted to Australia and New Zealand.
Biography
Cold Chisel is the classic Australian "pub rock band", playing a tough breed of rock and blues inspired by seventies bands like Free, Deep Purple and Led Zeppelin but characterised by the story-telling skills of their main songwriter, Don Walker, whose personal influences came from Bob Dylan. Between 1978 and 1983 Cold Chisel ruled as Australia's most popular band on record and stage. The band sold over three million records in Australia alone, two thirds of that number after their bitter break-up.
They came together in Adelaide during September 1973 on the initiative of guitarist/singer Ian Moss. In the beginning the band used a different name for every performance. After they used the name of the Don Walker song "Cold Chisel" for one particular performance that name stuck. Keyboard player Walker gradually came up with a strong catalogue of songs to match the group's tough rock reputation on stage, centred mainly on their raw voiced, vodka swilling dripping-with-sweat singer Jimmy Barnes. At the start of 1977 the band resettled in Sydney hoping to land the record contract that had alluded them for more than a year. In the era of Fleetwood Mac, ELO and the Eagles Cold Chisel's sound was not deemed commercial. However WEA Records took the chance and the first self-titled album was released in April 1978 without setting the world on fire. The first single "Khe Sahn" about an Australian Vietnam veteran was banned from airplay over part of the lyric. It has since become one of the most played classic rock tracks on Australian radio. The second album saw Cold Chisel into the top ten, less raw than the band on stage, but concentrating on the songs. Filled with localized lyric references Breakfast At Sweethearts earned the band its first platinum record. June 1980's East album took the band over the top, tougher than Breakfast At Sweethearts but still stacked with strong songs, this time with other band members joining in the songwriting, and guitarist Ian Moss taking lead vocals on two songs with his strong soul voice. They followed East with the #1 live album "^Swingshift while supporting the US release of East with tours across the country. The next album was aimed at the world market, but its title said how out of place they felt. They called it Circus Animals. Tours of Europe and the UK followed.
Disillusionment set in when the band's music failed to find favour in America, adding to the internal tensions created by various members' songwriting ambitions and singer Jimmy Barnes' volatile personality. On innumerable occasions throughout the band's life he had quit the band and rejoined. But now, after ten years together Cold Chisel decided to call it quits with a farewell tour ending at the Sydney Entertainment Centre in December 1983. Barnes immediately launched an incredibly successful solo career, accumulating seven Australian No.1 albums. Guitarist Ian Moss took five years off before releasing a #1 album of his own, reuniting him with the songs of Don Walker. Walker started his own low key recording and performing career, forging relationships with a varied assortment of Australian music makers, both rock and country. Drummer Steve Prestwich joined Little River Band for two years.
Throughout the rest of the eighties and into the nineties Cold Chisel albums kept selling and fans vainly hoped for a reunion. Then, after almost two years of secret discussions and jam sessions a reunion album and tour was assembled in October 1998, but The Last Wave Of Summer project proved to be a shadow of Cold Chisel's glorious past.
~ Ed. Nimmervoll, All Music Guide
History
Beginnings 1973 - 1978
The band was formed in Adelaide in 1973 as a heavy metal act covering songs by Led Zeppelin by bassist Les Kaczmarek and keyboard player Ted Broniecki, with the rest of the line-up being organist Don Walker, guitarist Ian Moss and drummer Steve Prestwich. Seventeen-year-old singer Jimmy Barnes -- known throughout his time with the band as merely Jim Barnes -- joined in December after a brief spell as Bon Scott's replacement in Fraternity[1]. The group changed its name several times before settling on Cold Chisel in 1974 after writing a song with that title. Barnes' relationship with other band members was volatile; as a Scot he often came to blows with English-born Prestwich and he left the band several times. During these periods Moss would handle vocals until Barnes returned.
Kaczmarek left Cold Chisel in 1975 and was replaced by Phil Small. After this, Walker took creative control of the group, writing virtually all the band's material. When he left them to complete his studies in Armidale, the rest of the group followed. Barnes' older brother John Swan was a member of Cold Chisel around this time, providing backing vocals and percussion but after several violent incidents he was fired[2].
In August 1976 Cold Chisel relocated to Melbourne but found little success and moved to Sydney in November. Six months later, in May 1977, Barnes announced he was quitting Cold Chisel in order to join Swan in Feather, a hard-rocking blues band that had evolved from an earlier group called Blackfeather. A farewell performance took place in Sydney that went so well the singer changed his mind and the following month Cold Chisel was picked up by the Warner Music Group.
Main career 1978 - 1982
In the early months of 1978, Cold Chisel recorded their self-titled debut album with producer Peter Walker. All tracks were written by Don Walker (Barnes contributed some lyrics to the song "Juliet"). Cold Chisel was released in April and featured appearances from harmonica player Dave Blight, who would become a regular on-stage guest, and saxophonists Joe Camilleri and Wilbur Wilde from Jo Jo Zep & The Falcons. The following month the song "Khe Sanh" was released as a single but was deemed too offensive for radio airplay by censors because of the lyric "Their legs were often open/But their minds were always closed"[3]. Despite that setback, it still reached #48 on the Australian singles chart and number four on the Adelaide charts thanks mainly to the band's rising popularity as a touring act and some local radio support in Adelaide where the single was aired in spite of the ban. "Khe Sanh" has since become Cold Chisel's signature tune and arguably its most popular among fans. The song was later remixed for inclusion on the international version of 1980's East.
The band's next release was a live E.P. titled "You're Thirteen, You're Beautiful, and You're Mine", in November. This had been recorded at a show at Sydney's Regent Theatre in 1977 that had featured Midnight Oil as one of the support acts. One of the EP's tracks, "Merry-Go-Round" was left off the first album and later recorded on the follow-up, Breakfast at Sweethearts. This album was recorded between July 1978 and January 1979 with experienced producer Richard Batchens, who had previously worked with Richard Clapton, Sherbet and Blackfeather. Batchens smoothed out some of the band's rough edges and gave their songs a sophisticated sound that made the album a hit. Once again, all songs were penned by Walker, with Barnes collaborating on the first single "Goodbye (Astrid, Goodbye)". This song became a live favourite for the band, and even went on to be performed by U2 during Australian tours in the 1980s.
By now the band stood at the verge of major national success, even without significant radio airplay or support from Countdown, the country's most important youth music program, which the band consistently boycotted throughout its career. The band had become notorious for its wild behaviour, particularly from Barnes who was rumoured to have had sex with over 1000 women and was known to consume more than a bottle of vodka every night during performances. Moss and Walker were also known to be heavy drinkers and the constant physical altercations between the singer and Prestwich also attracted widespread attention[2].
Following their problematic relationship with Batchens, Cold Chisel chose Mark Opitz to produce the next single, "Choir Girl", a Don Walker composition dealing with a young woman's experience with abortion. The track became a hit still played on radio and paved the way for Cold Chisel's next album. Recorded over two months in 1980, East reached No. 2 on the Australian album charts and was the second-highest selling album by an Australian artist for the year. Despite the continued dominance of Walker, during Cold Chisel's later career all four of the other members began to contribute songs to the band, and this was the first of their albums to feature songwriting contributions from each member of the band. Cold Chisel is one of the few Australian rock bands to score hits with songs written by every member of the group.
Of the album's twelve tracks, two were written by Barnes with Moss, Prestwich and Small contributing one each. The songs ranged from straight ahead rock tracks such as "Standing on the Outside" and "My Turn to Cry" to rockabilly-flavoured work-outs ("Rising Sun", written about Barnes' relationship with his girlfriend Jane Mahoney) and pop-laced love songs ("My Baby", featuring Joe Camilleri on saxophone) to a poignant piano ballad about prison life, "Four Walls". The cover featured Barnes asleep in a bathtub wearing a kamikaze bandanna in a room littered with junk and was inspired by Jacques-Louis David's 1793 painting The Death of Marat. The Ian Moss-penned "Never Before" was chosen as the first song to air by radio station Triple J when it switched to the FM band that year.
Following the release of East, Cold Chisel embarked on the Youth in Asia Tour, which took its name from a lyric in "Star Hotel". This tour saw the group play more than 60 shows in 90 days and would form the basis of 1981's double live album Swingshift.
In April 1981 the band was nominated for all seven of the major awards at the joint Countdown/TV Week music awards held at the Sydney Entertainment Centre, and won them all. As a protest against the concept of a TV magazine being involved in a music awards ceremony, the band refused to accept their awards and finished the night by performing "My Turn to Cry". After only one verse and chorus, they smashed up the set and left the stage[4].
Swingshift debuted at No. 1 on the Australian album charts, crystallizing the band's status as the biggest-selling act in the country. Elsewhere, however, Cold Chisel was unable to make an impact. With a slightly different track-listing, East had been issued in the United States and the band toured with Cheap Trick but while they were popular as a live act the American arm of their label did little to support the album. According to Barnes biographer Toby Creswell, at one point the band was ushered into an office to listen to the US master only to find it drenched in tape hiss and other ambient noise[2], making it almost unreleasable. The band were even booed off stage after a lackluster performance in Dayton, Ohio in May, 1981 opening for Ted Nugent, who at the time was touring with his guitar army aka the 'D.C. Hawks'. European audiences were more accepting of the band and the group developed a small but significant fan-base in Germany.
Cold Chisel returned to Australia in August 1981 and soon began work on the album Circus Animals, again with Opitz producing. The album opened with "You Got Nothing I Want", an aggressive Barnes-penned hard rock track that attacked the American industry for its handling of the band. The song would later cause problems for Barnes when he later attempted to break into the US market as a solo performer as senior music executives there continued to hold it against him. Like its predecessor, Circus Animals contained songs of contrasting styles, with harder-edged tracks like "Bow River" and "Hound Dog" in place beside more expansive ballads such as "Forever Now" and the Prestwich composition "When the War Is Over". This track has proved to be the most popular Cold Chisel song for other artists to record. Uriah Heep included a version on the 1989 album Raging Silence and John Farnham has recorded it twice, once while he and Prestwich were members of Little River Band in the mid-80s and again for his 1990 solo album Age of Reason. The song was also a No. 1 hit for former Australian Idol contestant Cosima De Vito in 2004 and was also performed (by Bobby Flynn during that show's 2006 season.
To launch the album, they performed under a circus tent at Wentworth Park in Sydney and toured heavily once more, including a show in Darwin that attracted more than 10 per cent of the city's population[5].
Break up and aftermath 1983 - 1984
Circus Animals and its three singles, "You Got Nothing I Want", "Forever Now" and "When the War is Over" were all major hits in Australia during 1982 but further success was continuing to elude them and cracks were beginning to appear. In early 1983 the band toured Germany but the shows went so badly that in the middle of tour Walker upended his keyboard and stormed off stage during one show and Prestwich was fired. Returning to Australia, he was replaced by Ray Arnott, formerly of the 1970s progressive rock band Spectrum. After this, Barnes requested a large advance from management. Now married with a young child, exorbitant spending had left him almost broke. His request was refused however because there was a standing arrangement that any advance to one band member had to be paid to all the others. After a meeting on 17 August during which Barnes quit the band it was decided that Cold Chisel would split up[6]. A final concert series known as The Last Stand was planned and a final studio album was also recorded. Prestwich returned for the tour, which began in October. Before the Sydney shows however, Barnes lost his voice and those dates were re-scheduled for December. Their final performance was at the Sydney Entertainment Centre on 12 December 1983, apparently precisely 10 years since their first live appearance. The Sydney shows formed the basis of the film The Last Stand, the biggest-selling concert film of any Australian band. Several other recordings from the tour were used on the 1984 live album Barking Spiders Live: 1984, the title of which was inspired by the name the group occasionally used to play warm-up shows before tours, and as b-sides for a three-CD singles package known as Three Big XXX Hits, issued ahead of the release of the 1994 compilation album, Teenage Love.
During breaks in the tour, Twentieth Century was recorded. It was a fragmentary process, spread across various studios and sessions as the individual members often refused to work together, but nonetheless successful. Released in February 1984, it reached No. 1 upon release and included the songs "Saturday Night" and "Flame Trees", both of which remain radio staples. "Flame Trees", co-written by Prestwich and Walker, took its title from the BBC series The Flame Trees of Thika although it was lyrically inspired by the organist's hometown of Grafton, New South Wales. Barnes later recorded an acoustic version of the song on his 1993 album Flesh and Wood and the track was also covered by Sarah Blasko in 2006.
Barnes launched a solo career in January 1984 that has since seen him score eight Australian No. 1 albums and an array of hit singles. One of those, "Too Much Ain't Enough Love" also peaked at No. 1. Throughout his solo career he has recorded with INXS, Tina Turner, Joe Cocker, John Farnham and a long list of other Australian and international artists and continues to the present as arguably the country's most popular male rock singer.
Prestwich joined Little River Band in 1984 and appeared on the albums Playing to Win and No Reins before departing in 1986 to join John Farnham's touring band. Walker, Moss and Small all took extended breaks from music. Small, the least prominent member of the band virtually disappeared from the scene for many years, playing in a variety of minor acts. Walker formed Catfish in 1988, ostensibly a solo band with floating membership that included Moss, Charlie Owen and Dave Blight at various times. The music had a distinctly modern jazz aspect and his recordings during this phase attracted little commercial success. During 1989 he wrote several songs for Moss including "Tucker's Daughter" and "Telephone Booth" that the guitarist recorded on his debut solo album Matchbook. Both the album and "Tucker's Daughter" peaked at No. 1 on the chart in 1989 and won Moss five ARIA Awards. His other albums met with little success.
Reunion
Throughout the 80s and most of the 90s, Cold Chisel was courted to re-form but obstinately refused, at one point reportedly turning down an offer of $5 million to play a single show in each of the major Australian state capitals. While Moss and Walker often collaborated on projects, neither would work with Barnes again until Walker wrote "Stone Cold" for the singer's Heat in 1993. The pair then recorded an acoustic version for Flesh and Wood later the same year. Thanks primarily to continued radio airplay and Jimmy Barnes' massive solo success, Cold Chisel's legacy remained solidly intact and by the early 90s the group had surpassed 3 million album sales, most of which had been sold since 1983. The 1991 compilation album Chisel was re-issued and re-packaged several times, once with the long-deleted 1978 EP as a bonus disc and a second time in 2001 as a double album. The Last Stand soundtrack album was also finally released in 1992 and in 1994 a complete album of previously unreleased demo and rare live recordings also surfaced. Teenage Love spawned a string of hit singles that fuelled speculation Cold Chisel would reform, to no avail.
Cold Chisel eventually reunited in 1998 to record the album The Last Wave of Summer and supported it with a sold-out national concert tour. The album debuted at number one on the Australian album chart. In 2003, the band re-grouped once more for the "Ringside" tour and in 2005 again reunited to perform at a benefit for the victims of the Boxing Day tsunami at the Myer Music Bowl in Melbourne.
In recent times it has been suggested that the band would reform and do another "Ringside" type tour in mid-2008, however this has not occurred.
Tours
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Personnel
- Jimmy Barnes (lead vocals / guitar)
- Ian Moss (lead guitar / lead vocals)
- Don Walker (keyboards / backing vocals)
- Steve Prestwich (drums / backing vocals)
- Phil Small (bass guitar)
Additional players
- Les Kaczmarek (bass guitar, October 1973- July 1975)
- Ray Arnott (drums, 1983)
- Dave Blight (harmonica)
- Billy Rodgers (saxophone)
- Jimmy Sloggett (saxophone)
- Andy Bickers (saxophone)
- Rene Geyer (backing vocals)
- Vanetta Fields (backing vocals)
- Megan Williams (backing vocals, Flame Trees)
- Peter Walker (acoustic guitar, Khe Sanh)
- Joe Camilleri (saxophone, My Baby and Home and Broken Hearted)
- Wilbur Wilde (saxophone, Home and Broken Hearted, Rosaline, Just How Many Times)
- James Morris (back up singer)
Discography
Standard Albums
Extended Plays
Compilations
Singles
- Khe Sanh
- Goodbye (Astrid Goodbye)
- Shipping Steel
- Choir Girl
- Cheap Wine
- My Baby
- You Got Nothing I Want
- Forever Now
- When the War Is Over
- Hold Me Tight
- Saturday Night
- Flame Trees
- Misfits
- Hands Out of My Pocket
- Yesterdays
- Nothing But You
- Water Into Wine
- The Things I Love In You
Filmography
Soundtrack
- Last Stand
- Vision
- Ringside... The Movie
- Rockpalast
Composer
Actor
Self
Cold Chisel (April 1978) WEA LP
Cold Chisel was the self-titled debut album of Australian pub rock band Cold Chisel, released in April 1978.
All songs by Don Walker, except as noted
1. "Juliet" (Walker, Jim Barnes)
2. "Khe Sanh"
3. "Home And Broken Hearted"
4. "One Long Day"
5. "Northbound"
6. "Rosaline"
7. "Daskarzine"
8. "Just How Many Times"
In 1999, Atlantic released a remastered version of the album with four bonus tracks:
1. "Teenage Love Affair" from the Teenage Love album
2. "Drinkin' In Port Lincoln" also from the Teenage Love album
3. "H-Hour Hotel"
4. "On The Road"
Singles: "Khe Sanh"
Credits
* Jim Barnes - vocals
* Ian Moss - vocals, guitar
* Don Walker - organ, piano
* Steve Prestwich - drums
* Phil Small - bass
* Dave Blight - harmonica, track 2
* Peter Walker - acoustic guitar, track 2
* Wilbur Wilde - saxophone, tracks 3, 6 and 8
Breakfast at Sweethearts (February 1979) WEA 1LP
Breakfast at Sweethearts was the second studio album by Australian pub rock band Cold Chisel, released in February 1979.
All songs by Don Walker, except as noted
1. "Conversations"
2. "Merry-Go-Round"
3. "Dresden"
4. "Goodbye (Astrid Goodbye)" (Walker, Jim Barnes)
5. "Plaza"
6. "Shipping Steel"
7. "I'm Gonna Roll Ya"
8. "Showtime"
9. "Breakfast at Sweethearts"
10. "The Door"
Singles: "Goodbye (Astrid Goodbye)", "Shipping Steel"
Credits
* Jim Barnes - vocals
* Don Walker - organ, piano
* Ian Moss - guitar, vocals
* Steve Prestwich - drums
* Phil Small - bass
East (June 1980) WEA 1LP
East was the third studio album by Australian pub rock band Cold Chisel, released in June 1980. The album peaked at No. 2 on the national chart and was the biggest-selling Australian album release of the year. The cover art was inspired by the 1798 painting The Death of Marat.
The album was preceded by the release of the single "Choir Girl" that was actually recorded in October 1979 and released in November, the band's first recording with Mark Opitz who would then work on all subsequent Cold Chisel albums. The songs "Cheap Wine" and "My Baby" were also released as singles. East was the first Cold Chisel album to feature tracks written by all members of the band.
All songs by Don Walker, except as noted
1. "Standing on the Outside"
2. "Never Before" (Ian Moss)
3. "Choir Girl"
4. "Rising Sun" (Jim Barnes)
5. "My Baby" (Phil Small)
6. "Tomorrow"
7. "Cheap Wine"
8. "Best Kept Lies" (Steve Prestwich)
9. "Ita"
10. "Star Hotel"
11. "Four Walls"
12. "My Turn to Cry" (Barnes)
Chart position: 2
Singles: "Choir Girl", "Cheap Wine", "My Baby"
Credits
* Jim Barnes - vocals
* Don Walker - organ, piano
* Ian Moss - guitar, lead vocals tracks 2, 5 and 8
* Phil Small - bass
* Steve Prestwich - drums
* Joe Camilleri - saxophone track 5
Swingshift (1981) WEA 2LP
Swingshift is a live album released by Australian band Cold Chisel in 1981. It was their first album to reach No. 1 on the Australian chart, debuting there in its first week.
Disc: 1
1. "Conversations"
2. "Shipping Steel"
3. "Breakfast at Sweethearts"
4. "Rising Sun"
5. "Choir Girl"
6. "Khe Sanh"
7. "My Turn to Cry"
8. "Four Walls"
9. "One Long Day"
Disc: 2
1. "Knockin' on Heaven's Door"
2. "My Baby"
3. "Star Hotel"
4. "Don't Let Go"
5. "Long as I Can See the Light"
6. "The Party's Over"
7. "Cheap Wine"
8. "Goodbye (Astrid Goodbye)"
Chart position: 1
Credits
* Jim Barnes - vocals
* Ian Moss - guitar, lead vocals track 9, disc 1 and track 6, disc 2
* Don Walker - organ, piano
* Phil Small - bass
* Steve Prestwich - drums
Circus Animals (1982) WEA 1LP
Circus Animals was a studio album released by Australian band Cold Chisel in 1982. It was recorded and mixed at Paradise Studios and EMI Studio 301, Sydney (Sep-Dec 1981). It spent 1 week at the top of the Australian album charts in 1982. Many of the album's songs were written as a direct reaction to the pop success of the previous LP East and feature unusual, experimental arrangements. The first single "You Got Nothing I Want" was written by singer Jimmy Barnes about the disinterest shown in them by their American label rep during the band's 1981 US tour. "Bow River" was a song by guitarist Ian Moss, written about a sheep station in the Northern Territory where his brother Peter had once worked. The song was included as the B-side to one of the album's singles but proved so popular that it was often played on radio in its own right. It is the one Cold Chisel song that Moss still plays live. "When the War Is Over" was written by drummer Steve Prestwich and has been covered numerous times by Little River Band, John Farnham, Uriah Heep, Cosima De Vito and Something for Kate. "Letter to Allan" was dedicated to a former member of the band's road crew, Allan Dallow, who died in a truck accident.
Five of the album's ten songs were later covered for the 2007 tribute album Standing on the Outside: "You Got Nothing I Want" (Alex Lloyd), "Bow River" (Troy Cassar-Daley), "Forever Now" (Pete Murray), "Houndog" (You Am I) and "When the War is Over" (Something for Kate).
1. "You Got Nothing I Want"
2. "Bow River"
3. "Forever Now"
4. "Taipan"
5. "Houndog"
6. "Wild Colonial Boy"
7. "No Good for You"
8. "Numbers Fall"
9. "When the War Is Over"
10. "Letter to Allan"
Chart position: 1
Singles: "You Got Nothing I Want", "Forever Now", "When the War Is Over"
Credits
* Jim Barnes - vocals
* Ian Moss - guitar, lead vocals tracks 2 and 9
* Don Walker - organ, keyboard
* Steve Prestwich - drums
* Phil Small - bass
Twentieth Century (1984) WEA 1LP
Twentieth Century was the final studio album for Australian band Cold Chisel until the group reformed in 1998. The album was written and recorded over various sessions during the period of the band's break-up and during breaks in their final tour. It was released in early 1984 and peaked at No. 1 on the Australian albums chart.
1. "Build This Love"
2. "Twentieth Century"
3. "Ghost Town"
4. "Saturday Night"
5. "Painted Doll"
6. "No Sense"
7. "Flame Trees"
8. "Only One"
9. "Hold Me Tight"
10. "Sing To Me"
11. "The Game"
12. "Janelle"
13. "Temptation"
Chart position: 1
Singles: "Hold Me Tight", "Saturday Night", "Flame Trees"
Credits
* Jim Barnes - vocals
* Ian Moss - guitar, lead vocals tracks 4 and 12
* Don Walker - organ, keyboard
* Steve Prestwich - drums
* Phil Small - bass
* Megan Williams - backing vocals, track 7
Barking Spiders Live: 1983 (1984) WEA 1LP
Barking Spiders Live: 1983 is a live album by Australian rock band Cold Chisel. It was recorded during the final performances of their Last Stand tour in 1983, at the Sydney Entertainment Centre. The name of the album derives from a name the band used occasionally when playing warm-up shows before tours. A "barking spider" is a slang term for flatulence.
All tracks by Don Walker except where indicated
1. Merry-Go-Round
2. You've Got Nothing I Want (Barnes)
3. No Sense (Barnes)
4. Hold Me Tight
5. Tomorrow
6. Forever Now (Prestwich)
7. Standing on the Outside
8. Bow River (Moss)
9. It's Only Make Believe (Nance/Twitty)
10. Twentieth Century
11. Taipan
12. Georgia (Gorrell/Carmichael)
Credits
* Jim Barnes - vocals, guitar
* Ian Moss - guitar, lead vocals tracks 8 and 12
* Don Walker - organ, piano
* Phil Small - bass
* Steve Prestwich - drums
* Dave Blight - harmonica
The Last Stand (1992) Warner 1CD Audio
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Cold Chisel: The Studio Sessions a
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Chisel a
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Last Stand July, 1984 (cinema), October 2005 (DVD) Warner Music Group
Last Stand is a film of the final concert appearances by Australian rock band Cold Chisel. It was filmed on 13 and 15 December 1983 and released to cinemas in July 1984. A DVD version featuring extra footage was issued in October 2005.
1. "Standing On The Outside"
2. "Cheap Wine"
3. "Rising Sun"
4. "Janelle"
5. "Khe Sanh"
6. "Twentieth Century"
7. "You Got Nothing I Want"
8. "Tomorrow"
9. "Star Hotel"
10. "Choir Girl"
11. "Bow River"
12. "Flame Trees"
13. "Saturday Night"
14. "Wild Thing"
15. "Goodbye"
16. "Dont Let Go"
Bonus tracks from 2005 edition:
1. "Only One"
2. "River Deep Mountain High"
3. "Only Make Believe"
4. Soundcheck: "Build This Love"
The Last Wave of Summer (1998)
The Last Wave of Summer is the 1998 reunion album for Australian pub rock band Cold Chisel. It reached number-one in Australia for one week in October 1998.
1. "Mr. Crown Prosecutor"
2. "The Things I Love In You"
3. "Baby's On Fire"
4. "Way Down"
5. "Bal-A-Versailles"
6. "Yakuza Girls"
7. "He Can't Believe It's Over With You"
8. "Angel In My Room"
9. "Never Stop Loving You"
10. "Red Sand"
11. "Pretty Little Thing"
12. "So Hard"
13. "Water Into Wine"
14. "The Last Wave Of Summer"
In addition to these, the album has a hidden track entitled:
* "Once around the Sun"[1]
The album covers topics ranging from the serious, including the Australian Aboriginal stolen generation in the Ian Moss penned Red Sand and judicial inequity in Don Walker's Mr. Crown Prosecutor, to the flippant, such as the pub adventure Yakuza Girls.
A rockabilly version of "Yakuza Girls" appreared on Don Walker's 2006 solo album Cutting Back.
Chart Position: 1
Singles: "Things I Love In You", "Water Into Wine", "The Things I Love in You"
Ringside (2003) 1CD Audio
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Extended Plays
You're Thirteen, You're Beautiful, and You're Mine (November 1978)
You're Thirteen, You're Beautiful, and You're Mine was a live EP by Australian pub rock band Cold Chisel, recorded at the Regent Theatre in Sydney in 1977, and released in November 1978. After a long period of unavailability, the EP was re-released as a bonus disk with the second pressing of the 1991 compilation album Chisel. The title is a parody of the song You're Sixteen by the Sherman Brothers, which was popularized by Ringo Starr.
All songs by Don Walker except "Wild Thing" Chip Taylor
1. "One Long Day"
2. "Home And Broken Hearted"
3. "Merry-Go-Round"
4. "Mona And The Preacher"
5. "Wild Thing"
Credits
* Jim Barnes - (vocals)
* Don Walker - organ, piano
* Ian Moss - guitar, vocals
* Steve Prestwich - drums
* Phil Small - bass
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Compilations
Radio Songs: A Best of (1985) WEA 1LP
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A1 Bow River (4:20)
A2 Cheap Wine (3:22)
A3 Goodbye (Astrid Goodbye) (2:49)
A4 No Sense (2:57)
A5 Breakfast At Sweethearts (4:08)
A6 Saturday Night (4:23)
B1 You Got Nothing I Want (3:16)
B2 My Baby (3:59)
B3 Forever Now (4:25)
B4 Khe Sanh (4:07)
B5 Choir Girl (3:14)
B6 Flame Trees (4:25)
Razor Songs (18 January 1988) WEA 1CD Audio
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Written By Don Walker (tracks: 1 - 5, 7, 8, 10)
1 Home And Broken Hearted (3:22) Producer - Keith Walker
2 Standing On The Outside (2:53) Producer - Cold Chisel , Mark Opitz
3 Conversations (4:55) Producer - Cold Chisel , Mark Opitz
4 Hold Me Tight (1:42) Producer - Cold Chisel
5 Ghost Town (1:21) Producer - Cold Chisel
6 My Turn To Cry (3:20) Written-By - Jimmy Barnes
7 Houndog (5:02) Producer - Cold Chisel , Mark Opitz
8 Painted Doll (2:20) Producer - Cold Chisel
9 Rising Sun (3:26) Producer - Cold Chisel , Mark Opitz Written-By - Jimmy Barnes
10 Merry Go Round (3:39) Producer - Keith Walker
11 Wild Thing (5:04) Producer - Keith Walker Written-By - Chip Taylor
Chisel (1991, 2001) Warner Music Group 1CD Audio and 2CD Audio
Chisel is the 1991 compilation album by Australian pub rockers Cold Chisel. It features a selection of their best songs from previous albums, including live versions of the tracks "Merry-Go-Round", "Star Hotel" and "Goodbye (Astrid Goodbye)". The track "Misfits" was a previously unreleased song and was removed from later re-issues of this album. A limited edition release of this album included the long-deleted 1978 live EP "You're Thirteen, You're Beautiful, and You're Mine.
1. "Standing On The Outside"
2. "Rising Sun"
3. "You Got Nothing I Want"
4. "No Sense"
5. "Misfits"
6. "Breakfast At Sweethearts"
7. "My Baby"
8. "Bow River"
9. "Choir Girl"
10. "Cheap Wine"
11. "Forever Now"
12. "Saturday Night"
13. "Flame Trees"
14. "Merry-Go-Round"
15. "Star Hotel"
16. "Goodbye (Astrid Goodbye)"
17. "When the War Is Over"
18. "Khe Sanh"
Remastered 2001 edition
In 2001 Cold Chisel's entire back catalogue was digitally remastered. To coincide with the new re-issues, Chisel was not only remastered but also expanded to include tracks from the 1998 reunion album The Last Wave of Summer. Featuring a new black cover, the 2001 version was also released as a limited 'bonus disc' edition which included a 20 page booklet.
2001 edition track listing:
1. "Standing On The Outside"
2. "Rising Sun"
3. "The Things I Love In You"
4. "Star Hotel"
5. "When the War is Over"
6. "Breakfast At Sweethearts"
7. "My Baby"
8. "You Got Nothing I Want"
9. "Yakuza Girls"
10. "Way Down"
11. "Forever Now"
12. "Cheap Wine"
13. "Merry-Go-Round"
14. "Water Into Wine"
15. "Bow River"
16. "Flame Trees"
17. "Saturday Night"
18. "Goodbye (Astrid Goodbye)"
19. "Choir Girl"
20. "Khe Sanh"
Limited edition bonus disc:
1. "Twentieth Century"
2. "Home and Broken Hearted"
3. "My Turn To Cry"
4. "No Sense"
5. "Four Walls"
6. "Shipping Steel"
7. "Conversations"
8. "Never Before"
9. "Ita"
10. "Knockin' on Heaven's Door"
11. "Hold Me Tight"
12. "Best Kept Lies"
13. "Georgia"
14. "Wild Thing"
15. "One Long Day"
16. "The Last Wave of Summer"
Singles: "Misfits"
Teenage Love (1994) WEA 1CD Audio
Teenage Love is a compilation album by Australian pub rock band Cold Chisel, released in 1994. The album collected demo recordings and live tracks that were not used on previous albums. "Hands Out of My Pocket", "Nothing But You" and "Yesterdays" were issued as singles. "The Party's Over" was a live staple for the band but not included on earlier live albums. "A Little Bit of Daylight" is an early version of the song recorded by Jimmy Barnes as "Daylight" on his solo album Bodyswerve.
1. Hands Out of My Pocket
2. Nothing But You
3. When the Sun Goes Down
4. Suicide Sal
5. It Ain't Wrong
6. Teenage Love Affair
7. Monica
8. Mona and the Preacher
9. Drinkin' in Port Lincoln
10. Payday in a Pub
11. Metho Blues
12. Yesterdays
13. Notion for You
14. F-111
15. A Little Bit of Daylight
16. The Party's Over
Singles: "Hands Out of My Pocket", "Yesterdays", "Nothing But You"
Credits
Jimmy Barnes- vocals
Ian Moss- vocals on tracks 2, 11 and 16, guitar
Don Walker- organ, piano
Steve Prestwich- drums
Phil Small- bass
Standing on the Outside: The Songs of Cold Chisel (2007) Rhino Records 2CD Audio
Standing on the Outside: The Songs of Cold Chisel is a tribute album dedicated to the songs of Australian band Cold Chisel. The album features 18 songs recorded by Australian and New Zealand artists The Living End, Dallas Crane, Pete Murray, Ben Lee, Thirsty Merc, Evermore, Paul Kelly, Troy Cassar-Daley, Grinspoon, You Am I, Katie Noonan, Something for Kate, Alex Lloyd, Shane Nicholson, The Waifs, Sarah Blasko, Augie March and The Flairz.
Standing on the Outside was conceived by Ed St John of Warner Australia as a tribute to the label's best-selling Australian act[7]. The album featured liner notes by Glenn A. Baker. A special edition featured a second CD containing the original 18 Cold Chisel songs.
1. The Living End - Rising Sun (Barnes)
2. Dallas Crane - Standing on the Outside (Walker)
3. Pete Murray - Forever Now (Prestwich)
4. Ben Lee - No Sense (Barnes)
5. Thirsty Merc - My Baby (Small)
6. Evermore - Water Into Wine (Prestwich)
7. Paul Kelly - Khe Sanh (Walker)
8. Troy Cassar-Daley - Bow River {Moss)
9. Grinspoon - Saturday Night (Walker)
10. You Am I - Houndog (Walker)
11. Katie Noonan - Choir Girl (Walker)
12. Something for Kate - When the War Is Over (Prestwich)
13. Alex Lloyd - You Got Nothing I Want (Barnes)
14. Shane Nicholson - Cheap Wine (Walker)
15. The Waifs - Four Walls (Walker)
16. Sarah Blasko - Flame Trees (Walker/Prestwich)
17. Augie March - Janelle (Walker)
18. The Flairz featuring Dave Larkin - Shipping Steel (Walker)
Bonus CD (all tracks by Cold Chisel)
1. Rising Sun (Barnes)
2. Standing on the Outside (Walker)
3. Forever Now (Prestwich)
4. No Sense (Barnes)
5. My Baby (Small)
6. Water Into Wine (Prestwich)
7. Khe Sanh (Walker)
8. Bow River (Moss)
9. Saturday Night (Walker)
10. Houndog (Walker)
11. Choir Girl (Walker)
12. When the War Is Over (Prestwich)
13. You Got Nothing I Want (Barnes)
14. Cheap Wine (Walker)
15. Four Walls (Walker)
16. Flame Trees (Walker/Prestwich)
17. Janelle (Walker)
18. Shipping Steel (Walker)
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DVD's
Last Stand July, 1984 (cinema), October 2005 (DVD) Warner Music Group
Last Stand is a film of the final concert appearances by Australian rock band Cold Chisel. It was filmed on 13 and 15 December 1983 and released to cinemas in July 1984. A DVD version featuring extra footage was issued in October 2005.
1. "Standing On The Outside"
2. "Cheap Wine"
3. "Rising Sun"
4. "Janelle"
5. "Khe Sanh"
6. "Twentieth Century"
7. "You Got Nothing I Want"
8. "Tomorrow"
9. "Star Hotel"
10. "Choir Girl"
11. "Bow River"
12. "Flame Trees"
13. "Saturday Night"
14. "Wild Thing"
15. "Goodbye"
16. "Dont Let Go"
Bonus tracks from 2005 edition:
1. "Only One"
2. "River Deep Mountain High"
3. "Only Make Believe"
4. Soundcheck: "Build This Love"
Starring: Jim Barnes (vocals, guitar), Ian Moss (vocals, guitar), Don Walker (organ, piano), Phil Small (bass), Steve Prestwich (drums)
Director: Tony Stevens
Producer: John McLean
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Vision
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Ringside... The Movie
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Rockpalast (26 May 2007) Warner Music Group
Rockpalast is a live film of Australian band Cold Chisel filmed during their 1982 tour. The concert is from their performance at Markthalle, Hamburg, Germany on 3 December.
1. Merry Go Round
2. Khe Sanh
3. Wild Colonial Boy
4. Taipan
5. Bow River
6. One Long Day
7. You Got Nothing I Want
8. My Turn To Cry
9. Forever Now
10. Letter To Alan
11. Houndog
12. Four Walls
13. Standing on the Outside
14. Don't Let Go
15. Star Hotel
16. Goodbye
17. Cheap Wine
18. Wild Thing
19. The Party's Over
20. Rising Sun
21. Conversations
22. When Something is Wrong With My Baby
23. Breakfast at Sweethearts
24. I'm Gonna Roll Ya
Starring: Jim Barnes (vocals, guitar), Ian Moss (vocals, guitar), Don Walker (organ, piano), Phil Small (bass), Steve Prestwich (drums)
Director: Christian Wagner
Producer: Peter Ruechel
Running time: 115 minutes
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Links
References
- ^ Creswell, Toby Jimmy Barnes: Too Much Ain't Enough (1993)
- ^ a b c Creswell
- ^ McGrath, Noel The Australian Encyclopedia of Rock and Pop (1983)
- ^ Creswell, Toby and Fabinyi, Martin The Real Thing
- ^ Creswell, et. al
- ^ Creswell, et al.
- ^ "Chisel come in from the cold". The Age. 2007-03-30.