- Gordon Parsons (song-writer)
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Gordon Parsons Born 24 December 1926
Paddington, New South Wales, AustraliaDied 17 August 1990 (aged 63)Genres Country Occupations Singer-songwriter, musician Instruments Vocals, guitar Years active 1946-1980s Labels Regal Zonophone, EMI Associated acts Slim Dusty Gordon Parsons was an Australian country music singer-songwriter, best-known as the composer of Slim Dusty's 1957 hit song "A Pub With No Beer".
Contents
Early Life and Career
He was born in Paddington, a suburb of Sydney in 1926, and moved with his parents to Cooks Creek near Bellingen, New South Wales in 1929.[1] At age 14 he left his parents' farm and subsequently worked as a sleeper-cutter. Around this time he entered a well-known radio talent quest, “Terry Dear’s Amateur Hour”, and was awarded second prize. Regal Zonophone Records, as a result of hearing him on "Amateur Hour", recorded six songs with him in 1947.[2]
As a performer, he then toured widely in rural Australia with a number of travelling shows, including Goldwyn Brothers Circus. While touring he met and married his first wife, Zelda, of the Great Ashton’s Circus family. They had a daughter (Gail) in 1949, but the marriage soon ended.[3]
He continued to tour regularly with major country acts such as Slim Dusty, Chad Morgan, and Tex Morton, and between tours “went bush” to write more songs, fish, and do menial farm work. He continued to record for Regal Zonophone, and later for various other labels, including Mystery (1950s), Hadley (1960s), CM Records (1970s), and Columbia and Selection (1980s).
"The Pub With No Beer"
In 1956, someone handed Parsons a scrap of paper with the words of a poem, "A Pub Without Beer" (written in 1943 by Queensland farmer Dan Sheahan, on finding that his local pub, the Day Dawn Hotel in Ingham, Queensland, had been drunk dry by US servicemen stationed in the area), and suggested that it might be a basis for a song. Parsons wrote "A Pub With No Beer", fleshing the poem out with word-portraits of patrons of his own local pub, the Cosmopolitan Hotel at the tiny settlement of Taylors Arm, about 25 km inland from Macksville, New South Wales. Slim Dusty heard the song while touring with Parsons, and he asked if he could record it as a novelty filler for his upcoming 1957 recording date, as he was one song short of the required four. Dusty's recording was released as the B-side of his 78 rpm release, "Saddle Boy"[4], and much to Slim's surprise, the B-side was soon getting huge air-play, particularly on Sydney radio station 2UE.[5] In 1958 it became a massive hit all over Australia, and remains the first and only 78 to be certified an Australian gold record.[6] In 1959, it reached #3 in the UK and #1 in Ireland, as well as becoming popular in Canada and the USA.
Later Career and Honours
Parsons wrote numerous other songs, and also contributed the hook and chorus for Chad Morgan’s classic “The Fatal Wedding”, but made only a few records in the 20 years after his 78rpm discs of the 1950s. In 1978, he married his third wife Jeanette and they settled in Sydney. He was inducted in 1979 into "Hands of Fame" in Australia's "capital of country music", Tamworth, New South Wales, and in 1982 he was added to Tamworth's "Hall of Renown".[7] There is also a bust of Parsons in Tamworth.[8]
Parsons died on 17 August, 1990, at age 63, and is buried in Pinegrove Cemetery.[9]
References
- ^ http://www.countrymusichalloffame.com.au/RollOfRenown/1982_GordonParson.htm
- ^ http://www.countrymusichalloffame.com.au/RollOfRenown/1982_GordonParson.htm
- ^ http://www.countrymusichalloffame.com.au/RollOfRenown/1982_GordonParson.htm
- ^ http://itunes.apple.com/au/artist/slim-dusty/id14115219
- ^ http://alldownunder.com/australian-music-songs/pub-with-no-beer.htm
- ^ http://aso.gov.au/titles/music/a-pub-with-no-beer/notes/
- ^ http://www.countrymusichalloffame.com.au/RollOfRenown/1982_GordonParson.htm
- ^ http://monumentaustralia.org.au/monument_display.php?id=23347&image=0
- ^ http://www.countrymusichalloffame.com.au/RollOfRenown/1982_GordonParson.htm
Categories:- 1926 births
- 1990 deaths
- Australian country singers
- Australian country singer-songwriters
- Australian male singers
- People from New South Wales
- Australian culture
- Australian country guitarists
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