John Kennedy (Australian musician)

John Kennedy
Also known as John Francis Kennedy
Born (1958-07-01) 1 July 1958
Liverpool, England, United Kingdom
Origin Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
Genres Country, R&B
Occupation(s) Musician
Instruments Vocals, guitar
Years active 1980–present
Labels
  • Waterfront
  • Red Eye
  • Mighty Boy
  • Twang!
  • PolyGram
Associated acts
  • JFK & the Cuban Crisis
  • John Kennedy's Love Gone Wrong
  • John Kennedy and the Honeymooners
  • John Kennedy's '68 Comeback Special

John Francis Kennedy (born John Kennedy 1 July 1978) is an English-born Australian musician and singer-songwriter–guitarist. He has been the leader of a number of groups including JFK & the Cuban Crisis (1980–84), and John Kennedy's Love Gone Wrong (1984–88). He has a penchant for strong melodies and "heart on your sleeve" pop songs often with country and western influences. In 1984 he described his music as "urban and western".[1]

Early life

John Kennedy was born in Liverpool, England on 1 July 1958. His father's name is also John Kennedy.[1] In October 1965 the Kennedy family migrated to Australia and settled in Brisbane.[2] Kennedy took the confirmation name, Francis, when he was ten and – as his middle name – it completes the famous JFK initials.[1] According to his website, "It seemed like a good idea at the time. The joke has long since worn off for him, but it still takes some explaining."[3][4] Kennedy grew up in Acacia Ridge, where he developed a preference for country-influenced music, especially Elvis Costello's debut album, My Aim Is True (July 1977).[1] He later recalled that "My parents listened to a lot of popular country – people like Burl Ives, Tom Jones, who was doing country then, and Johnny Cash... It was quite sophisticated country music – big vocals and a big production sound."[5]

JFK & the Cuban Crisis

John Kennedy, on lead vocals and guitar, formed his first band, JFK & the Cuban Crisis, with former school friend James Paterson on vocals and mandolin in Brisbane in October 1980.[6] The rest of the initial line-up were John Downie on bass guitar, Paul Hardman on keyboards, Holger Maschke on slide guitar and Stephen Pritchard on drums.[6][7] They established themselves on the local scene, taking up a residency at 279 Club,[1] with their smart Squeeze influenced pop. According to Australian musicologist, Ian McFarlane, they "played a brand of jangly guitar pop with country overtones."[6] They released two cassette albums, Over the Underpass and Under the Overpass (1981) and Down and Out in Brisbane and Sydney (1982).[7] They played support spots for the Pretenders and Ian Dury and the Blockheads.[1] The band issued their debut single, "Am I a Pagan", in March 1982 and then moved to Sydney in May.[6]

For the band Kennedy and Paterson recruited a new rhythm section: Greg Hall on bass guitar and Paul Rochelli on drums.[6] They started a residency at the Southern Cross Hotel in Surry Hills. A four-track extended play, Careless Talk Costs Lives (December 1982), had been recorded in Brisbane earlier and was the first release on the new Waterfront Records label.[6] It featured the song, "The Texan Thing", which received alternative radio airplay.[6] Kennedy had started writing it as "Take Something", which was a "jaunty keyboard-driven song".[1] When Paterson recommended "The Texan Thing" as their next single, Kennedy thought "that's a bit rude, he'd already had the A-side of the first single, and now he was mentioning this song I'd never heard of".[1] However Paterson had "misheard ['Take Something'] as 'Texan Thing'. So I had to go back and rewrite the lyrics."[1]

JFK & the Cuban Crisis were established on the inner city live scene alongside contemporaries, the Triffids. In 1983 Paterson was replaced by Graham Lee on guitar.[1] Soon after the group had "moved away from its pop roots, allowing the country elements to dominate proceedings."[6][7] In April 1984 they issued a three-track EP, The Ballad of Jackie O, and followed in May with their studio album, The End of the Affair.[6][7] In June that year, Kennedy disbanded the group due to "musical differences".[5][6] In September 1986 Stuart Coupe of The Canberra Times observed that he "suffered, as he still does, from accusations that he was imitating the nasal tones of Elvis Costello – something that's still very noticeable – but Kennedy insists that it's just coincidence."[5]

John Kennedy's Love Gone Wrong

Kennedy embarked on his solo career by releasing a single, "Forget", in September 1984 on Waterfront Records.[6] To promote it he formed John Kennedy's Love Gone Wrong (from early 1987, it was trimmed to Love Gone Wrong).[8][9] Alongside Kennedy were Lee on acoustic guitar, pedal steel and vocals; Adrian Bingham on saxophone; Ike on double bass; Peter Kennard (ex-Rockmelons) on percussion; Peter Timmerman (ex-Cheatin' Hearts) on drums and Martin Tucker on piano.[6][7] Kennedy described his music as "urban and western".[5] The band released a single, "Miracle (in Marrickville)" in March 1985.[6] Also in that month Colin Bloxsom joined on lead guitar (ex-Pop Rivets).[6][7]

John Kennedy's Love Gone Wrong appeared on the TV talent quest series, Starsearch, winning four heats and making the final in April 1985.[5][6] Kennedy and Bloxsom were joined by Mark Dawson on drums, Margaret Labi on harmony vocals and Barry Turnbull (ex-Chad's Tree) on bass guitar.[6][7] This line-up toured the Australian eastern states and recorded another single, "King Street" (November 1985).[6][7] Coupe described their work "Most notable among the records are 'King Street', an ode to the main street in the inner Sydney suburb of Newtown, and 'Miracle in Marrickville', a song about the suburb Kennedy was living in at the time."[5]

Early in 1986, for two months, Kennedy travelled through the United States and Mexico, while putting the band in hiatus.[6] Upon his return to Australia, Kennedy, Dawson and Turnbull were joined in the studio by Amanda Brown on violin, Sandy Chick on harmony vocals, Cory Messenger on acoustic guitar and Ian Simpson (of Flying Emus) on banjo and pedal steel.[6][5] They recorded a new single, "Big Country" (July 1986),[5][6] McFarlane described how "the song captured an authentic country truckin' feel."[6] Also early in 1986, while auditioning for new members of Love Gone Wrong, Kennedy had a casual band with Messenger and Turnbull: John Kennedy's Sweet Dreams.[6] They played country-inspired John Kennedy's Love Gone Wrong originals and covers of popular country songs.[6]

For the Big Country Tour of Australia Kennedy, Messenger and Turnbull were joined by Wayne Connolly on electric guitar and Vincent Sheehan on drums for a new line-up, which visited rural venues outside the major cities.[5][6] Kennedy acknowledged that "It's very hard to actually get people from the established country music industry in Australia to accept [outsiders], and what they see as alternative bands."[5] Coupe described their typical set list as "mostly Kennedy's songs although they frequently do cover versions of songs by Bob Dylan and The Byrds, from the periods where these artists moved into country-influenced music."[5] Red Eye Records released an eight-track compilation album, From Woe to Go, it covered Kennedy's material since 1984.[6][7]

In January 1987 Michael Armiger replaced Turnbull on bass guitar and Kennedy shortened the band's name to Love Gone Wrong.[6][9] He explained "People know who we are now, so I've severed that connection... Love Gone Wrong has a stable line up, and the members are contributing to the writing and the music. We perform mostly my stuff, but it's no longer John Kennedy and backing members."[9] They issued a single, "The Singing City" (September), which was about his birthplace, Liverpool.[6][9] It was followed by a studio album, Always the Bridegroom, in December on Mighty Boy Records.[6][7] The Canberra Times' Michael Wellham found it "is country music that avoids the cliches of being done wrong by women and depending on mates with hearts of gold. Intelligent lyrics and music that, while not easily accessible, is still immediate. Neither cattle fodder nor radio fodder."[10] In August 1988 Love Gone Wrong disbanded after Armiger left to join The Johnnys and Kennedy resumed his solo career.[6]

Solo and other projects

In August 1988 John Kennedy flew to Germany and performed at the Berlin Independence Day celebrations.[6] He returned to Australia where he released a solo album, One Day (February 1989), and an associated single, "Out of Town" (January).[6][11] He undertook the Out of Town Farewell Tour of the nation before moving to the US, then United Kingdom before settling in Berlin.[6] In 1990 Red Eye released a compilation album, Have Songs Will Travel, and in November he toured Australia to promote it.[6]

He returned to Germany where he formed John Kennedy and the Honeymooners.[6] The line-up included Christopher Blenkinsop on bass guitar and accordion, Michael "Moe" Jaksch on double bass and guitar, and Hans Rohe on guitar. An album recorded before he left Australia, Fiction Facing Facts, finally came out on Berlin-based label Twang!/PolyGram in May 1993.[6] In early 1994 Kennedy moved to Hong Kong, and then in early 1997 he moved to London. He moved back to Australia in late 1999.[12]

In 2000 he released Kennedy Town,[7] for which he returned to Berlin and used former Honeymooners to record.[13][14] In the following year he released a retrospective album, Inner West: Greatest Bits and Pieces,[7] rescued from aging master tapes.[15] Some of Kennedy's singles were distinguished by unusual cover art: "Miracle (in Marrickville)" featured a printed photograph of him standing in front of an auto electrician's garage, and for "Big County" a plastic map of Australia was affixed to every cover. Back in Australia Kennedy formed John Kennedy and the Lone Gunmen.[16] Then he formed John Kennedy's '68 Comeback Special in 2003,[7][17] a band which included former members of Love Gone Wrong.[18]

Band members

JFK & the Cuban Crisis
John Kennedy's Love Gone Wrong
John Kennedy and the Honeymooners
John Kennedy and the Lone Gunmen
John Kennedy's '68 Comeback Special

Discography

Albums

JFK & the Cuban Crisis
John Kennedy's Love Gone Wrong
solo
John Kennedy and the Honeymooners
John Kennedy's '68 Comeback Special

Extended plays

JFK & the Cuban Crisis
John Kennedy and the Honeymooners

Singles

JFK & the Cuban Crisis
solo
John Kennedy's Love Gone Wrong

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Stafford, Andrew (2006). "Ups and Downs (1980–1989)". Pig City: From the Saints to Savage Garden (2nd ed.). Brisbane: University of Queensland Press. pp. 171–174, 345, 354, 378. ISBN 0-7022-3561-X.
  2. Carter, Alison (11 March 1988), "Tall tales of love", Sydney Morning Herald
  3. Kennedy, John. "Biography | John Kennedy". John Kennedy Official Website. Archived from the original on 24 October 2009. Retrieved 20 June 2016.
  4. Cowle, June (12 November 2009). "Performer – John Kennedy and The 68 Comeback Special". Performer. 702 ABC Sydney (Australian Broadcasting Corporation). Retrieved 20 June 2016.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Coupe, Stuart (7 September 1986). "In comes urban and western!". The Canberra Times. 61 (18,603). p. 16. Retrieved 20 June 2016 via National Library of Australia.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 McFarlane, Ian (1999). "Encyclopedia entry for 'John Kennedy'". Encyclopedia of Australian Rock and Pop. St Leonards, NSW: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 1-86508-072-1. Archived from the original on 1 October 2004.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Holmgren, Magnus. "John Kennedy". hem2.passagen.se. Australian Rock Database (Magnus Holmgren). Archived from the original on 5 October 2013. Retrieved 20 June 2016.
  8. Coupe, Stuart (17 January 1988). "It's going right for Kennedy". The Sun-Herald.
  9. 1 2 3 4 Coelli, Andree (23 July 1987). "Things go right for Love Gone Wrong". The Canberra Times]]. 61 (18,920). p. 3. Retrieved 20 June 2016 via National Library of Australia.
  10. Wellham, Michael (11 February 1988). "Records will be records". The Canberra Times. 62 (19,121). p. 33. Retrieved 21 June 2016 via National Library of Australia.
  11. Howell, Anne (2 February 1989). "Why JFK was forced to defect". Sydney Morning Herald. Fairfax Media. p. 99.
  12. "John Kennedy". Archived from the original on 2009-07-27. Retrieved 2008-07-02.
  13. 1 2 "Kennedy Town review", Courier Mail, 15 February 2003
  14. Mengel, Noel (19 April 2003), "When love comes to town the second time around", Courier Mail
  15. Lalor, Peter (7 February 2002), "back to kennedy years", Daily Telegraph
  16. Holmes, Peter (16 March 2003), "THIS farewell tour thing is really taking...", Sun Herald
  17. Mengel, Noel (1 May 2003), "The urban cowboy", Courier Mail
  18. Mengel, Noel (17 April 2003), "THIS farewell tour thing is really taking...", Courier Mail
  19. Holmes, Peter (16 December 2001), "Inner West: Greatest Bits and Pieces review", Sun Herald
  20. Apter, Jeff (14 September 2007), "Someone's Dad review", Sydney Morning Herald

External links

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