Vale Chris Bailey
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Re: Vale Chris Bailey
Yep sad news, one of the first bands I feel in love with. Punk legends and oh so much more.The curse is dead. -
Re: Vale Chris Bailey
Charismatic, aloof, one of the great Australian lyricists. Right from the start he was just as comfortable lending his vocals to punk belters or bluesy ballads. Thanks for the memories Chris.Comment
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Re: Vale Chris Bailey
Chris Bailey was a legend. From punk to Celtic blues to folk blues. The man could do it all.
Loved the early punk stuff but my favourites are All Fools Day and King of the Sun.
Brilliant musician whom will be sadly missed.Comment
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Re: Vale Chris Bailey
Dear Dan, One week ago today, I was standing in front of a photo on display in the Stranger Than Kindness - The Nick Cave Exhibition in...
Nick Caves take on Chris Bailey
ISSUE #191 / APRIL 2022
I just heard about Chris Bailey’s death. What an amazing voice, what an amazing scream. Can you tell us something about what he meant to you as a young musician in Australia?
DAN, CONWAY, AUSTRALIA
Dear Dan,
One week ago today, I was standing in front of a photo on display in the Stranger Than Kindness – The Nick Cave Exhibition in Montreal. It is an extraordinary photo that came to light a few years ago — it shows the singer, Chris Bailey, of the Brisbane band, the Saints, sitting collapsed on stage in a small club in Melbourne, watched by a very young and unformed Nick Cave. In the photo Chris is already committed to his life as perhaps the greatest and most anarchic rock ‘n’ roll singer Australia would ever produce. Conversely, I am in that stonewashed and uncertain state between failing art school and, well, I am not quite sure what. You can almost see the thought bubble forming above my head as an alternate plan presents itself.
In the late seventies, the Saints came down from Brisbane and tore their way through Sydney and Melbourne with their famously seditious shows. It is impossible to exaggerate the resulting radical galvanising effect on the Melbourne scene – these legendary performances changed the lives of so many people, myself included.
So, it is with immense sadness that we learn of Chris Bailey’s death. Too many great singers have died recently and, once again, I don’t have the words that will in any way adequately measure the extent of our collective loss. I can only simply repeat, for the record, that, in my opinion, the Saints were Australia’s greatest band, and that Chris Bailey was my favourite singer.
Chris and I got to know each other well and went on to do a bunch of things together over the years, but it is this photo that I will treasure – a moment of realisation and divergence, as a drunk singer sits slumped on a stage floor, his very presence in that moment approximating some kind of moral purity or essential truth, and a young man watching transfixed, feeling his own best laid plans fall away as the thought bubble above his head fills with its sudden and outrageous revelation, ‘This is what I want to do and this is who I want to be.’
With enormous gratitude to Chris Bailey and may he rest in peace.
Love, NickMore of an In Bruges guy?Comment
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Re: Vale Chris Bailey
https://www.theredhandfiles.com/chri...amazing-voice/
Nick Caves take on Chris Bailey
ISSUE #191 / APRIL 2022
I just heard about Chris Bailey’s death. What an amazing voice, what an amazing scream. Can you tell us something about what he meant to you as a young musician in Australia?
DAN, CONWAY, AUSTRALIA
Dear Dan,
One week ago today, I was standing in front of a photo on display in the Stranger Than Kindness – The Nick Cave Exhibition in Montreal. It is an extraordinary photo that came to light a few years ago — it shows the singer, Chris Bailey, of the Brisbane band, the Saints, sitting collapsed on stage in a small club in Melbourne, watched by a very young and unformed Nick Cave. In the photo Chris is already committed to his life as perhaps the greatest and most anarchic rock ‘n’ roll singer Australia would ever produce. Conversely, I am in that stonewashed and uncertain state between failing art school and, well, I am not quite sure what. You can almost see the thought bubble forming above my head as an alternate plan presents itself.
In the late seventies, the Saints came down from Brisbane and tore their way through Sydney and Melbourne with their famously seditious shows. It is impossible to exaggerate the resulting radical galvanising effect on the Melbourne scene – these legendary performances changed the lives of so many people, myself included.
So, it is with immense sadness that we learn of Chris Bailey’s death. Too many great singers have died recently and, once again, I don’t have the words that will in any way adequately measure the extent of our collective loss. I can only simply repeat, for the record, that, in my opinion, the Saints were Australia’s greatest band, and that Chris Bailey was my favourite singer.
Chris and I got to know each other well and went on to do a bunch of things together over the years, but it is this photo that I will treasure – a moment of realisation and divergence, as a drunk singer sits slumped on a stage floor, his very presence in that moment approximating some kind of moral purity or essential truth, and a young man watching transfixed, feeling his own best laid plans fall away as the thought bubble above his head fills with its sudden and outrageous revelation, ‘This is what I want to do and this is who I want to be.’
With enormous gratitude to Chris Bailey and may he rest in peace.
Love, Nick
Get the The Saints Setlist of the concert at Mount Buller Ski Resort, Mount Buller, Australia on January 9, 2009 and other The Saints Setlists for free on setlist.fm!
The only thing that ever came close was seeing the original line up of the Stooges play not long before Ron Asheton died.
Some things that you wait your whole life for are just bound to let you down.because you invest so much emotional energy thinking about them and have huge expectations. The three things that didn't let me down were the Saints with Kuepper/Bailey (I'd seen them heaps of times with just Chris Bailey), The Stooges and winning the flag in 2016. All those things were exactly what I'd hoped they would be. They were perfect..They say Burt Lancaster has one, but I don't believe them.Comment
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What should I tell her? She's going to ask.Comment
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Re: Vale Chris Bailey
I picked this book up late last year and have only just started reading it.
I'm certain a few woofers would enjoy the read and would've been at the gigs i'm sure the book will explore.
It was first released in 1996 and apparently it caused a bit of a stir when first released.
Stranded: Australian Independent Music, 1976–1992
The definitive book on Australian punk and post-punk music, long unavailable, now reissued in a much-expanded new edition with 175 photos.
STRANDED offers the inside story of the emergence of the Saints, the Birthday Party, the Laughing Clowns, the Go-Betweens, Nick Cave, the Moodists, the Scientists, and many more great Australian bands, told by a writer who witnessed it all first-hand.
More of an In Bruges guy?Comment
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Re: Vale Chris Bailey
I saw a Saints show at the Corner a few years back, and was blown away by how much of a show Chris Bailey put on in being a prick to the audience (this is a compliment). One of my favourite YouTube rabbit holes is late 70s/early 80s Australian live music and really feel like I missed out on something with it.
The Saints were the band that fixed my music taste in high school, so will always be indebted to him for that too.- I'm a visionary - Only here to confirm my biases -Comment
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Re: Vale Chris Bailey
I picked this book up late last year and have only just started reading it.
I'm certain a few woofers would enjoy the read and would've been at the gigs i'm sure the book will explore.
It was first released in 1996 and apparently it caused a bit of a stir when first released.
Stranded: Australian Independent Music, 1976–1992
The definitive book on Australian punk and post-punk music, long unavailable, now reissued in a much-expanded new edition with 175 photos.
STRANDED offers the inside story of the emergence of the Saints, the Birthday Party, the Laughing Clowns, the Go-Betweens, Nick Cave, the Moodists, the Scientists, and many more great Australian bands, told by a writer who witnessed it all first-hand.
https://www.clintonwalker.com.au/stranded.htmlThey say Burt Lancaster has one, but I don't believe them.Comment
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