Hush
One of the defining moments of Australia's 1970s pop legacy was
undoubtedly Hush performing Bony Moronie on Countdown.
This updated version of the old Larry Williams rocker was a
Number 1 for Hush in September 1975. It was the perfect vehicle
for the band's flashy hi-jinks.
English-born lead singer Keith Lamb would wiggle his butt in
his satin flares, thrust out his crotch and leer at the camera
with a mischievous look in his eyes. A look which - in the
words of The Knack - the little girls understood.
This sleazy bump and grind was offset by the aura of exotica
provided by the two Asian band members, guitarist Les Gock and
bassist Rick Lum.
Gock strutted around in platform-heeled boots and glam threads,
with peroxide streaks in his jet black hair, while Lum hammed it
up in a serious kind of way. Drummer Smiley Pailthorpe cheerfully
revealed his goofy, gap-toothed grin whenever the camera panned
across his face.
Hush loved to put on a show. It was all a little contrived but
glorious entertainment at the same time. They were Australia's
answer to Slade, T. Rex and The Sweet. They had the sound (basic,
sassy glam-pop and refurbished 12-bar boogie), the looks and the
songs to make a grab for stardom, and for a while in 1975 and
1976, Hush were genuine scream-dream pop sensations with hordes of
howling, weeping teenyboppers in tow.
Walking, Get Rocked, Bony Moronie, Glad
All Over and Too Young To Know were all hit singles.
Album titles like Get Rocked, C'mon We're Taking Over,
Nothing Stays The Same Forever and Rough, Tough And
Ready were statements of intent.
Inevitably, as is the way with all fads, Hush's popularity
began to slide. While the band tried to make a serious affirmation
of its abilities (the 1977 album Touché featured
a rock side called A Touch of Decadence, and a slow side
called A Touch of Class), prospects were grim. Keith Lamb
tried to keep the flame alight with The New Hush and then with The
Keith Lamb Band (which later became Airport), but by then the
screaming had faded.
It would be too easy to heap derision on the memory of Hush.
They were simply the right band in the right place at the right
time. After all, it was great pop music, and Keith, Les and the
boys probably had the ride of their life. Underneath it all, Les
Gock really did know how to handle his white Stratocaster and now
works in the world of advertising, no doubt laughing all the way
to the bank as one of Australia's foremost jingle writers.
In 1987, Keith Lamb was admitted to a psychiatric hospital
after being found unfit to face a $4 million fraud charge. Keith
thought that Status Quo owed him royalties for songs he'd written
- which in fact they did, only they didn't know how to contact
him. So he wrote out a cheque for four million dollars and
deposited it in a bank in Melbourne.
Sometime later he tried to withdraw two hundred dollars and the
police were called. The police psychiatrist thought Keith was
deluded because he claimed to have thirteen gold records. And of
course that wasn't a delusion, it was perfectly true. He was later
diagnosed as suffering from schizophrenia.
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