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Zoot

 
Artist: Zoot

Similar Artists:

Chain, Dingoes, Blackfeather, The Master's Apprentices, Carson, Healing Force, Country Radio

Performed Songs By:

Rick Springfield, Terry Britten, Itai d'Israeli

Formal Connection With:

  • Genres: Rock
  • Representative Albums: "Zoot Locker: The Best of the Zoot, 1968-1971", "Zoot Out", "Zoot

Biography

For the release of Zoot's inaugural single, "You Better Get Going Now," the band draped themselves, as well as the gaudy Berties discotheque venue, in bright pink. Pushing the slogan "Think Pink -- Think Zoot," the band would later burn their pink suits and bare their backsides in an act of defiance that ultimately was unable to resurrect their forever pink-stained careers.

Forming in Adelaide, South Australia, in 1966 and calling themselves "Down the Line," a soon re-badged Zoot achieved local fame on the dance scene before moving to Melbourne in 1968. Shortly after their pink-fuelled launch, their second single, "One Times, Two Times, Three Times, Four," peaked at number 32 on the Melbourne charts and the band began playing the Melbourne TV show Uptight regularly. Their next single, "Monty and Me," hit number one in Brisbane and the band, along with local contemporaries the Valentines, the Flying Circus, and New Dream, developed a strong teen following with their blend of disposable pop. Replacing guitarist Roger Hicks with Rick Springfield saw the band's sound begin to mature, and they toured with the cream of Australian pop on the national Operation Starlift Tour in September 1969. They ended the year by being voted Top Australian Group in Go-Set magazine's Pop Poll.

Despite burning their former pink outfits for the cameras and baring their backsides for Go-Set, their next single, "Hey Pinky" (April 1970), failed to chart. Nevertheless, the band placed second to the Flying Circus in Hoadley's National Battle of the Sounds final in July 1970 and released their debut album, Just Zoot, the following month. The band achieved their biggest hit with their next single, a cover of the Beatles' "Eleanor Rigby," which peaked at number four on the national charts in March 1971. The single later achieved gold status after being re-released by EMI in 1979 and Zoot formed a reputation for performing heavy covers of well-known songs. Zoot's next single, "The Freak," failed to achieve chart success and, still haunted by their former teen-star status, the group disbanded in May. Several of the bandmembers continued successful careers in music and film, including Rick Springfield, who went on to achieve international success as a singer and actor in the U.S. ~ Brendan Swift, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Zoot (band)
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Zoot was a four piece pop/rock band formed in Adelaide, South Australia in 1965.

They played many clubs and discos around Adelaide, gradually gathering a strong following, and they backed rising singer John Farnham (then known as Johnny Farnham) on demo recordings which secured him a contract with EMI Records.

They renamed themselves Zoot in 1967 at the suggestion of Adelaide musician Doc Neeson, who later went on to front renowned Australian rock band The Angels. In 1968, they relocated to Melbourne, Victoria, Australia and performed in several Australian cities. Two of the more notable members of Zoot were founder Beeb Birtles, who also founded the Little River Band in 1975 and Rick Springfield who, after moving to the United States in 1972, achieved international fame as a solo artist, songwriter and actor.

Contents

Influences

Zoot is sometimes credited with kicking off the "second pop wave" in Australian music, much of their musical influence coming from the Mod and Merseybeat sounds coming out of Britain. They were heavily influenced by The Hollies and were originally known as Down The Line (taken from an early Hollies song).

Image and reaction

Although Zoot was one of the most popular bands in Australia during the late 1960s, critics labelled the quartet as a "jugend" or "light bubblegum" band. This is primarily because of a "Think Pink-Think Zoot" publicity campaign their management devised. This plan, in addition to having the band members dressed head to toe in pink satin, also included having the band drive around in a pink car, and having the band photographed with a dog with its fur dyed pink. While the publicity did bring attention to the group as well as attract a number of teenage girl fans, it also caused the band to have problems establishing credibility as serious rock musicians.

In the summer of 1969, Zoot had joined other Australian rock bands in a multi-city tour across the nation named Operation Starlift. It was considered a success in terms of publicity, but was a financial disaster for several of the bands involved. For Zoot, it brought about an increase of the ridicule from media, envy from peers and scorn from detractors, much of the criticism leveled being homophobic in nature, despite the fact that all of the band members were heterosexual in orientation. Several band members had left because of the taunting about being "pretty pink pansies."

Guitarist Roger Hicks left Zoot in late 1969, shortly after he contributed to the sessions for the landmark single "The Real Thing" by Russell Morris, for which Hicks composed and performed the song's opening guitar riff. He was replaced by Rick Springfield.

In December 1969, in Brisbane, Australia, the group made headlines when they became the victims of an assault by street toughs, resulting in injury to the lead singer, Darryl Cotton. Despite the attack, Zoot was still voted Top Australian Group in Go-Set music magazine's Pop Poll. By 1970, the members of Zoot had grown tired of the garish outfits as well as the harassment and physical abuse they suffered due to the unwanted "think pink" image foisted on them. In an effort to distance themselves from the bubblegum/teen idol image, they burnt the outfits on Happening 70 a nationally televised music show.

New image

Zoot also promoted their fifth single "Hey Pinky" in an advertisement in Go-Set magazine featuring a rear-nude picture of the group [1]. "Hey Pinky" was a hard charging guitar oriented song, but it did not rank significantly on the charts. The lyrics, penned by Springfield, were rebellious in nature and openly mocked the pink outfits as well as their management and their detractors. Despite Zoot's retooled visual image, daring, harder-edged lyrics and heavier, louder music, including the 1970 release of a heavy-metal rendition of the Beatles' ballad "Eleanor Rigby", the "think pink" image persisted.

In 1971 the Music Corporation of America expressed interest in bringing the band to the United States to record, but they encountered resistance from Australian government bureaucracy. That, along with other disappointments such as a poor showing in the previous year's Hoadley's Battle of the Sounds, led to the band breaking up in May 1971.

Albums

Year Album
1969 Just Zoot
1971 Zoot Out
1980 Best of the Zoot Locker 1969-1971
 ? 4 Shades of Pink (EP)

Singles

Year Record Chart Position
1968 You'd Better Get Going Now
1x2x3x4 #2 Melbourne
1969 Monty and Me #33 Melbourne, #1 Brisbane
It's About Time
Sailing
Yes, I'm Glad
Little Roland Lost
She's Alright
Sha La La
Flying
1970 Mr. Songwriter
Hey Pinky/Strange Things
Eleanor Rigby #4 Nationwide
1971 The Freak/Evil Child #27 Melbourne

Band members

Founders

Drummers

  • Teddy Higgins 1967-68
  • Rick Brewer 1968-71

Guitarists

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Zoot (band)" Read more

 

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