Gary Shearston

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Gary Rhett Shearston (9 January 1939 – 1 July 2013[1][2]) was an Australian singer and songwriter who was a leading figure of the folk music revival of the 1960s. He was notable as a performer of Australian traditional folk songs in an authentic style. He scored a Top 10 hit in the United Kingdom in 1974 with his cover version of the Cole Porter song "I Get a Kick out of You".

Early life

Shearston was born in Inverell, New South Wales, Australia, the son of Audrey Lilian (née Manchee) and James Barclay Shearston. During World War II his father was posted on active service and Shearston and his mother lived on his grandparents' property, "Aydrie", near Tenterfield, New South Wales. At the age of 11 his family moved to Sydney and he attended his father's alma mater, Newington College (1950–1955), commencing as a preparatory school student in Wyvern House.[3]

Working life

Shearston trained as press correspondent with United Press and his first show business job was with The Tintookies, the Australian travelling puppet show. He joined the Hayes Gordon Ensemble Theatre working as an actor and stage manager.

Music career

Having taken up guitar, Shearston learned a repertoire of English, American and Australian folk songs and at 19 become a professional singer. He worked in hotels and sang at The Folksinger and with the American gospel and blues singer Brother John Sellers. In 1962 Shearston signed with Leedon Records and the following year was signed to the Australian division of CBS Records by A&R manager Sven Libaek. In March 1965 Sydney radio stations started playing a track from his album Australian Broadside. His single "Sydney Town" hit the Top 10 in his home city. In 1966 and 1967, he became Australia's biggest record seller of folk music. He had his own national television show called Just Folk and Peter Paul and Mary recorded a cover of his "Sometime Lovin'". They also invited him to go to the United States. He spent a year in London and then four years on the east coast of the United States. In 1972 he returned to England and rerecorded some songs for the album Dingo. The song which attracted most attention was his deadpan interpretation of Cole Porter's "I Get a Kick out of You". In 1990 he received the Tamworth Songwriters' Association's Bush Ballad of the Year award for the autobiographical song "Shopping On A Saturday".

Church ministry

Shearston returned to Australia in 1989 and later became a priest in the Anglican Church of Australia in rural New South Wales.

Death

Shearston died on 1 July 2013, aged 74 years, at Armidale Hospital in New South Wales after earlier in the day suffering a stroke at his home, "Aydrie", near Tenterfield.[1]

Discography

Albums

  • Folk Songs & Ballads of Australia (CBS 1964)
  • Songs of our Time (CBS 1964)
  • Australian Broadside (CBS 1965)
  • The Springtime It Brings On The Shearing (CBS 1965)
  • Bolters, Bushrangers & Duffers (CBS 1965)
  • Sings His Songs (CBS 1966)
  • Abreaction (On a Bitumen Road With Soft Edges) (Festival 1967)
  • Dingo (Charisma 1974)
  • The Greatest Stone On Earth and Other Two-Bob Wonders (Charisma 1975)
  • Aussie Blue (Larrikin 1989)
  • Only Love Survives (Rouseabout 2001)
  • Here & There, Now & Then Anthology 1964-2001 (Rouseabout 2007)
  • Best of all Trades (Rouseabout 2009)
  • Renegade (Rouseabout 2011)
  • The Great Australian Groove (Rouseabout 2012)
  • Reverently (Restless Music 2013)
  • Hills of Assisi (Restless Music 2013)
  • Pathways of a Celtic Land (Restless Music 2013)

Singles

Year Single Chart Positions
AU UK[4]
1965 "Sydney Town" 33 -
"Sometime Lovin'" 59 -
1974 "I Get a Kick Out of You" 19 7
"Without a Song" - -
1975 "A Whiter Shade of Pale" - -

See also

References

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  3. Newington College Register of Past Students 1863-1998 (Sydney, 1999) p. 178.
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External links

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