Johnny Rebb

Johnny Rebb, born Donald James Delbridge, (20 March 1939[1] – 28 July 2014[2]) was an Australian singer.

Johnny Rebb
Birth nameDonald James Delbridge
Born(1939-03-20)20 March 1939
Died28 July 2014(2014-07-28) (aged 75)
Newcastle, New South Wales
Occupation(s)Singer, panel beater
Years active1958–1976
LabelsLeedon
Associated actsThe Rebels, The Atlantics

Rebb began as a country & western singer and was signed with Leedon Records and was dubbed the "Gentleman of Rock" by disc jockeys of the time.[3]

He also replaced Johnny O'Keefe as the MC of Saturday Rock while O'Keefe was in the USA. In the 1960s, with the onslaught of rock'n'roll, Rebb began singing in the band The Atlantics and became their lead singer.[4]

Singles

  • "Johnny B. Goode" / "Rebel Rock" - Columbia, 1958
  • "Think Me A Kiss" /"Love Ville" - Coronet, 1960
  • "Lonesome Road" / "We Belong Together" - Leedon, 1960
  • "Hey Sheriff" / "Noeline" - Leedon, 1960
  • "How Will It End" /"There You Go" - Coronet, 1960
  • "Anytime You Want Me" / "She's Just Another Girl" - Coronet, 1961
  • "Billy Blue Shoes" / "Letter A Day" - London, 1962
  • "Got Over It" / "Secret" - CBS, 1963[5]
gollark: Well, if you're good at faking things and the organization is sufficiently dysfunctional, things.
gollark: Ugh, do I *actually* have to illicitly download all images LyricLy ever sent and find a good OCR thing?
gollark: Can anyone find the message where LyricLy was complaining about some ABR code with maps in it or something?
gollark: I'm trying to find where LyricLy was complaining about ABR's code.
gollark: It's increasingly annoying that I can't OCR-search all images ever posted on here.

References

  1. "Johnny Rebb: 1939 - 2014". theatlantics.com. Archived from the original on 8 August 2014. Retrieved 4 August 2014.
  2. "Donald DELBRIDGE". smh.com.au. 2 August 2014. Retrieved 4 August 2014.
  3. Laws, John (18 November 1962). "That's Music: The Most Happy Duo". The Sydney Morning Herald. p. 99. Retrieved 26 September 2009.
  4. "The Atlantics Ride the Wave Crest Again". The Sydney Morning Herald. 23 October 1966. p. 96. Retrieved 26 September 2009.
  5. Laws, John (19 May 1963). "That's Music". The Sydney Morning Herald. p. 81. Retrieved 26 September 2009.

Further reading


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