The Creatures (Australian band)

The Creatures were a garage rock band which formed in Mildura, Australia in 1965 as The Beagle Boys.[1] They changed their name in February 1966 and relocated to Sydney where they were active during the mid- to late 1960s.[1] The line-up included three Marcic brothers: Eric on guitar, Herman on bass guitar, and Rudolph on drums; together with Keith Matcham on lead vocals and Michael Parnis on rhythm guitar.[1]

The Creatures
Also known asThe Beagle Boys, Chocolate
OriginMildura, Victoria, Australia
GenresGarage rock, rock and roll, protopunk
Years active1965 (1965)-1969 (1969)
LabelsSound 66, RCA
Past members
  • Eric Marcic
  • Herman Marcic
  • Rudolph Marcic
  • Keith Matcham
  • Michael Parnis
  • Richard White
  • Greg Lawrie

Australian music journalist, Glenn A. Baker, described their appearance: "at a time when moderate long hair was becoming acceptable, [they] dyed their tatty locks to bilious pastel shades and invited the media to react with appropriate horror".[1] The group were billed as "the wildest, longest, coloured hair group in Australia, and 'Australia's answer to the Rolling Stones'".[2] Richard White had replaced Parnis before the first single, "All I Do Is Cry" (1966), appeared.[1] Hair colours were: red for Eric, blue for Herman, green for Rudolph, purple for Matcham, and pink for White.[3]

The Creatures were known for their hard-driving 60's punk and protopunk sound, as typified by their singles, "All I Do Is Cry" (1966) and "Ugly Thing" (1967).[1][4] Greg Lawrie replaced Eric on lead guitar prior to the second single.[1] As Lawrie had "very short brown hair", he was given a red wig to wear, but during one performance "his wig came off! ... he put it back on and it was the wrong way, and he couldn’t see what he was doing."[3] By December 1967 they had relocated to Melbourne and were renamed as Chocolate, where they issued another single, "I'm an Animal" (1969).[1]

After the group disbanded, Lawrie joined Carson County Band in January of the following year.[1] Herman played in Toby Jugg,[1][4] alongside Garth Porter (later in Sherbet). In 1998 Kustom 65 record label issued a compilation album, It's a Kave-in!, with The Creatures' "All I Do Is Cry".[5] The same track was covered by Shutdown 66 for the tribute album, Wild About You!, recorded live-in-the-studio by radio station, 3CR's Cara Beltrame in 2004.[6]

Discography

  • "All I do is Cry" / "Mona" (sound 66 S45-01) (March 1966)
  • "Ugly Thing" / "Your One and Only Man" (RCA 101803) (December 1967)[4]
  • "I'm an Animal" (released under the name, Chocolate, 1969).[1]
gollark: You mean Pascal's triangle?
gollark: Your idea of "run the thing backward" is quite obvious to anyone who looks at the problem. There have been many people looking at the problem. So if it worked someone would have proved collatz now.
gollark: <@!714406501346967572> 0.4 offense, but if you could easily prove the Collatz conjecture with relatively simple maths someone already would have,
gollark: I assume the 0/1/infinite solution thing is from something something linear algebra.
gollark: Ah. So the matrix maps the values of all the variables to the outputs of each equation, and the same output can be attained in multiple ways sometimes.

References

  1. McFarlane, Ian (1999). "Encyclopedia entry for 'The Creatures'". Encyclopedia of Australian Rock and Pop. St Leonards, NSW: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 1-86508-072-1. Archived from the original on 23 August 2004. Retrieved 10 July 2014.
  2. Sleath, Emma (13 December 2010). "Farewell Chris Marcic". 783 ABC Alice Springs. Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC). Retrieved 10 July 2014.
  3. McIntyre, Iain. "The Creatures". Wild About You: A Tribute to the Australian Underground 1963–1968. Archived from the original on 23 August 2007. Retrieved 10 July 2014.
  4. Marks, Ian; McIntyre, Iain (2010). Wild About You: The Sixties Beat Explosion in Australia and New Zealand. Portland, London, Melbourne: Verse Chorus Press. pp. 256–264. ISBN 978-1-89124-128-4.
  5. Crests); Outcasts; Town Criers; Creatures (1998), It's a kave-in!, Kustom 65. National Library of Australia, retrieved 10 March 2015
  6. Beltrame, Cara (2004). "Wild About You! Tales from the Australian Rock Underground 1963–68". 3CR Melbourne. Archived from the original on 23 August 2007. Retrieved 10 March 2015.
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