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Showing posts with label Rolf Harris. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rolf Harris. Show all posts

Monday, January 26, 2009

Have a Ripper Aussie Day Mates



Beaut. And if you catch one, don't overcook it.

In the early days of living in Australia I used to really like Rolf Harris after watching him through my childhood. I could not see how many Australians cringed when he came on and failed to enjoy the obvious self parody. Now that I have been here for a while I am much more likely to listen to Paul Kelly and unfortunately something my daughter chooses.

Just spent a couple of days on the road returning from Canberra along the River Murray. What a great drive and what a beautiful country, driving through parts many Australians don't get to see. If you could just arrange to get rid of some of the Truckies on the Hume Highway, that would be great. We saw kangaroos and Emus, went to the Pioneer Settlement at Swan Reach, which had a scottish pipe band timed for Burns Night, a three wheeled Glasgow Tractor from the early 1900s (who knew), passed through lots of communities with funny names and met some friendly Aussies. We got to see the bizarre looking Scottish submarine at Otaway, the Huge Murray Cod at Swan Reach and the Big Orange at Berri. How Aussie is that.

Coming over the hill from Swan Reach to Mannum was one of the greatest drives I have taken as the sun set over the rolling brown hills and then there was the free ferry at Mannum. The change in the character of the Murray as we drove along was stunning. Sometimes a wide channel, sometimes almost non existent, some interesting bridges and then the scale at Swan Reach and Mannum. I hope the politicians can work something out and that it rains a bit.

Thanks for having me Australia. I like it here.

And I still like Rolf Harris, although I don't tell many people.

Tuesday, July 01, 2008

Bring on the Wobble Board King



Rolf Harris is to be inducted into the Aria Hall of Fame tonight.

"I got into children's television because I was crash-hot at cartoons," he says. "That was my bread and butter, how I paid the bills."

It was at the Down Under that he first performed Tie Me Kangaroo Down, Sport.

"Back then, when you did anything Australian, there was a cringe factor," he says.

"Anything Australian was second-rate. You had to sing in an American or English accent.

"I spent seven years trying to be British, impress the Poms, and speak correctly. Suddenly, I could be myself, and sing with an Australian accent. I could sing in my own voice."

When he eventually returned to Perth to record Kangaroo three years later, it would spend four weeks at the top of the Australian charts.

The song launched an extraordinary career that has encompassed multiple rebirths, including guest slots with the Beatles and top 10 hits.

And that's not to mention his achievements in art — his other creative passion — and television.

"Kangaroo was one of the first songs besides Slim Dusty's Pub with No Beer to be number one with an Australian accent," he says. "It was a huge change for Australia."




Onya Rolf

Too bad you missed out on Australias 50 Greatest Albums from the AussieMusic Snobborazzis.



He even sang with the Beatles as backup singers.

Wobble On You Good Aussie.

Friday, December 08, 2006

Rolf's PC Mea Culpa

From This is London

Rolf Harris has apologised for using racist language in Tie Me Kangaroo Down, Sport - the hit song that launched his career.

The original words he wrote for the 1960 hit - sung to the accompaniment of his famous wobbleboard - included a verse referring to Aboriginal workers as if they were slaves.

The opening lines tell of a dying stockman giving his friends instructions on how they should treat his pet animals, such as 'keep me cockatoo cool, Curl' and 'take me koala back, Jack'. However, in the fifth verse comes a slur on Australia's indigenous population: 'Let me Abos go loose, Lou, Let me Abos go loose. They're of no further use, Lou, so let me Abos go loose.'

In an interview with Radio Scotland to be broadcast on Sunday, 76-year-old Harris admits that those lines were racist and he wished he had never written them.

Asked whether he regretted having included the verse, he said: 'Of course - dear, oh dear.' He said he now has a 'great love and respect' for Aborigines.

The song was written in 1957, when Aborigines were not allowed to vote, were not counted in the census and were often indentured workers in conditions approaching servitude.

Harris later dropped the verse when re-recording the hit, with the word 'emus' substituted for 'Abos'. But today his website contains a set of lyrics with no mention of emus or 'Abos'.

I just think that he is a great entertainer. We used to love to watch his paintings develop and the wobble board on his TV show. I mean come on it was the 1960s. I can remember growing up in Scotland the Scots were some of the worst parochial racists (they still are) in the world. I don't remember reading much into the lyrics. My kids love him now. Go Rolf.