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Jo Jo Zep and the
Falcons
Jo
Jo Zep and the Falcons is the group which started one of Australia's
most talented musicians, Joe Camilleri, making music of his own.
It didn't happen straight away, but it did happen.
By the time
Jo Jo Zep and the Falcons was formed in 1975
Maltese-born Joe had already spent some ten years in the Melbourne
music scene, and become one of its mainstays, well-known and admired
amongst his peers. From mid-sixties r&b group the King Bees he moved
to blues purists the Adderly Smith Blues Band, who sacked him for
sounding too much like Mick Jagger and for being too much of a showman,
neither of which he could help. Joe was just doing what came naturally,
but Adderly Smith took themselves very seriously, priding themselves
on educating audiences on where the songs the Rolling Stones were
recording originally came from. Joe spent the early seventies in
more innovative, even eccentric bands like Lipp and the Double Dekker
Brothers, the Sharks and the Pelaco Brothers (the latter with Stephen
Cummings of the Sports).
In late 1975
Ross Wilson was still waiting out his Daddy Cool/Mighty Kong recording
contract, keeping himself busy by producing Skyhooks. He also decided
to produce a version of Chuck Berry's 'Run Rudolph Run', the kind
of retro rocker Daddy Cool used to record, as a one-of Christmas
single for Mushroom Records.
Since contractually
he couldn't perform the vocals himself, Ross asked musician around
town Joe Camilleri to sing and play on the record, and front it.
In Maltese "Joe" is "Zep". The name put on the single was Jo Jo
Zep and his Little Helpers. To promote the single it seemed a good
idea to put together a scratch band comprising some of the other
people who had worked on the record, more Ross Wilson cohorts. On
stage they called themselves Jo Jo Zep and The Falcons.
The single
wasn't a hit, but the band stayed together. When Ross Wilson formed
his own Oz label, he signed the band and produced their records.
The first Falcons single 'Beating Around The Bush' was one of the
tracks on the Ross Wilson soundtrack for a movie, also called 'Oz'.
The band had become an outlet for another of Ross Wilson's songwriting
proteges, Wayne Burt, who wrote great songs in that r&b/soul idiom
that was the Falcons' stock and trade in the beginning. A team player
throughout his career, Joe Camilleri didn't entertain the idea of
writing songs himself until Wayne Burt left and the band had to
find new songs from somewhere. Written with other band members the
new songs shifted the band into the 'new wave' rock which was sweeping
though rock worldwide at the time - as both an answer to, and support
of the punk rock's demand for change in the latter Seventies. The
king of new wave Elvis Costello thought so much of Jo Jo Zep and
The Falcons' 'So Young' single, he ended up recording a version
himself, an incredible complement then, and still a great complement
in retrospect considering Elvis' own songwriting.
In 1978 the
Oz label folded and Jo Jo Zep and the Falcons moved back to Mushroom,
still in the twilight between their old r&b and their new contemporary
sound. Mushroom was very eager to connect with the 'new wave' in
England and had brought over English producer and latterday Procol
Harum member Peter Solley to produce Mushroom's other major contender
in that field, the Sports. One night Solley saw JJZ & TF perform,
and on the strength of a new song, 'Shape I'm In' asked to produce
Jo Jo Zep as well.
The partnership
with Peter Solley brought the group to major success. Until now
they'd been a cult band, and known for their live performances.
On stage there was never a set list. They decided what they played
on the spot. Now they had hit singles ('Hit And Run', 'Shape I'm
In', 'All I Wanna Do') and nationally selling albums ('Screaming
Targets', 'Hats Off Step Lively'). They were major contenders at
home and on the Next Big Thing list internationally. But ultimately
it wasn't a happy period for Joe Camilleri himself. Peter Solley
wanted things too much his way. Hit records wasn't necessarily why
Joe and the others were playing music.
In June 1981
Joe Camilleri disbanded the Falcons. He was planning to record a
solo album, but the record company convinced him otherwise, and
put the new line-up Joe put together back in the studio with Peter
Solley. To avoid interference and conflict Joe came into the studio
with the songs already written and arranged. The new extended band
was now simply Jo Jo Zep - no Falcons. The 'Cha' album explored
a bold new direction, salsa influenced, with Jane Clifton brought
in to sing on the album's hit single 'Taxi Mary'.
Together with
ex-Split Enz Eddie Reynor, Joe produced 'Losing Game', the band's
first single in America. After a disastrous tour of America where
Joe told one hostile San Francisco audience "no wonder your parents
lost the Vietnam War" 'Losing Game' was Jo Jo Zep's last single.
The group would get together again for reunion performances, but
essentially Jo Jo Zep's story was finished.
Joe Camilleri
wasn't finished. Next, he formed the Black Sorrows.
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