The Allusions
The Allusions were one of the most stylish and inventive of Sydney's
1960s beat groups. The band issued six singles; Gypsy Woman (March
1966), The Dancer (July 1966), Looks Like Trouble (October
1966), Roundabout (February 1967), Seven Days Of Rain (July
1967) and Mr Love (January 1968), plus one excellent - and very
rare - self-titled album through EMI/Parlophone (January 1967).
Bruce Davis replaced Terry Chapman on bass in July 1966, in time to
appear on the album. Chapman went on to join one of America's first
psychedelic trios, The Knack (not the band of My Sharona fame!).
Gypsy Woman and the Michael Morris-penned The Dancer
were both Top 10 hits in Sydney, and are rightly regarded as
Australian 1960s classics. The Dancer owed a debt to The
Beatles' arrangement of I'm Happy Just To Dance With You
but is a superb stand-out track all the same. The Allusions also
included a tough cover of The Kinks' R&B
stomper I Gotta Move on their album.
Michael Morris left the band in late 1967 to be replaced briefly by
John Spence. The band then continued on as a four-piece until October
1968 when Terry Hearne joined Digger Revell's backing band. Morris
returned but, having failed to adapt to the prevailing winds of
psychedelia, the band finally called it a day in 1969.
TRIVIA NOTE
Chris Bailey (ex-The Saints) recorded a
version of Gypsy Woman in 1981.
| The
Band |
Michael Morris
Guitar, vocals
Terry Hearne
Guitar, vocals
|
John Shaw
Keyboards, vocals
Terry Chapman
Bass
|
Kevin Hughes
Drums
Bruce Davis
Bass
John Spence
Guitar, vocals |
|
|