LEVI
SMITH’S CLEFS HISTORY Formed in 1967 Style: R&B & Soul
Music.
Original line-up:
This story has been amended immensely
by Barrie McAskill from the written documentation
of During
the 1960s, Adelaide-born Barrie McAskill earned a reputation as the King of
Rock & Roll with his band The Drifters
Levi
Smith's Clefs initially earned a reputation on the disco /club and dance
circuit as a gutsy R&B band, eventually proving to be a breeding ground for
the swelling ranks of
McAskill’s
philosophy became to encourage his band members to improve as musicians, and
for them to move on as the urge arose. Many of them became successful musicians
and bandleaders because of his willingness to share his knowledge. The
Levi Smith's Clefs story actually began in
This Clefs line up issued two singles in 1966: I Can Only Give You Everything*****Roberta,
(EMI. A Boy Like Me*****Bring
It to Jerome (Tony Barber’s Phono Vox label).
When
Harris accepted an invitation to create a supergroup, The Groove, in early
1967, McAskill was offered the job as lead singer; however he decided to assume
leadership of The Clefs, which had changed members to
When
manager Peter Raphael (The Editor of
Go-Set Magazine and proprietor of
the Australian Entertainment Exchange)
suggested the band be renamed, McAskill decided upon, The Levi Smith Affair
(which in a roundabout way had been inspired by the name of the Four Tops lead
singer Levi Stubbs and Smith being one of the biggest listings in the phone
book). Tweed
Harris asked
Hence the
“Levi Smith’s Clefs” were born.
Seek and you
shall find. Michael
Carlos: As
a six-piece, Levi Smith's Clefs worked Melbourne and Adelaide then to Sydney
where they played the Here Disco and
were offered a three month season at the Whisky
Au Go Go nightclub in Kings Cross, this Gig turned into a six night a week, ( The
line-up shifted constantly along the way, with Inez Amaya (vocals),
By 1968, the line-up had stabilized with McAskill, Amaya, Carlos, Blake, Jurd (guitar), Richard Lockwood (flute, sax) and Robert Taylor (drums, Johnny Young & Company).
The
next move, Carlos, Lockwood, Blake and Taylor all left to form Tully, before joining Harry Miller’s Australian stage
production of the American “tribal
love-rock musical”, Hair in June
1969.
When
McAskill left The Whisky Amaya also
joined the cast of Hair. Still at The Whisky, McAskill, Amaya and Jurd assembled a new Levi Smith's Clefs with John Bisset (organ, The Mods, The Action), Bruce Howe (bass, Fraternity, Something Purple, The Clefs, Mickey Finn, Some Dream), and Tony Buettel (drums, Bay City Union, Band of Light). This line-up recorded the adventurous Empty Monkey album for the Sweet Peach label. It was one of the first Australian albums to combine Soul / R & B / pop / jazz with a more progressive rock outlook.
Ed Nimmervol of the editor of Go-Set & Juke magazines, now Howl Space
on the web, reviewed this album and concluded that, “This is the best rock album ever produced in
Despite
being a groundbreaking release in many ways, the album failed to see the
success it deserved.
Perhaps
due to Sweet Peach changing its recording company from Polydor, to Polygram
half way through the promotional tour: And
Sweet Peach’s own agenda to take over McAskill’s band: The
standout cut was an 11-and-a-half minute arrangement of The Beatle’s You Can’t Do
That, Sweet
Peach also lifted two singles from the album, Lisa*****Roadrunner (January
1970) And
a cover of Junior Walker’s: Shotgun*****Who is it that Shall Come (April 1970). By
the time the album came out in March 1970, Jurd,
Bisset, Howe and Buettel were leaving to form Fraternity with Bon Scott
and supply the backing for Doug
Ashdown’s double album The Age of the Mouse, released by Sweet Peach.
McAskill
assembled a new Levi Smith's Clefs and returned to Whisky Au Go Go in
Steve
Doran: Linda Cable:
A Single. Love Like a Man*****Take a Little Piece of My Heart (Linda Cable)” Released on Chart Records, (September 1970). An EP, Best of Whisky
Au Go Go (Shared with the band Autumn): also on the Chart label. The Barrie McAskill and Levi Smith's Clefs tracks were Down in the Valley / Lawdy Miss Clawdy When
McAskill was offered the famous “Chequers
Night Club” where he did another mammoth stint 6 nights a week for a year, another long party. Mike Cousins (trombone, Jeff Duff &
It wasn’t long before changes developed to, Mick Kenny (trumpet, The Chant), Bob Jeffrey (sax),
Jim Kelly (guitar, Kerry Biddel and
The Affair, Dal Myles, their manager
was at Peter Raphael’s home when McAskill renamed The
Clefs). Russell Dunlop (drums,
Aesops Fables), John (Yuk) As Barrie McAskill's Levi
Smith's Clefs, this band issued a brassy R&B single,
Throughout
1971, this band held down the residency at Chequers night club in The
Levi Smith’s Clefs went on the road again, line-up changes continued apace with
Ted (The Head) Yanni (guitar,
Plastic Tears, Maple Lace), Yuk Harrison (bass), Doug Stirling (bass), Allan Turnbull (drums, Don Burrows), Greg Henson (drums, The Rhythm Aces)
and Bob Jeffrey (sax), Michael Carlos (organ).Carlos and Henson then joined the backing band for the Australian
production of the Andrew Lloyd Webber
and Tim Rice’s rock musical Jesus Christ Superstar. In
late 1971, McAskill’s “Madmen, Mescaline
& Music” days began, as quoted by Julien
Cumming of Juke Magazine. Some of McAskill’s bands became known as The Bear’s Brigade, McAskill, McAskill's Marauders, McAskill’s People, Barrie McAskill and Friends, “McAskill, Murphy, Melouney, Firth and Barns”, God’s Warriors & the Amazons, however he always thought of them as the Levi Smith’s Clefs.
Barrie McAskill's People comprised Vince Melouney (guitar; Billy Thorpe
and the Aztecs, Bee Gees, Fanny Adams, Cleves, Flite), Michael Barnes (guitar; Nutwood Rug), Ken Firth (bass, Tully, The Ferrets) and Kevin Murphy (drums, Wild Cherries, The Aztecs, King Harvest,
Chain, Leo D’Castro & Friends, Rush):. In
mid-1972, McAskill reverted to the Levi Smith's Clefs name for the line-up of
Doug Stirling, Kevin Murphy,
By October 1972, McAskill was working with a line-up, which comprised Murphy, Clyne, Mal Capewell (sax, flute, Dr Kandy's Third Eye, Dada, Little Gulliver’s Company Caine), Russell Smith (trumpet, vocals, Ram Jam Big Band, Power House), Phil Manning (guitar, Bay City Union, Chain, Band of Talabene), and Barry Harvey (drums, Chain). A month later, Murphy, Clyne, Capewell, and Harvey broke away from McAskill and became Mighty Mouse.
It
would appear McAskill was left high and dry once again, although he has never
seen it this way, he says,
McAskill
formed a new band called McAskill, (Barns,
McAskill
returned to
Barrie McAskill's on Fire: Doug Johnston, (drums) Randell Wilson (drums) David Dempsey (guitar), Kirk Steele (piano), Benni Seidel,
(bass), Joan Boylan, (vocals), Kevin Locket, (sax & flute), Steve Goss, (pedal steel guitar): Barrie McAskill and Friends, Chris Finnen, (guitar & vocals, Chain), Carl Orr, (guitar), Doug Johnston, (drums, The Keytones, The
Fabulous Drifters), Russ Johnson,
(guitar, Country Radio, Mississippi), Stan
Chamarczuk, (bass, The Brats), Laurie
Pryor, (drums, The Twilights, Healing Force, Hair), Dean Birbeck, (drums, Bobby Bright, Doug Ashdown, Hayden Burford
& The Beaumen), Fred Payne,
(trumpet, Freddy Hampton’s Big Roll Movement), Stan Koretjni (guitar, Some Dream), Graham Conlan, (guitar, Sybil
Graham’s Alice’s Wonder Band, Sue Barker & Self Abuse, The Onions). In
In
1983 McAskill returned to
Carl
Hammond: Dash Riprock: Steve Russell:
Bob Birtles (sax, Max Merritt & the
Meteors), Steve Giordano (sax,
After a year of keeping a
ten piece band together for a year, McAskill formed his Bear’s Boogie Band,
Jackie Ozarski, (bass, Syrius, Marcia Hines
Band, Bakery, Jump Back Jack), Harry Bruss
(bass, Black Feather, Renee Geyer Band), Doug
Williams, (bass,
Jan & Barrie married and formed a Duo, Topsy & The Bear, (Jan McAskill, (keyboard & vocals),
Barrie McAskill, (guitar & vocals) and toured Australia with their son Tarrin for ten years to eventually
settle in Adelaide and now work their Duo
as Barrie & Jan McAskill.
Two Levi Smith’s Clefs reunions were held in Melbourne: 2002 & 2003. Jan McAskill Live at the Levis Reunion 2003:*** Mercedes
Benz
Ian:
Gil Matthews, (drums, the original Levi
Smith’s Clefs, Billy Thorpe’s Sunbury Aztecs, Ross Wilson’s Mondo Rock, The
Richard Clapton Band),
It’s not over
yet. Levi
Smith’s Clefs Discography
Singles: Road Runner / Lisa: (Sweet Peach SP 011) 1970 Shotgun / Who is it that shall come: (Sweet Peach SP 021) 1970 Love like a man
/ Take a little piece of my heart: (Chart PR 202) 1969 Dancing
& Drinking / Gonna get a seizure: (Chart CHK 4184) 1971 E.P:
The Best of
Whisky Au Go Go: Autumn &
Levi Smith’s Clefs Levis: Lawdy Miss Clawdy*****Down in the Valley Compilation: (Chart)
1971 Albums: CDs:
Empty Monkey
(Sweet Peach SPB 504) 1970 Festival 70 Sweet Peach compilation album
( The First Session: Same line-up as Empty Monkey Un-released till 2005
“I’ll just
slip into something more comfortable”, Regards, The Bear
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