
The
Mansons originally flourished in the city of Newcastle, 120kms north of
Sydney, Australia from 1981 to 1983.
Starting
as a series of jam sessions at the house of Monkee Manson in mid-1981,
Harry and Monkee had been school chums from Marist Brothers High School
and together decided to change the face of Novocastrian music for ever.
After
leaving school Monkee became a metallurgist for B.H.P. and met Curlee
Manson, who was also in the same field of study.
Providence
begat them a drummer one day when a 14 year old boy came jumping
over the fence for a ball. He became enlisted as Donny Manson, later changing
his name to Donny Anarchy.
The
line up now consisted of Harry Manson on vocals and wig wearing, Monkee
Manson on guitar, Curlee on bass and Donny on drums.
Soon
afterwards a cool biker friend of Monkee's from the BHP Steelworks snapped
this picture (below) of the Mansons at the Newcastle Post Office. His
name was Bill Pitt and was also responsible for supply of authentic sixties
granny specs which completed the look. Note the great beards!

They
played their first gig at the Grand Hotel on the 26th September, 1981
supporting another Novocastrian band, the Nonchalence, later embarking
on a series of pub and club gigs that are now legendary.
They
were the only band ever to be thrown out of Norths Leagues Club, (which
had the reputation at the time of totally supporting the fringe punk and
alternative music), because of an altercation one night between Harry
and the club manager, along with several huge bouncers. "I still
don't know why we set up on the floor that night, as opposed to the stage"
recalled Monkee in an interview in 1995, "it happened at the end
of the night and we all thought we were going to die." They were
thrown out, told they would never be Newcastle's foremost punk band, and
told never to return.
With
no place to play, the band was forced to go under a series of alternate
names such as "Harry M" , "Tate's Mates" and the "Beatles"
to get work. With no wives and kids to feed, it didn't really matter.
Finding
themselves at a loose end one day they decided to record a single entitled
"I Died Four Times". The initial inspiration for the song came from a
phone conversation with a old school chum, Greg 'Chook' Coleman, who was
lamenting that a mutual friend was taking far too long to die of a series
of diseases, "You know he's died four times...but he doesn't want to talk
about it!", and so the song was born.
The
song became notorious, being played by the famous John Peel on Radio London
who was rumored to have announced that it had just as much chance as anything
else at achieving success.
It
even reached top ten in Yugoslavia, or so it was reported by Kerb McCorrison,
who became the Mansons de facto manager during those turbulent times.

The
Mansons legendary single
"I died four times (But I don't Wanna Talk About It)"
and "What is Her Name?"

Kerb
became manager after he persistently said he would from the back of a
bus one rainy day. They met on a magnificent trip in a double decker bus
carrying The Mansons and most of the Newcastle punk scene (almost like
a magical mystery tour), through the beautiful Hunter Valley to bring
'punk to the people'. Kerb later toured Europe and was never seen again.

Live at the South Newcastle Beach Pavilion
They
played some great, and some not-so-great gigs around town. Highlights
included fantastic shows at Belmont 16 footers, The Castle, South Newcastle
Beach Pavilion and many many parties. Some rare recordings have recently
come to light after almost 20 years and display the rare energy and fun
of the period.
The
Mansons continued for a time to progressively fragment and later disintegrate
until the end came at the beginning of 1983, just prior to Donny Anarchy
leaving Australia for a solo tour of Europe.
They
were officially pronounced dead on the 13th March 1983 closing transmission
on Sunday night at 11:08pm precisely.
Harry
was to later re-emerge in the Ramjets and the Marones with Newcastle fun
king Pucko, finally becoming a school teacher. Curlee set about populating
the earth with his seed and political science and Monkee became a Hipslinger,
an Elvis impersonator, a Wooser Bottom, librarian and archivist. Donny
is still performing from time to time with various punk acts such as Skazoo,
Raw War and Cash From Chaos.
The
Mansons finally received International recognition in 1997 with their
inclusion in the punk exhibition "Punkulture" at the Australian
Museum along with Sex Pistols and the Clash.
Salve
Mansons.

Recording
sessions at Angelwood Studios Newcastle
on the 10th and 11th May 1982.


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| "It
started with the Mansons who covered punk standards with all the
tastelessness their name would suggest."
- THE SQUARE (From Concert Review of Pel Mel, Swami Binton, Mansons)
December 1981.
"Dispensing
with my moralising for the moment now that you know my prejudices,
it's timely I suppose to let you know what the bands were actually
like. First up were The Mansons - tacky name boys. They were well
intentioned but something less that inspired. The only thing that
warmed me to them was that they smiled a bit (really smiled, not
a cynical grin at all) and seemed to want to enjoy themselves.
I think I could detect a touch of The Saints as an influence but,
er, not quite so intense or together. One of the last songs they
played was "Pretty Vacant". Too much of 1977 encroaching
here methinks. Not my cup of tea but at least they tried hard."
-
Mark Mordue (Premier Hotel - The Mansons, Swami Binton, Pel Mel
12/12/1981)
"I don't
know whether to suggest that you take along a flag or a riot shield
to this Australia Day Weekend rock music concert. The concert,
planned to begin at the South Newcastle Beach pavilion at 3.30pm
on Sunday, features the Newcastle groups The Mansons and the Razor
Gang. It has been organised by Rival Gang Promotions, so don't
heckle the compere, either."
- Newcastle Herald 6/2/1982
"Under
the heading of FUN must come The Mansons. Previously I'd written
that they weren't "my cup of tea", but I must have been
too smashed and/or intensely serious about it all that week to
appreciate the dubious yet engaging appeal The Mansons have. During
their set three punk-dag "fans", replete with black
coats, pants, boots and sunnys, are the only ones dancing.
They
jump all over the floor, fall over, slide around and are generally
completely uninhibited or suffering from severe withdrawals from
hard drugs. They're the perfect foil to The Mansons ridiculously
overplayed Sex Pistols/Saints image. The Mansons are pure punk
rock vaudeville, and are possibly amongst the worst dressed bands
I've ever seen. You really had to laugh at the whole thing, which
was just fine.
Incidentally,
their music wasn't too bad either: a crass blend of loud, crude
pop and punk, played with a minimum of talent and tempered by
energetic and unashamed histrionics. My favourite was the singer,
if Chris Bailey had overdosed on munchies at McDonalds and been
five years behind his time, he would have been vocalist for The
Mansons and enjoyed it. Great."
-
Mark Mordue (Review of The Allniters Red Orchestra The Mansons
gig at Norths Leagues Club Virgin Press, May 1982. |
What's
in a name?
The
Mansons: an unfortunate name for a band because one immediately thinks
of convicted killer Charles Manson and his fanatical 'family'.
Still,
it's a shade better than the Dead Kennedys. And believe me, the band's
perchant for offbeat names is more than matched by its enthusiasm to entertain
and perform.
The
Mansons lineup is Monkee Manson, guitar; Danny Anarchy, drums; Curlee
Manson, bass; and Harry Manson, vocals and horrendous wigs.
Newcastle
boys one and all, bless 'em, the lads have released a double A-sided single
What Is Her Name/ I Died Four Times (But I Don't Wanna Talk About
It) and are confident that it'll do big things for them. So, do yourselves
a favour and ...sorry, Molly.
Both
songs were written by guitarist Monkee, recorded at Angelwood Studios
(g'day, Peter 'Flash' Sheedy!) and produced and engineered by Graham (Errol)
Greenland.
The
Mansons have been together about 12 months, playing at parties and occasionally
at North Leagues. To say the boys have an enthusiastic following would
be an understatement: everywhere the band goes it is pursued by an energetic,
high-kicking group of fans who'll hear nothing band about the band. This
kind of reaction is usually seen only at the gigs of national and international
name acts.
I
suppose you could describe The Mansons as '60s poppish'. Yes, it's been
said before about a lot of bands but that's the way they hit me. Your
opinion might be different.
One
thing's for sure and that you'll never make up your mind up until you've
witnessed a Mansons performance.
I
don't know where Harry learned to shake his legs like that (probably at
the same place he bought his Old English Sheepdog wig).
Maybe
he's got double-jointed knees.
-
Stepping Out with Leo della Grotta Entertainment
Section (Newcastle
Herald
c.1982)
The
Rekording Sessions
On the
10th and 11th of May 1982 the Mansons went to Angelwood Studios in Newcastle
to record two of their songs, 'What is her name?' and 'I Died 4 Times'.
At the first session on Monday night they spent 4 (not 1 but 4) hours
mucking around until the guy ( the engineer), decided to set the levels.
Suffering
from starvation they got Kerb (the manager) to go and buy them a can of
coke and they were ok. They started recording - Monkee was dying of nerves,
his plectrum kept slipping out of his fingers yet it was boofhead who
was making all the mistakes.
After
the 757th out take they were described by big boofhead that the bass sounded
too sluggish. Curly boofhead immediately kicked the wall and stormed out
of the studio muttering something about his mother. They finally put down
the music and retired to the couch and the floor to relax.
It was
big boofhead's turn to be laughed at and he recorded the vocals to both
tracks.
The
next night was a Tuesday night and they finally found Curly Boofhead at
Homesville by following the trail of smashed cars, damaged trees and dead
pensioners that he left behind when he stormed out of the studio the night
before. The Tuesday night Monkee arrived late (in comparison to everyone
else) and found the whole studio full of people who were 'gonna' sing
backups to '4 times'. Harry was blind chit and kept slurring the words,
but it was finally recorded without the 'chit choir' and everyone went
home to retire.
Anonymous
- 18/5/1982
Live
Norths 17/9/1982
Hunters
and Collectors/ The Mansons
The
Mansons - at least the Family enjoyed them. A parochial Ramones with psychedelic
shirts. See "ABOMINABLE."
- Unknown
The
Gloss of Fame
Last
Year a group of Newcastle musos (well, sorta musos, ya know?) called The
Mansons released the single What Is Her Name and B-side I Died Four Times
(But I Don't Wanna Talk About It).
Luckily
for Newcastle The Mansons later disappeared. But not never to be seen
again.
Out
of the Mix heard this week that the lead singer of the defunct musicos
tres tasteless, Harry Mansons, is now an industrial painter in Darwin.
That's
showbiz, sweetheart (but we don't wanna talk about it).
-Unknown
Newcastle Herald c.1983
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