In Julie Mostyn and Penny Ward both bands would feature a strong female presence; Mostyn as the perfect foil for Flaming Hands songwriter Jeff Sullivan and (initially) his sweet tales of unrequited love set to a '60s backbeat, before turning it up a notch and adding a dance element and scoring some minor chart success into the early'80s.
Shy Impostors songwriter Penny Ward would present her noir like prose atop a menacing rock ’n ‘roll beat via a band that oozed serious talent and featured future members of both the Sunnyboys and Lipstick Killers. Existing for just 12 months during 1979-1980 the legend of the band lies largely in the release of one posthumous single but an impossibly good one-off reformation show in 2017 showed just what could have been.
"Where's the professor? We need him now." Legend has it that 'The Professor' referred to in The Saints classic "Know Your Product" was Stephen Vineburg, a friend to the band during their Sydney sojourn of early 1977. Taking the moniker that singer Chris Bailey had entrusted upon him Vineburg would then form a band of the same name, The Professors, playing a hybrid of '77 punk and Sydney style Detroit existing - like many - for the briefest of moments in the late 70s.
Well before the moniker was high-jacked by wannabe socialites and talentless bums mild-manned record store clerk Frank Cotterell was a major taste maker for serious young music buffs. As Dr. Rock though, any Clark Kent-like tendencies are pushed to the side as Frank’s alter-ego takes control of the decks with a garage-psych-soul meltdown for the ages.
And if you’re loving the artwork for the show it was designed by former Disney animator and Radio Birdman bass player Warwick Gilbert, one of the supreme artistic talents of the day and the man responsible for the great Radio Birdman tour posters of the mid-late 1970s. See Warwick's art and plenty of others from Reg Mombassa to Martin Sharp to Paul Worstead at the Sedition Festival 2019. Details here.