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Jack O'Hagan

Australian singer and songwriter (1898–1987)


Summary

Australian singer and songwriter (1898–1987)

FieldValue
nameJack O'Hagan
honorific_suffix
imageJack O'Hagan.jpg
landscape
backgroundsolo_singer
birth_nameJohn Francis O'Hagan
birth_date
birth_placeFitzroy, Victoria, Australia
death_date
occupationSinger, songwriter, radio personality
instrumentVocals
years_active1916–1961
website

John Francis O'Hagan (29 November 189815 July 1987) was an Australian singer-songwriter and radio personality.

Early life

O'Hagan was born as John Francis O'Hagan, in Fitzroy, a suburb of Melbourne. He was the son of Pat O'Hagan, a hotelkeeper and Alice née Quinlan. He went to school at St Patrick's College and then later at Xavier College in Melbourne. His first job in the music business was at Allans Music in Melbourne – he played sheet music for potential customers. When radio was introduced to Australia, he was one of the first to broadcast for 3LO, and later on 3AW.

Compositions

Between 1916 and 1961, O'Hagan wrote over 600 songs, more than 200 of which were published. Some of O'Hagan's well-known songs are:

  • "Along The Road To Gundagai" 1922 (used as the theme to the Dad and Dave radio show); first performed by Bass-Baritone singer Peter Dawson in 1924 and recorded in London before selling some 40,000 to 50,000 copies in the first three months.
  • "Our Don Bradman" 1930
  • "Dog on the Tuckerbox" 1938
  • "Ginger Meggs" 1948
  • "God Bless Australia". In 1961, it was used in a film-theatre advertisement which was run during the 1960s by the then Australian petrol company, Ampol and sung to the tune of "Waltzing Matilda".

His music and lyrics for the stage include the musical The Flame of Desire, which premiered at Melbourne's Apollo Theatre in October 1935.

In the 1940s and 1950s, O'Hagan wrote many radio commercials and campfire songs. However, the combination of the rising popularity of rock and roll and television ended his career.

Despite writing songs about the town, O'Hagan first visited Gundagai in 1956 when he was guest of honour at the centenary celebrations of the town.

Honours

O'Hagan was awarded the OBE in 1973.

References

References

  1. Bebbington, Warren ''The Oxford Companion To Australian Music'' Oxford University Press 1997
  2. (15 September 2007). "John Francis 'Jack' O'Hagan (1898–1987) Song Composer". Travis M Sellers.
  3. (10 September 2003). "Waltzing Matilda and the National Anthem". Roger Clarke.
  4. (21 October 1935). "PREMIERE OF AUSTRALIAN MUSICAL PLAY.". [[The Age]].
  5. "The Jack O'Hagan story". David Spicer Productions.
  6. Llewellyn, Marc. (4 February 2007). "Beyond the Tuckerbox". News Limited.
  7. "Sheet Music, We're All Cobbers Together, 1940".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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