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Young Elders
Australian pop rock band
Australian pop rock band
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Young Elders |
| landscape | |
| alias | The Monicas |
| origin | Melbourne, Victoria, Australia |
| genre | Pop rock, Jangle pop, contemporary Christian |
| years_active | – |
| label | Disctronics, Blah-Blah-Blah |
| website | |
| past_members | Phil Hawkins |
| Chris Heazlewood | |
| Peter Heazlewood | |
| Ross Jackson | |
| Paul Taylor |
Chris Heazlewood Peter Heazlewood Ross Jackson Paul Taylor Young Elders were an Australian pop rock band formed in 1982. The band released an extended play, Fly Monica Fly, in 1993, and the lead track was adopted by the tennis player, Monica Seles. In 1999 the group, renamed as The Monicas, released a studio album, Celebration, but disbanded in 2000.
History
Young Elders were formed in Melbourne in 1982 by Phil Hawkins, Chris Heazlewood, Peter Heazlewood and Ross Jackson. For the next eight years they played largely in contemporary Christian music circles. They performed at the National Christian Youth Convention in Ballarat in 1987 and were a main-stage artist at Black Stump Music and Arts Festival in 1990. Young Elders crossed over into the secular live music scene in Melbourne in 1991 when they won a round of the 3RRR Reel-to-Real competition with the song "Real Town".
The band were assisted by former Skyhooks bass player Greg Macainsh The Melbourne Age noted its "sure-handed guitar pop" and "pleasingly bitter-sweet lyrics" and music paper Inpress noted its "magnificent bright catchy pop songs". The title track, "Fly Monica Fly", was written by Peter Heazlewood for a girlfriend in distress. It came to the attention of prominent tennis player, Monica Seles, who was recovering from her 1993 stabbing. Seles stated "I received this at a pretty tough time in my life and it was very inspirational and I played it a lot". At the conclusion of the Australian Open in January 1996, Seles met the band which played her a personal rendition. Their meeting was subsequently broadcast by ESPN.
In 1999, the band changed its name to The Monicas and released Celebration, with Rolling Stone (Australian edition) noting its "heart-on-sleeve lyrics" and "acoustic-bent pop" The band, described as "one of the most enduring Christian bands in the country" played its final gig at Melbourne's Continental Café in May 2000.
Members
- Phil Hawkins – guitar, vocals (1982–2000)
- Chris Heazlewood – bass, vocals (1982–1988)
- Peter Heazlewood – lead vocals (1982–2000)
- Ross Jackson – drums (1982–2000)
- Paul Taylor – bass, vocals (1985–2000)
Discography
- Fly Monica Fly (EP, 1993) Disctronics/Studio 52 52CD058
- Celebration (1999) Blah-Blah-Blah Records BBB0134 (as The Monicas)
;Featured Tracks on compilations
- "Flags of Metal" on Nu-Music Sampler Series 3 (Studio 52 records) (1991)
- "Fly Monica Fly" on Nu-Music Sampler Series 7 (Studio 52 records) (1997)
- "Fly Monica Fly" on The Big Backyard (1999) (as The Monicas)
References
References
- Campbell, Vic. (March 1994). "Young Elders – Non-nonsense Pop in the Pubs". On Being.
- Parisi, Michael. (13 November 1991). "Reel-to-Real". Inpress.
- Spencer, Chris. (1996). "The who's who of Australian rock". Informit, Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology.
- "Young Elders – ''Fly Monica Fly''". Tag Tuner.
- Masterson, Andrew. (21 April 1995). "Going It Alone". [[The Age]] (EG).
- Bassett, Daryl. (25 May 1994). "Young Elders – Fly Monica Fly". Inpress.
- "'Fly Monica Fly' at APRA search engine". [[Australasian Performing Right Association]] (APRA).
- (1996). "Monica – From Fear to Victory". HarperCollinsPublishers.
- Eliezer, Christie. (4 May 1996). "Global Music Pulse – Australia".
- (3 March 1996). "Seles Swings into Smash Hit". Herald-Sun.
- (October 1997). "A musical fairy tale". Crosslight (UCA).
- (January 1996). "Monica Seles meets Young Elders". ESPN.
- Grimson, Tracey. (June 1999). "The Monicas – ''Celebration''". [[Rolling Stone Australia]].
- Best, Bruce. (May 2000). "The Monicas end this tune". Crosslight (UCA).
- (May 2000). "Brief updates". Alive Magazine.
- (17 October 1999). "Young Elders – ''Fly Monica Fly''". ACMusic.
- (17 October 1999). "The Monicas – ''Celebration''". ACMusic.
- "'Flags of Metal' at APRA search engine". Australasian Performing Right Association (APRA).
- "Various artists: indie compilations etc...". wolf's kompaktkiste.
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