Martin Clarke


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Founder of the Perth-based label [l408043].

From milesago

The Perth-based Clarion label, established ca. 1962, was co-owned by Martin Clarke and 6PR DJ Keith MacGowan. Like his Sydney namesake and contemporary Martin Erdman, Clarke developed a passion for music and sound recording as a youngster. His built his first recording studio in his mother's home as a teenager; he began his career working as a turntable-panel operator with Perth radio stations in the 1950s, while still at school. At the age of 21 he set up Western Australia's first purpose-built recording studio in North Fremantle; a few years later he sold that facility and purchased an old house at 272 Hay Street, East Perth, which he converted into the Martin Clarke Recording Studio.

Clarke installed the best recording equipment he could buy, including a top-of-the-line Neumann record cutting lathe imported from Germany. The ability to produce his own master discs was a crucial advantage, giving Clarke total control of the final sound -- it ensured that sub-standard masters were not being used for pressing Clarion's records, and avoiding the risks of damage or loss of master tapes in transit and production.

No one in Australia did that, it hadn't been done before and hasn't been done since.
Just like Erdman's Du Monde label in Sydney, Clarion was dedicated to local Perth acts and it did much to support the thriving local music scene there in the Sixties and Seventies, but it had a wider national impact thanks to the national breakthrough of several of its acts, notably Johnny Young. The first single issued on Clarion was Jag Drag b/w Little White Star (right) by Peter Piccini & His Orchestra, released in 1962. The A-side was an instrumental; the b-side was a song with monologue, about the recent space flight of John Glenn, which made reference to Glen having seen the lights of Perth from orbit. Piccini was a noted accordionist, keyboard player and composer-arranger, who later became musical director for the Nine Network. He did arrangements, conducted and played on many Clarion recordings.

Clarion evidently went into abeyance for several years until 1966, when it was revived, with Clarke acting as producer, engineer, A&R manager and (in the early days) distributor. Prior to reactivating Clarion, Clarke set up the shortlived Action label, but only three singles were released on this imprint.

The first group of releases from the mid-Sixties (personally distributed by Clarke) were mostly recordings by local Perth TV personalities, and these had only limited success. When Clarke began tapping into the booming Perth pop scene sales began to rise as he recorded and released local acts such as The Times, Russ Kennedy & The Little Wheels, Roy Hoff & The Off Beats, Glen Ingram, Clem Croft, The Times, the early singles by The Valentines, and Clarion's most successful artists, Johnny & The Strangers, who became nationally known under their later name, Johnny Young & Kompany.

A distribution deal with Festival Records deal led to a national release of some of the singles that had already been successful in Western Australia, like The Skye Boat Song by Glen Ingram, and songs by Robby Snowden, Johnny Young and others. Over the next few years sales were strong and the label earned three gold record awards, including a Gold Album award for the Johnny Young LP Young Happening.

Clarion was one of the most productive independent labels of the period, with 120 singles, 20 EPs and 20 LPs issued between 1962 and 1978. Clarke also released about fifty singles on the Martin Clarke Recording Studios label, as well as countless one-off specialty recordings. The label's biggest national hit was Johnny Young's double-sided hit Cara-Lynn / Step Back (May 1966), which went to #1 in Perth, Melbourne and Sydney and topped the new Go-Set national Top 10, shooting Johnny to national stardom. Young's recordings featured prominently on the Clarion catalogue until mid-1969 and releases include several tracks written by the Bee Gees, with whom Johnny became good friends.

Among other notable releases was Ray Hoff & The Offbeats' Tossin' and Turnin' -- which must rank as one of the wildest Australian pop singles of the Sixties -- Glen Ingram, Toni Lamond, Perth's pop prince Robbie Snowden, folk singer, Play School host and children's entertainer Don Spencer, Perth band Fatty Lumpkin (which included ex members of Bakery) and songwriter Bill Millar. Clarke and Millar also collaborated on one of Clarion's most remarkable singles, the outrageous pyschedelic confection Even Stevens / Hypnotic Suggestion, which they released under the pseudonym 'The Vegetable Garden'. Clarion also recorded the first singles by The Valentines, which featured future AC/DC frontman Bon Scott and singer and music journo Vince Lovegrove as co-vocalists.

During 1970 Clarion released two singles by Perth band The Birds. According to Alec Palao's liner notes for the Clarion Call CD, this group was a trio that included a couple of English roadie-musicians who had previously worked with guitarist Ron Wood, who (with brother Art) had played in a UK band of the same name in the mid-60s. Apparently the Perth Birds simply appropriated the name and passed themselves off as the (emigrated) UK Birds in order to get a contract with Clarion, and they even recorded two tunes that the UK Birds had already covered.

Clarion's releases tapered off sharply after 1970, with only a handful of singles issued each year in 1971, 1972, 1973, and 1974. The label was briefly reactivated for one final single in February 1978, after which the label was wound up.

Martin Clarke left Perth in 1989 and moved to England, where he had family. In the early 2000s he licensed the rights to Clarion/Action catalogue to the British reissue label Cherry Red, who compiled the CD The Clarion Call. It's an excellent overview of the Clarion singles of the Sixties, mixing well-known hits with more obscure material, including the demo version of Johnny Young's breakthrough hit Step Back, recorded in a Perth hotel room by Johnny, and accompanied by The Easybeats.

Martin Clarke was inducted into the WAM Hall of Fame in 2005 for his contributions to Western Australian music. Sadly, he died in London from a heart attack on Tuesday 28 March, 2006. Later that year the Western Australian Museum's Light and Sound Discovery Centre mounted the Clarion Gold exhibition, co-ordinated by Richard Rennie, which commemorated Martin's work with Clarion, and was staged to coincide with the 40th anniversary of Clarion's first national hit. The exhibition displayed a number of significant items, including Martin Clarke's first record cutting lathe, ca. 1957, a gold record he was awarded in 1966, and many rare records, photographs and documents and some magnificent 1960's record players.

ALBUMS


Bon Scott
Round And Round The Forgotten Tales
2011, CD, ,
Classic Rock
Various
The Clarion Call... R&B, Mod And Pop-Psych From Down Under
2003, CD, Comp, RPM Records (2), Bam-Caruso Records, ,
Beat/Garage Rock/Psychedelic Rock/Pop Rock/Rock & Roll/Rhythm & Blues
Bon Scott With The Spektors And The Valentines
Bon Scott With The Spektors And The Valentines
1999, CD, Comp, See For Miles Records Ltd.,
Bon Scott With The Valentines (4) & Fraternity
The Early Years
1988, CD, ,
Rock & Roll/Pop Rock/Classic Rock
Bon Scott With The Valentines
The Early Years
1988, Vinyl, ,
Rock & Roll/Pop Rock/Classic Rock
The Quarefellas
Bottom Of the Punchbowl
1975, LP, Album, Clarion Records (2), Clarion Records (2)
Garry Meadows
Hip Pocket Nerve
1974, 7", Single, Martin Clarke Recording Studios, Martin Clarke Recording Studios
The Quarefellas
Governor Broome Folk Club
1974
Mark IV
Let This Life Mean Something To Me
1972, 7", Single, Martin Clarke Recording Studios
Clare Thomas
Let Me Be Free
1972, 7", Single, Clarion Records (2)
The Inner Circle
Aladdin
1970, 7", Clarion Records (2)
Gemini
Sunshine River / 12.30
1969, 7", Single, Clarion Records (2)
Soul Purpose* With Elaine Mort
Boogaloo Down Broadway
1969, 7", Single, Clarion Records (2)
Quentin Irving
Share/Who Can I Love
1969, 7", Single, Clarion Records (2)
Les Meade
What A Fool You Played Me For
1969, 7", Single, Clarion Records (2)
Tex Croft
I Won't Go Huntin' With You Jake (But I'll Go Chasin' Wimmin)
1969, 7", Single, Clarion Records (2)
Gemini
Butterfly Wings / Nobody Knows You When You Are Down And Out
1969, 7", Single, Clarion Records (2), ,
Vocal
Wayne Pride
It Takes All Kinds To Make A World
1969, 7", Single, Clarion Records (2)
Tex Croft
When It's Springtime In Alaska / Miller's Cave
1969, 7", Single, Clarion Records (2)
The Proclamation
King Of The Mountain
1968, 7", Clarion Records (2)
Bill Millar
The Three Bells
1968, 7", Single, Clarion Records (2),
Robby Snowden
Freckles / I Can't Stop
1968, 7", Single, Clarion Records (2)
Tex Croft
I've Walked A Long, Long Way
1968, 7", Single, Clarion Records (2)
Colin Cook
I've Had My Moments
1968, 7", Clarion Records (2)
The Valentines
She Said
1967, 7", Single, Mono, Clarion Records (2), ,
Pop Rock
Clem Croft, Hi-Five*
Mule Skinner Blues
1967, 7", Single, Clarion Records (2)
Colin Cook
Pocketful Of Rainbows
1967
Johnny Young And Kompany*
When Will I Be Loved
1967
Ray Hoff And The Off Beats*
Tossin' And Turnin'
1966, 7", Clarion Records (2)
John Mowson
Double Bass
1966, 7", Mono, Clarion Records (2), Clarion Records (2)
Roberto Valli Trio
Dracula Cha Cha
1966, 7", EP, Clarion Records (2)
Johnny Young & Kompany
Featuring Let It Be Me And Step Back
1966
Johnny Young & Kompany
Young Johnny
1966, ,
Beat/Garage Rock
Glen Ingram With The Hi Five / Terry Walker (4) With The Hi Five
Skye Boat Song / Long Time Gone
1966
Johnny Young And Kompany*
Step Back
1966
The Times
Tender Feeling
1965, 7", His Master's Voice
The Times
Glad, Not Sad
1965
Peter Piccini And His Orchestra
Jag Drag / Little White Star
1962, 7", Clarion Records (2)
Lloyd Lawson
Lloyd Sings
1962, 7", EP, Mono, Clarion Records (2)
Cloverdale Assembly Of God Choir
Sweet Chiming Christmas Bells
7", EP, Martin Clarke Productions, Martin Clarke Productions
Garry Meadows
What Is Christmas
7", Single, Martin Clarke Recording Studios
Peter Piccini At The Conn Organ*
Organ Highlights
Johnny Young
The Best Of Johnny Young