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Biography
Use dmy dates|date=April 2011Infobox musical artist| image = Daryl Braithwaite - 2009.JPG| name = Daryl Braithwaite| image_size = 220px| background = solo_singer| birth_name =| alias =| birth_date =birth date and age|df=yes|1949|1|11| death_date =| origin = Melbourne , Victoria (Australia)|Victoria , Australia | instrument = Voice , Guitar , Keyboard instrument|Keyboards | genre = Pop (music)|Pop Rock (music)|Rock | occupation =| years_active = 1970present| label = Festival Records (Australia) , Sony Music , Independent record label | associated_acts = Sherbet (band)|Sherbet | website = http://www.darylbraithwaite.com.au darylbraithwaite.com.au| current_members =| past_members =| notable_instruments = Daryl Braithwaite (born 11 January 1949) is an Australia n pop singer . Best known as the lead vocalist of Sherbet (band)|Sherbet , Braithwaite has also sustained a successful solo career, placing 15 singles in the Australian top 40, including the No. 1 hits " You're My World " and " The Horses ".
Biography
Early years
Daryl, along with his twin brother Glenn (who had a son named Jason and daughter named Kayla who all now live in Perth), was born and raised in a working class family in Melbourne , Victoria (Australia)|Victoria His father was an English people|English plumber. As a child, he attended Punt Road Primary School in South Yarra, Victoria|South Yarra , Melbourne and then Christ Church Grammar, also in Punt Road, where he sang in the school choir, and for a time was in the same class as Olivia Newton-John . http://www.abc.net.au/tv/enoughrope/transcripts/s1219832.htm Interview with Olivia Newton-John on Andrew Denton's 'Enough Rope', 18 October 2004 http://www.debbiekruger.com/writer/freelance/onj_transcript.html Olivia Newton-John Interview with Debbie Kruger, 30 August 1994, over lunch at Shelley Beach, Ballina, NSW In 1963 his family moved to the Sydney beachside suburb of Coogee, New SouthWales where he attended Randwick Boys High until the end of year 10. He then began a fitter and turner apprenticeship, set up by his father, which he completed in 1969, but decided that this was not the career path for him and left home to pursue a musical career instead. http://www.darylbraithwaite.com.au/SWF/Main%20Page.swf Daryl Braithwaite Homepage Biography
By the time he was in his teens Braithwaite was singing in various Sydneyrock groups, his first being Bright Lights, in 1967, then House of Bricks and Samuel Lilith. In 1970, at the age of 21, he joined Sherbet (band)|Sherbet , a band that had already released one single. Initially hired as Sherbets' second lead vocalist, within a few months Braithwaite became the band's only frontman when original lead singer Dennis Laughlin left.
Sherbet's second single ("Can YouFeel It Baby") featured Braithwaite's gritty-but-polished lead vocals, and became an Australian Top 40 hit in 1971. The combination of Braithwaite's soul-influenced vocal style and Sherbet's pop songcraft was then heard on a series of singles and albums throughout the 1970s, and The Sherbs ended up placing an additional 19 hits on the Australian Record chart|charts from 1971-79. In the process, Braithwaite rose to national fame as the band's lead singer.
Braithwaite also forged a similarly successful solo career alongside his work in Sherbet. Working in largely the same pop/rock vein as that band, from 1974 through 1993 Braithwaite placed 15 solo hits in the Australian top 40.
Early solo career: 1973-1979
Already a budding star due to his work in Sherbet, in 1973 Braithwaite played the lead role in the Australian production of the rock opera Tommy (rock opera)|Tommy . The following year, amidst unfounded rumours that he would soon be leaving Sherbet, Braithwaite began his official solo career with a cover of the ballad " You're My World ", which went to No. 1 in Australia.
More hits followed throughout the 1970s, including a cover of The Small Faces ' "Afterglow (Of Your Love)". An infrequent songwriter, Braithwaite's solo career has been dominated by cover songs.
Curiously for the 'album rock' era, Braithwaite's solo recordings from 1974-78 appeared only on 7-inch singles. A 'best of' solo LP was compiled in 1978, but Braithwaite's first original full-length album as a solo artist ( Out On The Fringe ) didn't appear until 1979, during a time when Sherbet had briefly broken up.
He was crowned Australia 's Australian pop music awards#1967& ndash;1978: King of Pop Awards|King of Pop by TV Week over three consecutive years from 1975 to 1977. http://www.nostalgiacentral.com/pop/kingofpop.htm TV Week King of Pop Awards
Solo career on hold: 1980-1987
By 1980, the members of Sherbet were back together and had renamed themselves The Sherbs . At this point, Braithwaite put his solo career on hold to concentrate on work with his bandmates. However, The Sherbs had only a very few minor hits and broke up in 1984.
For a period of time after the break-up, Braithwaite played regular gigs, but as of 1987, he had left the music industry and was working as a builder of footpaths for less than 200 Australian dollars a week.
Comeback: 1988-present
In 1988, Braithwaite recorded and released his comeback album Edge (Daryl Braithwaite album)|Edge . This LP featured a somewhat more adult contemporary sound than Braithwaite's previous work, and spawned four hit singles that returned him to the Australian singles charts after an absence of nearly a decade. Two of these hits, "As The Days Go By" and "All I Do", were penned by Canadian songwriter Ian Thomas (Canadian musician)|Ian Thomas ; a third, "One Summer", was a Braithwaite original.
Braithwaite went on to have a number of solo hits in the early 1990s, including the Australian No. 1 "The Horses", a cover of a Rickie LeeJones recording written by Jones and Walter Becker . He also made his first US chart appearance as a solo artist at No. 47 with the 1991 single "Higher than Hope", a song he co-wrote with Simon Hussey . By the end of 1991, Braithwaite's Rise album had become Australia's biggest selling CD of the year, and Edge had become the best-selling album ever released by Sony Music Australia to that time.
Braithwaite then worked alongside Jef Scott, Simon Hussey and James Reyne to create the 1992 album Company of Strangers (Company of Strangers album)|Company of Strangers . Braithwaite sang lead or co-lead vocals on 4 of the album's tracks, including two Australian top 40 singles: "Motor City (I Get Lost)" (#26, 1992) and "Daddy's Gonna Make You A Star" (#35, 1993).
His comeback success was somewhat derailed by a 1992 lawsuit, in which his former managers sued Braithwaite for back payment of fees owing. The suit was successful, and Braithwaite essentially had to give up all the revenue he made from Edge (Daryl Braithwaite album)|Edge and Rise , as well as a portion of the revenue from his next album, 1993's Taste The Salt . This last-named album was only moderately successful, and after a 1994 'best-of' collection was released, Braithwaite was dropped by his record company. He did not record another album for 12 years.
He was a member of 'A Current Affair's Kokoda Challenge' in 1996, where he travelled to Papua New Guinea and did a 100 kilometre nine day trek of the Kokoda Trail with other celebrities Angry Anderson , Grant Kenny , Collette Mann and Dermott Brereton to retrace the steps of Digger (soldier)|Australian Diggers to mark the end of War 51 years previously. His own father had served in Papua New Guinea during the war and he wanted to experience something of what he had to endure. He stated that it was the toughest test he has faced, "I was determined to make it, no matter what. But it was really, really hard." http://www.kokodatreks.com/docs/AngryAndersonStarsriseandfallonKokoda.doc Angry Anderson Stars rise and fall on Kokoda - Word Document
In the interim Braithwaite toured regularly, and in 1997 he returned to the musical theatre stage in the Melbourne production of Chess (musical)|Chess . As of 1999, he also resumed occasional touring with a reunited Sherbet.
After a more than a decade away from the recording studio, Snapshot , appeared in 2005. It included four songs co-written by Braithwaite including See You Around Sometime which was written with Mark Seymour and had been previously recorded by Seymour for his album One Eyed Man .
In 2006, Braithwaite sang on two new Sherbs tracks specially recorded for a greatest hits compilation; they were The Sherbs' first new recordings in 22 years. Braithwaite then resumed his solo career with the 2008 release of The LemonTree , an album of acoustic reworkings of both solo and Sherbet hits, and a few covers.
Discography
Solo singles
Release date
Title
Chart Positions
AUS small>
United States Billboard Hot 100|Hot 100 cite web |url=Allmusic|class=artist|id=p12445|pure_url=yes |title=Daryl Braithwaite |publisher= Allmusic.com |accessdate=6 March 2010
UK Six Moons: The Best of 1988-1994 liner notes by Daryl Braithwaite. ref>
Afterglow: The Essential Collection 1971-1994 (2002)
The Great Daryl Braithwaite (2004) - distributed by Rajon Music (a 3 CD set)
The Essential Daryl Braithwaite (2007)
Featured on
James Reyne , Company of Strangers (1992).
References
reflist
"Afterglow" liner notes by Glenn A. Baker .
External links
http://www.darylbraithwaite.com.au/ Braithwaite's personal site
Sherbet Persondata | NAME =Braithwaite, Daryl | ALTERNATIVE NAMES = | SHORT DESCRIPTION = | DATE OF BIRTH =11 January 1949 | PLACE OF BIRTH = | DATE OF DEATH = | PLACE OF DEATH = DEFAULTSORT:Braithwaite, Daryl Category:1949 births Category:Living people Category:ARIA Award winners Category:Australian male singers Category:Australian people of English descent Category:Singers from Melbourne Category:Australian pop singers