From their start in 1979 to their demise only five years later,
Australian Crawl stood as a bizarre anomaly against the largely punk and political scene Down Under. Essentially sculpted as the Melbourne
Beach Boys,
the Crawl's songs ranged from odes to Errol Flynn and Resort Girls to rousing singalongs like "Hootchie Gucci Fiorucci Mama," and their mash cover of the Kingsmen's "Louie, Louie." Consisting of
James Reyne (lead vocals, piano),
Guy McDonough (co-lead vocals, rhythm guitar),
Bill McDonough (drums, percussion),
Simon Binks (lead/acoustic/slide guitar),
Paul Williams (bass), and
Brad Robinson (rhythm guitar),
the Crawl initially appeared to be little more than hedonistic surfers -- in
Reyne's own words, "part of people's lives; a representation of the beach, the open air and good vibes." But their debut album, 1980's The Boys Light Up, also contained recountings of automobile accidents ("Indisposed") and vicious attacks against shallow materialists (the band's first single "Beautiful People"). Their combination of light, breezy tunes with significantly darker subtexts (not altogether unlike
Brian Wilson's best material) left The Boys Light Up on the Aussie charts for no less than 104 weeks.
1981's sophomore effort, Sirocco, did not mess much with their proven formula. Alongside hits like "Lakeside," "Things Don't Seem," and "Errol," the album also produced their standard "Unpublished Critics," a
Reyne rant later redone as a live track on the B-side of "Louie, Louie." The follow-up,
Sons of Beaches, added famed producer
Mike Chapman to the mix, lending the proceedings a more polished sound, while much of the music remained the same (the hit "Shutdown" even borrowing its title from a
Beach Boys classic). However,
Sons also found
Reyne starting to veer off into new territory, earmarked by the cryptic "Letter from Zimbabwe." Still entrenched in classic
Crawl arrangements, hints began to emerge at
Reyne's crucial shift in direction.
After a number one 12" EP, Semantics,
the Crawl released their fourth and final studio album,
Phalanx at the end of 1983. (The American version of this album, released on Geffen in 1984, bore the title Semantics, and served as more of a compilation of
the Crawl's career to date.) Aside from the cover of "Louie, Louie,"
Phalanx also contained the smash single "Reckless," a song
Reyne would later redo for one of his solo ventures. Shortly before their demise,
the Crawl served as opening act for
Duran Duran on certain legs of the
Arena tour. They would release a rare live album, Final Wave and a posthumous singles collection, Crawl File, before
Reyne jaunted off on a hugely successful solo career that continues to thrive in his native Australia.
Significantly, each of
the Crawl's four studio albums and their EP all reached the Top Five on the Australian pop charts, granting them a level of fever-pitch success shared by only a handful of Aussie artists before or since. ~ Tomas Mureika