The Town Criers were an Australian pop band formed in 1964.[1] By 1967 their line-up was Andy Agtoft on lead vocals, Mark Demajo on bass guitar (ex-Gemini 5), Sam Dunnin on lead guitar (ex-Gemini 5), Chris Easterby on drums, and George Kurtiss on keyboards.[2] Their first single was a cover version of the Kinks' album track, "The World Keeps Going Round", which was issued in 1965 but did not chart.[3]
Town Criers | |
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Origin | Melbourne, Victoria, Australia |
Genres | Pop |
Years active | 1964 (1964)–1972 (1972) |
Labels |
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Past members |
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They released a cover version of American singer, Robert Knight's "Everlasting Love", as a single in February 1968, which reached No. 17 on the Go-Set National Top 40 alongside United Kingdom's Love Affair's rendition which peaked at No. 23 on the same chart at the same time.[4] Kurtiss left the group in May 1968 and was replaced on keyboards by John Taylor (ex-Strings Unlimited).[2] Their next single, "Unexpectedly", did not reach the top 40.[2]
Agtoft was replaced early in 1969 by Barry Smith from Adelaide and Taylor left without being replaced.[2][3] Town Criers released further singles, "Any Old Time (You're Lonely and Sad)" (March 1969), "Love Me Again" (October 1969) and "Living in a World of Love" (May 1970), before disbanding in 1972.[2][3] Australian musicologist, Ian McFarlane, opined, "[they] made a name for themselves with a melodious, commercial pop sound and squeaky-clean teen idol image... By the end of 1971, [their] sound had become outmoded, and the members went their separate ways."[2]
Title | Details |
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Complete Recordings |
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Title | Details |
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Everlasting Love |
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Love Me Again |
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Year | Title | Peak chart positions |
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AUS [4][5] | ||
1965 | "The World Keeps Going Round"[3] | - |
1968 | "Everlasting Love"[3] | 17 |
"Unexpectedly"[3] | - | |
1969 | "Any Old Time (Your Lonely And Sad)" | 53 |
"Love Me Again" | 35 | |
1970 | "Living in a World of Love" | 42 |
1971 | "Laughing Man" | - |
"Love, Love, Love" | - |