










|
Slim is the most prolific
and biggest selling recording artist in Australia with more than
5 million of his recordings sold on the domestic market.
One of the most-awarded Australians
ever, Slim has been with the one record company for more than
half a century and in 2000 released his official 100th album.
Click here for Slim's Top
100
The Slim Dusty Story starts back
in the 1940s on a remote dairy farm in the hills behind Kempsey,
NSW, when a 10-year-old boy dreamed of being a country music
singer. His name was David Gordon Kirkpatrick... he called himself
"Slim Dusty" and began to live that dream.
But even the most optimistic farm boy
would never have imagined the life that was to unfold... a life
that would establish Slim as the voice of the nation, the chronicler
of Australian history in song.
As the world enters a new millennium,
Slim is as strong as ever, still building, and living, the dream.
Slim has managed to hold on to those
early visions of writing and singing about the bush because during
his lengthy career, he has kept in touch with his audience. And
he has done this in a very real and meaningful way, so much so
that his fans would feel that Slim is one of their mates and
his songs "just a good yarn you might hear from a mate at
the pub, around a camp fire in the bush or at a back yard barbie".
He describes his music as "songs
about real Australians. I have to be fair dinkum with my audience.
I can't see any other way of doing it," he says. "You
have to believe in what you are singing about."
To quote a London Country Music People
magazine review: "Three things are certain in this life.
Death, Taxes... and Slim Dusty. This man has been making music
and epitomising the spirit of Australia for 50 years. Although
he had a massive worldwide hit with A Pub With No Beer in
the late '50s, few outside his home country are aware of the
continuing popularity and reverence in which Dusty is held Down
Under, not only by the public but by his fellow musicians and
artists, including those who hang their hat under the New Country
sign."
Slim Dusty was the first Australian
to receive a Gold Record (still the only 78 rpm gold record in
existence in this country), the first Australian to have an international
record hit, and the first singer in the world to have his voice
beamed to earth from space (in 1983, astronauts Bob Crippen and
John Young played Slim singing Waltzing Matilda from the
space shuttle "Columbia" as it passed over Australia).
His amazing career spans six decades,
has him holding 35 Golden Guitars (an achievement as yet,
and unlikely to be, unequalled), more Gold and Platinum Record
Awards than any other Australian artist, ARIA Awards (Australian
Recording Industry Awards) including induction into the ARIA
Hall of Fame, video sales Platinum and Gold Awards, an MBE and
Order of Australia for his services to entertainment, and he
was one of the earliest inducted to the Country Music Roll of
Renown.
Just recently (1999) Slim was named
Father of the Year and Senior Australian of the Year... two more
accolades added to numerous other awards and honours.
He is rightly known as the "Historian
of the Bush" but his songs and his stage performances reflect
the changing face of Australia in the country as well as in the
city, and his touring show is as popular now as it has ever been.
 |
1927 Born Kempsey, 13th June. Named David Gordon
Kirkpatrick. Brought up nearby at a Nulla Nulla Creek dairy farm. |
 |
1937
Aged 10, writes first song, The Way The Cowboy Dies. |
 |
1938
Calls himself Slim Dusty. |
 |
1942
Gate-crashes Radio 2KM Kempsey.
Makes his first recording at own expense... Song For The Aussies
and My Final Song. |
 |
1945
Still living at Nulla Nulla
Creek, writes his first country music classic When The Rain
Tumbles Down In July. |
 |
1946
Signs first recording contract
with the Columbia Graphophone Co. for the Regal Zonophone label.
Records six titles including When The Rain Tumbles Down In
July. |
 |
1948
Part-time show business career.
Intermittent radio, hall show and tent show appearances. |
 |
1951
Marries country singer-songwriter
Joy McKean. |
 |
1952
Daughter Anne Kirkpatrick born. |
 |
1954
Commences full-time show business
career. Launches first travelling Slim Dusty Show. |
 |
1956
Establishes partnership with
showman Frankie Foster, which established the Slim Dusty Show
as a large tent show on the showground circuit. |
 |
1957
Records A Pub With No Beer
-- at that time the biggest selling record ever by an Australian. |
 |
1958 Son David Kirkpatrick born. Received Australia's
first Gold record, for A Pub With No Beer. |
 |
1960
Releases first LP album Slim
Dusty Sings. |
 |
1963
Ends showground partnership
with Frankie Foster. |
 |
1964 Establishes
annual round Australia Slim Dusty tour - a 30,000 mile, 10 month
journey. |
 |
1969 First tour outside Australia, in New Zealand,
with New Zealand's Hamilton County Bluegrass Band. Also tours
Papua New Guinea and Solomon Islands. |
 |
1970
Awarded an MBE for services
to music. |
 |
1973
Tamworth's first Australasian
Country Music Awards. Awarded Best LP for Me And My Guitar,
Best EP or single for Lights On The Hill. Joy wins Song
of the Year, also for Lights On The Hill. |
 |
1978
First Sydney Opera House performance
(live recording of The Entertainer). |
 |
1979
Daughter Anne wins Best Female
Vocalist at Tamworth; Joy wins Song of the Year for Beat Of
The Government Stroke with Tom Oliver. Slim elevated to the
Roll of Renown. |
 |
1979 Publishes best selling autobiography Walk
a Country Mile. Identically titled album has achieved Platinum
status in sales. |
 |
1980
Records super hit Duncan,
achieving Gold status. |
 |
1981
Releases 50th album, The
Golden Anniversary Album, reaching multi Platinum status
in Australia. |
 |
1984
Release of feature film, The
Slim Dusty Movie. A video also released. |
 |
1985 Trucks on the Track
album achieves double award at Tamworth, Album of the Year and
Top Selling Album. |
 |
1986 In November, celebrates 40 years commercial
recording with the one company, EMI Australia. Honoured at a
350 guest dinner attended by music industry figures and artists.
EMI announces that Slim's latest album, Beer Drinking Songs
Of Australia, had gone Gold in the first three weeks of release. |
 |
1987
At Tamworth (Country Music Awards),
truck album Neon City wins Album of the Year. |
 |
1988
In Australia's Bicentennial
Year, travels right round Australia at the head of the biggest
country music show to tour the nation. Mt Bukaroo wins
Heritage Award. |
 |
1989
Heritage Award for We've
Done Us Proud. Album G'day, G'day goes Gold. Records
first duo album with daughter Anne. |
 |
1990
Appears in Papua New Guinea
as Australia's representative at the Southern Highlands Province's
Independence Celebrations. Takes show right around Australia. |
 |
1990
Releases double album Coming
Home. Presented with special award acknowledging Slim as
the "Artist of the Decade". Named an "Achiever
of the Year" by the Australia Day Council. |
 |
1991
Two Singers, One Song duo album awarded Top Selling at Tamworth;
Coming Home takes out Album of the Year. November 19 marks
the 45th anniversary of Slim's first commercial recording When
The Rain Tumbles Down In July (1946). |
 |
1992
Involved in the formation of
the Country Music Association of Australia holding the position
of Chairman since its inception. Recorded top selling video Live
Into The Nineties. |
 |
1993
Celebrates 50th anniversary
of continuous recording in Australia. As guest of Aboriginal
band, Yothu Yindi, Slim and his band tour the Northern Territory
and Bathurst Island. |
 |
1994
Marks 40 years since Slim Dusty and Joy McKean established their
touring Slim Dusty Show. Wins Golden Guitar with Lee Kernaghan
for Vocal Group or Duo of the Year with Leave Him In The Longyard.
Tours New Zealand extensively for the first time in many years.
Presented with a double Platinum award for sales in excess of
20,000 video cassettes for Slim Dusty - Live Into The Nineties
and a Platinum award for sales in excess of 10,000 video cassettes
for Slim Dusty - Across Australia. |
 |
1995 On January 20, the Slim Dusty Exhibition opens
at the Australian Country Music Foundation museum in Tamworth.
A professionally designed display of memorabilia collected by
Slim and Joy, a vivid history of country music performing and
recording in Australia over a long span of time. (Exhibition
continues as the centrepiece of the ACMF's Australian Country
Music Hall of Fame.) |
 |
1996 Completes his 91st
album and an accompanying long-form Video recording, both aptly
titled 91 Over 50, commemorating Slim's 50th Year with
EMI Australia. Re-records his 1980 #1 Australian hit Duncan
with Rolf Harris, the first time the two have recorded together. |
 |
1997
Awarded Golden Guitars for Bush Ballad of the Year
and Heritage Song of the Year. Released album A Time to Remember
of war-time favourites, launched at the historic Rocks on Sydney's
waterfront. Part royalties from this album went to Legacy. In
May, crossed the Nullarbor Plain in two Kenworth roadtrains from
Thompson's Transport collecting material for his next truck album.
Opened the Kempsey exhibition "Made on the Macleay"
(his home district). July saw the release of Slim's second autobiography
Another Day, Another Town, and the recording of Makin'
A Mile the truck album released in October this year. Appeared
on the Grand Ol' Opry in Nashville (15th August) by special invitation
from the Country Music Association of America to mark his 50
years of commercial recording for the one company. On his return
to Australia, received the Special Achievement Award from the
Australasian Record Industry Association at the ARIA Awards. |
 |
1998
Awarded another Golden Guitar, for Bush Ballad
of the Year (Lady is a Truckie). At the Tamworth CM Festival,
made over 50 appearances and interviews in 10 days, and unveiled
the Stan Coster plaque at Manilla. In February, voted a National
Living Treasure by the public, a very special honour. At the
APRA (Australasian Performing Right Association) Awards in May,
awarded the Ted Albert Award for Lifetime Achievement. The Not
So Dusty tribute album released in June... recordings of
Slim's songs by his peers in the music industry (including a
number of rock and folk artists and bands). Besides touring during
the year, Slim visited his home town of Kempsey where the Country
Music Heritage Festival committee awarded him the Living Legend
Award and he recorded much video footage around his old home
in Nulla Nulla Creek. In September, Slim, Joy and the Travelling
Country Band travelled to the Solomon Islands to participate
in the opening celebrations of the Gold Ridge gold mine outside
Honiara. The closing open air concert was attended by as many
as 30,000 islanders. Altogether, a varied and satisfying year
for Slim. |
 |
1999
For only the second time in the history of the Australasian
Country Music Awards, Slim missed being in Tamworth due to sudden
and urgent cardiac surgery early in January. He made a very good
recovery and was filming in March for the BBC from Wales, working
on two albums and sitting for portrait painter Judy Cassab. Big
surprise to discover that he was working on his 99th album, which
was finally called '99 and released late this year. Named
"Father of the Year" by the NSW Council, and in September,
named the inaugural "Senior Australian of the Year"
by the Commonwealth Government. |
 |
2000 At the Tamworth
Country Music Festival in January, Slim was awarded the Australian
Bush Laureate Awards Golden Gumleaf Heritage Award for his contribution
to upholding the heritage of bush balladry and poetry over the
years and saw the launch of personalised postage stamps with
his image on a special issue. In his new 'Columbia Lane Studios',
Slim has now completed his 100th album, a landmark for the Australian
recording industry. Titled Looking Forward, Looking Back,
the album was released just four weeks after a giant tribute
concert to Slim (Hats Off To Slim) in Tamworth, Country Music
Capital, on the Saturday of the June long weekend organised and
staged by the CMAA. Two weeks after that, "the country music
industry" paid tribute to Slim at a special function in
Sydney's Theatre Royal organised by EMI, following which Channel
9 rolled in the production crew for a special one hour Slim
Dusty -- This Is Your Life, the second time Slim has starred
in the show... the first one was in 1974. Looking Forward,
Looking Back was certified Gold within three weeks of release
and Slim was on the road again from August in an extensive tour
to promote the album. In September, Looking Forward, Looking
Back surpassed the 100,000 sales mark and on Sunday, October
1, Slim was the final act at the Closing Ceremony of the Sydney
2000 Olympic Games. Preceded by a star-studded programme of entertainers,
Slim walked on to stage just prior to the official announcement
of the closure leading a jam-packed audience of 100,000 plus
spectators in a rousing rendition of Waltzing Matilda!
A fitting end to the Games, a fitting tribute to Australia, a
fitting statement for Australian country music! |
 |
2001 At the first Country Music Awards of the 21st
Century, Slim wins three Golden Guitars from his milestone 100th
album Looking Forward Looking Back. The Australian country
music industry pays a unique tribute voting unanimously to make
Slim Honorary President For Life of the Country Music Association
of Australia (CMAA). Australia Post pays national tribute
by naming Slim among its Legends stamp series. In February, work
begins on album 101 (and beyond). In August, Slim performs with
fellow "national treasures" Richard Tognetti and Roger
Woodward at a National Trust dinner in the Sydney Town Hall to
honour Australia's living national treasures and to raise funds
for the work of the Trust. Looking Forward Looking Back
wins the 2001 ARIA Award for Best Country Album. Fund-raising
commences in earnest in Kempsey for a Slim Dusty Heritage Centre.
Two new albums released... West Of Winton and The Men
From Nulla Nulla with Shorty Ranger. Towards the end
of the year, Slim undergoes successful surgery to remove a kidney. |
 |
2002: Slim
kicks off the year with a sold out family concert in Tamworth's
famous Town Hall and his 35th Golden Guitar for West Of Winton
(Bush Ballad of the Year) at the 30th Anniversary Toyota Golden
Guitar Awards. The song, written by Ray Rose, is the title track
to the album which was recorded some years ago but put on hold
while 99 and the 100th album Looking Forward Looking
Back were released. Slim performed Lights On The Hill
as part of the finale to the Awards presentation which went to
air the same night Australia-wide on the Seven and Prime television
networks. Lights On The Hill, written by Joy McKean, won
the very first Golden Guitar ever presented, for Song of the
Year, in 1973. |
|