The Seekers
Founded in Australia in 1963, the original Seekers comprised Athol Guy (b. 5 January 1940, Victoria, Australia; vocals/double bass), Keith Potger (b. 2 March 1941, Columbo, Sri Lanka; vocals/guitar), Bruce Woodley (b. 25 July 1942, Melbourne, Australia; vocals, guitar) and Ken Ray (lead vocals/guitar). After a year with the above line-up, Athol Guy recruited Judith Durham (b. 3 July 1943, Melbourne, Australia) as the new lead singer and it was this formation that won international success. Following a visit to London in 1964, the group were signed to the Grade Agency and secured a prestigious guest spot on the televised Sunday Night At The London Palladium. Tom Springfield, of the recently defunct Springfields, soon realized that the Seekers could fill the gap left by his former group and offered his services as songwriter/producer. Although 1965 was one of the most competitive years in pop, the Seekers strongly challenged the Beatles and the Rolling Stones as the top chart act of the year. A trilogy of folk/pop smashes, "I'll Never Find Another You", "A World Of Our Own" and "The Carnival Is Over", widened their appeal, leading to lucrative supper-club dates and frequent television appearances. Aside from Tom Springfield's compositions, such as "Walk With Me", they also scored a massive chart hit with Malvina Reynolds' "Morningtown Ride" and gave Paul Simon his first UK success with a bouncy adaptation of "Someday One Day". Meanwhile, Bruce Woodley teamed up with Simon to write some songs, including the Cyrkle hit "Red Rubber Ball". In early 1967, the breezy "Georgy Girl" (written by Tom Springfield and Jim Dale) was a transatlantic Top 10 hit but thereafter, apart from "When Will The Good Apples Fall" and "Emerald City", the group were no longer chart regulars. Two years later they bowed out in a televised farewell performance, and went their separate ways. Keith Potger oversaw the formation of the New Seekers before moving into record production; Bruce Woodley became a highly successful writer of television jingles; Athol Guy spent several years as a Liberal representative in the Victoria parliament; and Judith Durham pursued a solo singing career. She had a minor UK hit in 1967 with "Olive Tree", and her 1973 album, Here I Am, contained songs by Rod McKuen, Nilsson and Elton John, as well as some folksy and jazz material.
Listen to The Seekers
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Albums
- (2007) The Ultimate Collection
- (2004) A's, B's & EP's
- (2003) Come The Day
- (2003) A World Of Our Own
- (2003) Seekers Seen In Green
- (2003) The Very Best Of
- (2003) The Seekers
- (1998) The Very Best of The Seekers
Top Tracks
- Georgy Girl
- I'll Never Find Another You
- A World of Our Own
- The Carnival Is Over
- Red Rubber Ball
Related Artists
- Petula Clark
- Peter & Gordon
- The Dave Clark Five
- Anne Murray
- Chad & Jeremy
- Nick Gilder
- Xuefei Yang
- Brenton Brown
- Cheryl Studer/Nadine Denize/Martine Olmeda/Ben Heppner/Thomas Hampson/José Van Dam/Marcel Vanaud/Jean-Philippe Courtis/Jean-Paul Fouchécourt/Choeur du Capitole de Toulouse/ Sociedad Coral de Bilbao/Orchestre du Capitole de Toulouse/Michel Plasson
- Dame Felicity Lott/Thomas Hampson/Elzbieta Szmytka/John Aler/Kurt Azesberger/Robert Poulton/Rudolf Schasching/Sir Dirk Bogarde/Glyndebourne Chorus/London Philharmonic Orchestra/Franz Welser-Möst
- Green River Ordinance
- Peter Seiffert/Thomas Hampson/City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra/Sir Simon Rattle
- Placido Domingo/Thomas Hampson/Philharmonia Orchestra/Eugene Kohn
- the bird and the bee
- The Nashville Bluegrass Band
- The TurtleDuhks
- Thomas Hampson/Armen Guzelimian
- Thomas Hampson/Geoffrey Parsons
- Thomas Hampson/Kenneth Sillito/Armen Guzelimian
- Thomas Hampson/London Philharmonic Orchestra/Antonio de Almeida
Fans
