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Greg Anderson (Australian musician)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Greg Anderson is an Australian musician and horserider. His single "No Roses For Michael" from the TV film of the same name reached #21 on the Australian charts in 1970.[1]

Anderson's career began in the sixties and he released two early singles through Kommotion. In 1970 he recorded the theme song for a TV movie titled No Roses For Michael and it was released as a single by Festival and charted in October 1970. Through Festival he went on to release an album and four more singles.[1] Anderson started performing a long running show as the Electric Horseman (the name was taken from the Robert Redford film) with his horse Butch Cassidy.[2][3]

Anderson married actress Lynda Keane from Bellbird[4] and joined the cast of that show for a period of six weeks.[5] They had three children together.[6]

Discography

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Albums

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  • Greg Anderson (Festival, 1970)

Singles

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  • "I Feel Good" / "When It's All Over" (Kommotion, 1966)
  • "I've Been Unfaithful" / "Mickey's Monkey" (Kommotion, 1966)
  • "No Roses For Michael" / "Ned Kelly" (Festival, 1970) Aus #21[7]
  • "Just Come Running To Me" / "Live For Life" (Festival, 1971)
  • "It's Over" / "Shame" (Festival, 1971)
  • "Somewhere Somewhere" / "It's Over" (Festival, 1972)
  • "Thank Your Lucky Star" / "It's Over" (Festival, 1972)

References

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  1. ^ a b McFarlane, Ian (1999). "Encyclopedia entry for 'Greg Anderson'". Encyclopedia of Australian Rock and Pop. St Leonards, NSW: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 1-86508-072-1. Archived from the original on 3 August 2004. Retrieved 22 October 2024.
  2. ^ Arblaster, Jo (4 October 1990), "Butch takes the bright lights at full gallop", The Sydney Morning Herald
  3. ^ Tubb, Rochelle (20 February 1994), "Greg's bridled passion", The Sydney Morning Herald
  4. ^ Bang, Maureen (5 November 1969), "Enchanting "Bellbird" bride", The Australian Women's Weekly
  5. ^ "no title", Queanbeyan Age, 16 July 1971 {{citation}}: Cite uses generic title (help)
  6. ^ Allison, Karen (13 February 1983), "Butch Cassidy lives here", The Sydney Morning Herald
  7. ^ National Top 60, Go-Set, 1970, retrieved 22 October 2024
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