Doug Ashdown | |
Birth Name: | Douglas Wesley Ashdown |
Birth Date: | 1942 7, df=yes |
Birth Place: | Adelaide, South Australia, Australia |
Genre: | Rock, folk, country |
Occupation: | Singer-songwriter |
Years Active: | 1959–present |
Associated Acts: | Col Joye, JAM |
Website: | dougashdown.com |
Douglas Wesley Ashdown (born 29 July 1942) is an Australian singer-songwriter who had a minor hit in Australia with "Winter in America", also known as "Leave Love Enough Alone", which also reached No. 13 on the Dutch Singles Chart in 1978.
Ashdown reached No. 46 on the Australian Kent Music Report with "The Saddest Song of All" released in August 1970. In 1988, "Winter in America" was covered by Dutch singer René Froger, and in 1994 by Australian group The Robertson Brothers.
Douglas Wesley Ashdown was born in 1942 in Adelaide, South Australia. At the age of 17 he travelled to England to play in a rock band. In 1961, he was back in Adelaide and played guitar alongside Bobby Bright as a vocalist in The Bowmen. By 1965, as a solo singer-songwriter, he released his first album, This Is Doug Ashdown. His 1960s popular singles were "Something Strange" in 1968, and in 1969, "Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin On", a cover of the Jerry Lee Lewis' hit.
In 1970, he signed with the independent label, Sweet Peach, and issued "The Saddest Song of All" in August, which peaked at number 46 on the Kent Music Report. The song was written by Ashdown and Jim Stewart, who became his long-term producer and co-writer. The associated album, The Age of Mouse, was the first double LP album of original material released by an Australian. Ashdown and Stewart relocated to the United States, living in Nashville. While there, the pair co-wrote "Just Thank Me", for David Rogers, who released it in 1973. It peaked at No. 17 on the US Country Music Singles Chart. They also co-wrote "Leave Love Enough Alone", which Ashdown released in 1974 after relocating to Sydney. He had a minor hit with it when it was renamed "Winter in America" and released in 1976. It peaked at No. 3 in Brisbane, No. 14 in Melbourne and No. 30 in Sydney.
In 1977, his album Trees won the King of Pop Award for "Best Album Cover" from TV Week, the Australian television entertainment magazine. Ashdown also worked with science fiction writer/songwriter Terry Dowling on recordings of Dowling's song-cycle "Amberjack", about a stranded time traveller. Ashdown contributed lead vocals and guitar to six of the tracks of Dowling's song-cycle, which were broadcast by the ABC in 1977.
He continued to release singles and albums, and had minor chart success into the 1980s. He co-wrote several original songs for the 1995 film Billy's Holiday.
Album details | Peak chart positions | Certification | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
AUS [1] | ||||
This Is Doug Ashdown |
| - | ||
The Real Thing |
| - | ||
Source |
| - | ||
The Age of Mouse |
| - | ||
Leave Love Enough Alone |
| 38 |
| |
Trees |
| 98 | ||
Empty Without You |
| - | ||
The World for the Right Kind of Man |
| - | ||
Love Lives |
| - | ||
No Cheap Grace |
| - | ||
Homesong |
| - |
Doug Ashdown Live |
| |
---|---|---|
Doug Ashdown and Friends Live – The Blues and Then Some |
|
Really and Sincerely |
| |
---|---|---|
A Career Collection 1965-2000 |
|
Title | Peak chart positions | Album | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
AUS | ||||
1970 | "The Saddest Song of All" | 46 | The Age of Mouse | |
1976 | "Winter in America (Leave Love Enough Alone)" | 37 | Leave Love Enough Alone | |
1981 | "And the Band Played Waltzing Matilda" | 40 | The World for the Right Kind of Man |
|-| 1975[3] | Leave Love Enough Alone| Easy Listening Male Album of the Year| |}
. David Kent (historian). Australian Chart Book 1970–1992. illustrated. Australian Chart Book. St Ives, N.S.W.. 1993. 0-646-11917-6. 20.