Myponga Pop Festival Explained

Myponga'71 Pop Festival
Location:Myponga, South Australia, Australia
Years Active:1
Dates:
Attendance:15,000
Website:https://www.myponga71.comhttps://www.facebook.com/mypongamusicfestival

The Myponga Pop Festival was a music festival which took place on a farm near Myponga, South Australia from 30 January to 1 February 1971.[1] Myponga Pop Festival drew approximately 15,000 people,[2] the biggest event in Adelaide since the Beatles drew a 300,000 strong crowd in 1964.[3] The main funder[4] and figure in the festival organising company, Music Power, was Hamish Henry.[5] [6] [7] [8] The festival has been described as a "tribute to Henry's entrepreneurial genius".[9] As well as organising the Myponga festival, Henry managed several of the headlining local bands, War Machine and two other Adelaide groups, Headband and Fraternity.[10] [11] Hamish had brought rock band Fraternity to Adelaide, South Australia and soon had them headline his Woodstock inspired festival alongside Black Sabbath.[12] [13]

According to Myponga: South Australia's first pop festival by Lindsay Buckland, the festival was originally to be held at Silver Lake near Mylor, South Australia. The owner of the Silver Lake site threatened court proceedings against Music Power for changing the site of the event to Myponga. As a result Alex Innocenti pulled out from the festival as an investor and organiser and was contracted to the festival for various remedial duties, not in an official decision making capacity.[14]

Trevor Brine was the festival's booker and artist liaison.[15] The festival was headlined by heavy metal pioneers, Black Sabbath. Cat Stevens was advertised as co-headline artist at the festival but he cancelled to perform in Los Angeles. The compere was Adrian Rawlins,[16] who wrote of his experiences at Myponga, and other festivals, in his book Festivals in Australia: an Intimate History (1982). Another international act was Syrius, (from Hungary, see Jackie Orszaczky).

According to Brine's assistant and ticket seller Alex Innocenti,[17] [18] [19] "we went down to the farm at Myponga in Hamish's great American sports car with no roof, like movie stars. The farmer says, `What do you guys want?' and Hamish says, `I want to buy your farm.' He gave him a $1 deposit and paid him the next week." Innocenti says he has no idea what's happened to Henry.[20]

Australian artists included Daddy Cool, Spectrum, Fraternity, Billy Thorpe and the Aztecs, Fanny Adams, Jeff St John's Copperwine with Wendy Saddington, Company Caine and Chain; South Australian artists included Steve Foster.[21] [22]

The Canberra Times correspondent reported that the "festival rocked to a close tonight after taking days to warm up. The pop crowd, estimated at 8,000, started arriving at the 62-acre farm at Myponga early on Saturday morning. Most of them had brought plenty of alcohol and, although violence did not erupt, the atmosphere at the festival was tense at times."[1] The promoters did not make any profit.[23]

Author Clinton Walker in his book 'Highway to Hell: The life and death of Bon Scott' described the Myponga Festival: "With a bill boasting an exclusive appearance by Black Sabbath as well as the cream of Australia's progressive bands, Myponga - bankrolled by Hamish Henry was the biggest thing to hit Adelaide since the Beatles..."[24]

In March 2013 Black Sabbath's Ozzy Osbourne recalled the group's debut Australian performance, "That was the Myponga Pop Festival if I remember right? Management told us we'd have an exact copy of our amplifiers there, which we thought was great, but when we got there they were nothing like our amplifiers! But you know what? You get up there and do your best and I had a good time. I remember we had a big party at the hotel and some chicks there got absolutely shit-faced and were throwing up everywhere and we had to send them home. I don't remember much on the sex front after that..."[25]

To commemorate the 50th Anniversary of the festival a monument was erected near the original festival site on Higgs Road, Myponga.[26] A concert was held to celebrate the 50th Anniversary of Myponga Music Festival and Fraternity at Thebarton Theatre on Thursday 18 March 2021. Original Myponga Music Festival bands Chain, Spectrum & Fraternity performed. Doug Parkinson (Fanny Adams) was also scheduled but died just days before the event.

Lineup

(Bands are listed in the order they appeared.)

Sunday, January 30th

Monday, January 31st

Tuesday, February 1st

See also

References

Book: Marshall, Victor . Fraternity: Pub Rock Pioneers . Brolga . 2021 . 978-1920785109 . Melbourne, Australia . 190–204 . en.

Notes and References

  1. News: $6,000 Missing as Pop Show Ends in Chaos . . 45 . 12,724 . 2 February 1971 . 15 May 2017 . 3 . .
  2. Web site: MILESAGO - Performance - Music Festivals - Myponga Festival, 1971. 2021-01-28. www.milesago.com.
  3. Book: Walker, Clinton. Highway to Hell: The Life and Death of Bon Scott. 2007-07-01. Pan Macmillan Australia. 978-1-74198-503-0. en.
  4. Book: Huxley, Martin. AC/DC: The World's Heaviest rock. 2015-09-01. St. Martin's Publishing Group. 978-1-250-09652-4. en.
  5. Web site: Piggott. John. 2021-01-23. Fraternity for eternity: Lost Bon Scott recordings found. 2021-01-28. The Senior. en-AU.
  6. Web site: MILESAGO - Performance - Music Festivals - Myponga Festival, 1971. 2021-01-28. www.milesago.com.
  7. Web site: Remember Myponga—South Australia. 2021-01-28. sites.rootsweb.com.
  8. Web site: Myponga Rock Festival 1971. 29 January 2021. Music Minder.
  9. Web site: Stroud. Graeme. Fraternity (featuring Bon Scott). 2021-03-29. en-US.
  10. Web site: MILESAGO - Performance - Music Festivals - Myponga Festival, 1971. www.milesago.com. 2020-02-23.
  11. Book: Huxley, Martin. AC/DC: The World's Heaviest rock. 2015-09-01. St. Martin's Publishing Group. 978-1-250-09652-4. en.
  12. Web site: Turner. James R.. 2021-01-19. The Best Band You've Never Heard Of: Fraternity – 'Seasons of Change' » We Are Cult. 2021-01-28. We Are Cult. en-GB.
  13. Book: Wall, Mick. AC/DC: Hell Ain't a Bad Place to Be. 2012-10-25. Orion. 978-1-4091-1536-6. en.
  14. Book: Buckland, Lindsay. Myponga: South Australia's First Pop Festival. Lindsay Buckland. 2021. 9780645011609. Australia. 18–19.
  15. Web site: Music Power . Music Power presents at Myponga, South Australia a festival of progressive pop music: January 30–31, February 1 . 1970 . Music Power . 16 May 2017 . Summary: Information leaflet promoting the first Australian Festival of Progressive Music, held at Myponga, South Australia, January 30-February 1, 1971. Also known as the Myponga Festival. Includes location map, general information and a list of international, interstate and South Australian performers. .
  16. Web site: MILESAGO - People - Adrian Rawlins. 2021-01-28. www.milesago.com.
  17. Web site: ABOUT Myponga Music Festival. 2022-01-18. Myponga 71. en.
  18. Web site: Permanent reminder of Myponga festival. Victor Harbor Times. 2021-03-29.
  19. Web site: ABOUT Myponga Music Festival. 2021-03-29. Myponga 71. en.
  20. Web site: Myponga part of rock history. 2010-06-19. www.adelaidenow.com.au. en. 2020-02-23.
  21. Web site: https://webarchive.nla.gov.au/awa/20030623140000/http://pandora.nla.gov.au/pan/35967/20030624-0000/www.milesago.com/Festivals/myponga.htm . Performance – Festivals – Myponga Festival, 1971 . Kimball . Duncan . Carl . Belle . Vince . Lovegrove . Vince Lovegrove . John . Low . Sam . Pickering . Terry . Stacey . Milesago: Australasian Music and Popular Culture 1964–1975. Ice Productions . 23 June 2003 . May 2003 . 16 May 2017 .
  22. Web site: Myponga part of rock history . Davies . Nathan . . 20 June 2010 . 15 May 2017 .
  23. Book: McFarlane . Ian . Ian McFarlane . . Encyclopedia entry for 'Festivals' . https://web.archive.org/web/20040806231517/http://www.whammo.com.au/encyclopedia.asp?articleid=593 . http://www.whammo.com.au/encyclopedia.asp?articleid=593 . 1999 . . . 6 August 2004 . 1-86508-072-1 .
  24. Book: Walker, Clinton. Highway to Hell: The Life and Death of Bon Scott. 2007. Picador. 978-0-330-42363-2. en.
  25. Web site: https://webarchive.nla.gov.au/awa/20140723140100/http://pandora.nla.gov.au/pan/134238/20140724-0001/www.ripitup.com.au/music/article/black-sabbath-ozzy-osbourne-interview.html . Black Sabbath: Ozzy Osbourne Interview . McLennan . Scott . Rip It Up! . 23 July 2014 . 14 March 2013 . 15 May 2017 .
  26. Web site: 50th Anniversary of Myponga Pop Music Festival Monument Australia . 2022-07-25 . monumentaustralia.org.au.