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Hunters & Collectors

Hunters & Collectors are an Australian rock band formed in 1981. Fronted by founding mainstay, singer-songwriter and guitarist Mark Seymour, they developed a blend of pub rock and art-funk. Other mainstays are John Archer on bass guitar, Doug Falconer on drums and percussion. Soon after forming they were joined by Jack Howard on trumpet and keyboards, Jeremy Smith on French horn, guitars and keyboards, and Michael Waters on trombone and keyboards. Also acknowledged as a founder was engineer and art designer Robert Miles. Joining in 1988, Barry Palmer, on lead guitar, remained until they disbanded in 1998. The group reformed in 2013 with the 1998 line-up.

"Hunnas" redirects here. For the British band, see The Hunna. For the falls, see Hunnas Falls.

Hunters & Collectors

Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

1981 (1981)–1998 (1998), 2009, 2013 (2013)–present

  • Geoff Crosby
  • Greg Perano
  • Ray Tosti-Gueira
  • Nigel Crocker
  • Andy Lynn
  • Chris Malherbe
  • Martin Lubran

Originally Hunters & Collectors were influenced by Krautrock and productions of Conny Plank, featuring strong percussive influences, noisy guitar, and driving bass lines. Their sound was in the vein of Talking Heads' 1980 album Remain in Light. Hunters & Collectors used Plank to produce two of their early albums, The Fireman's Curse (1983) and The Jaws of Life (1984), but neither charted into the Top 50 of the Australian Kent Music Report Albums Chart. Their first Top 10 album, Human Frailty (1986), also featured their logo, a H & C symbol, where the "&" consists of twin snakes entwined around a hunting knife, a variation of a caduceus.


Later Top 10 studio albums were Ghost Nation (1989), Cut (1992), and Demon Flower (1994). Their hit singles were "Talking to a Stranger" (1982), "Throw Your Arms Around Me" (1984), "Say Goodbye" (1986), "When the River Runs Dry" (1989), "True Tears of Joy" (1992), and "Holy Grail" (1993). They became one of the best live acts in Australia and according to musicologist Ian McFarlane, their "great achievement was to lay bare human emotions in the intensely ritualistic milieu of the pub-rock gig".

History[edit]

1978–1980: Formation[edit]

Hunters & Collectors' founding mainstays are John Archer (bass guitar), Doug Falconer (drums) and Mark Seymour (guitar and lead vocals).[1][2][3] They met as residential students of Ormond College at the University of Melbourne in the late 1970s.[4] Seymour is the older brother of Nick Seymour, the bass guitarist for Crowded House.[1][3] In 1978 with Robert Miles (sound engineer) Archer, Falconer and Seymour formed a casual band, The Schnorts (named after a Belgian tennis racket).[4]

(1982)

Hunters & Collectors

(1983)

The Fireman's Curse

(1984)

The Jaws of Life

(1986)

Human Frailty

(1987)

What's a Few Men?

(1989)

Ghost Nation

(1992)

Cut

(1994)

Demon Flower

(1998)

Juggernaut

Awards and nominations[edit]

ARIA Music Awards[edit]

The ARIA Music Awards is an annual awards ceremony that recognises excellence, innovation, and achievement across all genres of Australian music. They commenced in 1987. Hunters & Collectors were inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2005.[46]

Howard, Jack (2020). Small Moments of Glory. Brolga Press.  9-781922-175045.

ISBN

Official website

at Curlie

Hunters & Collectors

at Billboard

Hunters & Collectors discography

Official Jack Howard website

Official Mark Seymour website

Interview with Jeremy Smith on 3RRR FM

2014 Helpmann Award Winners

on YouTube

Can – Hunters And Collectors (Edit) (Official Audio)