James Griffin (songwriter)

This article is about the Australian singer-songwriter. For other uses, see James Griffin.
James Griffin
Birth name Jamie Francis Griffin
Origin Australia
Genres rock, country
Occupation(s) Songwriter, musician, poet, visual artist, playwright, broadcaster
Instruments Guitar, backing vocals
Years active 1979–present
Labels Hot, Radio, Chase
Associated acts The Agents
James Griffin and the Subterraneans
Shadow Gang
Tablewaiters
Website www.jamesgriffin.com.au

Jamie Francis "James" Griffin is an Australian singer-songwriter, poet, musician, playwright and broadcaster. His style is rock and country music, his work has been covered by other artists including The Black Sorrows and Lee Kernaghan. Griffin has led bands the Agents (1980–83) and James Griffin and the Subterraneans (1983–88); and released material as a solo artist.

The Agents

Jamie Francis Griffin started his musical career in 1979 with a self-financed four-track extended play, James Griffin.[1][2] He formed a country and rock music group, Agents, in 1980 with Lindy Allen on bass guitar, James McIntyre on keyboards and Robin Walsh on drums.[1] This line-up released a single, "Suburbs of the Heart" (1980), which Griffin had written.[2]

The second line-up was Griffin backed by Gye Bennetts (drums), Karl May (bass) and Kydric Shaw (keyboards, guitar). They released the "Merciless Cinema" 7" in 1981. Further lineup changes included the return of James McIntyre (guitar), Kim Knight (bass) and Dennis Flannery (drums). This lineup released the "Seven Samurai" 7" and No Adjustment To The Face mini-LP in 1983.[1]

Griffin released a solo 7"EP, Panic, in December 1984.

James Griffin and the Subterraneans

The Subterraneans was intended to have a floating lineup of musicians who did not have other commitments at the time.[1]

Later bands

In 1991, Griffin played with the Shadow Gang: Peter Harrison (drums), Roger Hart (guitar, vocals) and Rowan McKinnon (bass).[1]

Discography

[1]

James Griffin

Agents

James Griffin and the Subterraneans

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, March 08, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.