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Bon Scott memoir Live Wire sheds new light on AC/DC legend


Posted By FRC All Music Admin, 2018-07-27
Bon Scott memoir Live Wire sheds new light on AC/DC legend

MARY RENSHAW, GABBY D’ARCY, JOHN D’ARCY PerthNow


A NEW memoir by three of Bon Scott’s closest friends sheds new light on the rock legend.

Co-author Mary Renshaw tells of the Bon she knew:

I HAD always wanted to work in fashion, and when I was 16 I left school to work at Norma Tullo, one of the biggest fashion houses in Melbourne.

It was a sociable workplace with many girls my age and we’d often go to 10th Ave, a venue in Bourke St that held lunchtime rock shows.


During our lunch hour, we’d see bands such as The Easybeats, The Wild Cherries, The Purple Hearts and The Loved Ones.

A scene was developing in Melbourne, involving music and fashion, and I loved being a part of it. It was a fun, happy atmosphere.

When Norma Tullo moved to Richmond, I stayed in the city and got a job as a designer at Kenneth Pirrie, where we designed knitwear, evening wear, daywear and lingerie.

It was 1968; I’d just turned 18 and I was a fashion designer. Life was good. Then I went to see a band called The Valentines at 10th Ave.

A friend had seen them and she was a fan.

After the show, one of the singers came up to me and started chatting. He was admiring the beads I was wearing, or at least, that’s what he claimed.

As he stared at my beads, he asked if I could make him some.

“Sure,” I said. “What’s your name?”

“Bon,” he smiled. “Bon Scott.”

And that was it; we were friends from that day on.

As well as the hippie beads, I made Bon a velvet bolero. With jewels and gold braid, it was very Jimi Hendrix.

I became a regular at The Valentines’ gigs. They were singing mostly covers, but they had a great dynamic on stage and their shows were always fun.

I remember at one show Bon was struggling to sing because he had a dry throat.

“Can someone get me a Coca-Cola?” he requested, but no one did. T

hen, gasping for air, he added, “I really need a Coca-Cola!” so I rushed off to get him a drink. After the show, Bon revealed that he suffered from asthma, though it never seemed to affect his singing career.

I also started visiting the band at their house, an old double-storey place in Dalgety St, St Kilda. A lot of musicians lived in the area because it was cheap. St Kilda in the late ’60s was also quite edgy; there were a lot of boarding houses and working girls in the area.

Bon’s co-lead singer, Vince Lovegrove, had the front room, while Bon had the room upstairs, which was like an attic. He’d painted the room red, and in it he had a little bed and table.

I did a Beardsley-inspired drawing for him and he stuck it to the wall. It was the only thing he had that resembled decoration in his room.

Bon was really open and friendly and easy to talk to. I soon discovered that he never judged anyone. He was always up for meeting new people and having a chat.

During the AC/DC days, Bon did an interview with Melbourne journalist Lawrie Masterson, in which he confessed that he’d spent 11 months in jail when he was 17. Bon claimed it was for assaulting police.

“I was singing a couple of songs with a band at a dance in Fremantle and a couple of guys started giving me a hard time,” Bon told The Herald .

“I got off the stage and got stuck into them. The cops tried to break it up and I finished up on a charge of assaulting the police.”

Bon told me he’d done time in jail, but he refused to elaborate, saying only that he’d broken his mum’s heart.

The wide-eyed livewire
The wide-eyed livewire Picture: Supplied

It was only when I read Clinton Walker’s Bon biography 26 years later that I found out what had really happened.

At a dance, a 16-year-old Bon had sex with an underage girl. A couple of other guys at the dance then tried to force themselves on to the girl and Bon took on both of them.

When the police broke up the fight, Bon gave them a false name and address and took off in a mate’s car.

He ended up in the Fremantle Children’s Court, pleading guilty to charges of unlawful carnal knowledge, giving a false name and address to police and having stolen 12 gallons (54 litres) of petrol. He was sent to a boys’ home.

Bon was obviously ashamed of what he’d done, and throughout his life he was driven to succeed, partly to say sorry to his mum and dad.

There would always be plenty of girls at that Dalgety St house. The guys were starving — if they had some money, they’d wander down to Greasy Joe’s for a burger — but there would always be girls at The Valentines’ house, cooking and cleaning. And they always had great parties.

At one party, I remember Bon running downstairs and grabbing my arm. “There’s a girl in my room,” he whispered. “Can you get her out of there?”

Bon was concerned that the girl was a little out of it. The next morning, she was sheepish. “I’m so embarrassed, Mary,” she confided.

“When he got up out of the bed he had one of my false nails stuck on his bum!”

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Bon Scott: a wild hard rocker with soft centre


Posted By FRC All Music Admin, 2018-10-18
Bon Scott: a wild hard rocker with soft centre

More than 35 years after his death, everyone thinks they know Bon Scott.

bon Scott Soft.jpg The story of one of Australia's most iconic musicians — the denim, tattoos and tragic death with AC/DC on the verge of world domination — is carved into rock music legend.

But for the three people who knew Scott best — his soulmate, his roadie and that roadie’s wife — the legend was incomplete and becoming frayed around the edges by stories embellished for notoriety or bank notes.

So this week Mary Renshaw, John D’Arcy and Gabby D’Arcy released the biography Live Wire — their personal story of Bon Scott, a real and raw remembrance of the person behind rock’s ultimate persona.

“He was just one of the nicest dudes you could ever meet,” John, or Darce to everyone who knows him, said. “And if he was still alive he would still be walking around Fremantle in his cut-off jean shorts with his cluster hanging out.”

Darce’s introduction to Scott, who was building his reputation as a singer in Perth-based teenybopper band The Valentines, frames the introduction to the book — and sets a bawdy and bacchanalian scene.

Half an hour after they met, Darce was sharing a very intimate encounter with the singer and a young female fan.

“So started ... years of madness. My life would never be the same again,” he said.

“It was pretty heavy at times and we lived the lyrics, especially It’s a Long Way To The Top. I lived those songs with Bon.”

The memoir is frank about the sex, drugs and rock’n’roll that enveloped Scott as he went from teenybopper idol to Melbourne and then Sydney as lead singer of Fraternity and on to AC/DC.

The origins of two of AC/DC’s most famous songs, Whole Lotta Rosie and The Jack, are laid out in lurid detail, both owing much to Scott’s bedroom prowess.

But through the eyes of the women in his life, Scott’s softer side emerges.

The prolific letter and Christmas card writer; the dedicated, driven and ambitious musician; and a son shamed by Children’s Court charges that he was determined to make up to his mum.

“Of course I knew the rock and roll singer but I knew the man behind that for a lot longer,” Renshaw said. “Recalling all his different sides for the book was bitter sweet in a way because he was my friend and I loved him and I wish he was still here.

“So this was a way of remembering the real Bon by the people who knew him best and to clear up a lot of the rubbish out there.”

That had to include how Scott died. After a night drinking in London in February 1980, he was left to sleep it off in the car of acquaintance Alistair Kinnear.

The next day, Kinnear found Scott unconscious and he was pronounced dead at nearby King's College Hospital, aged just 33.

The circumstance and the sheer waste of Scott’s death jump from the pages.

For Darce, it is the regret of not going with his friend to London but to stay in Australia with his wife and new child.

For Renshaw, it is the tragic timing. She owns Back In Black — the AC/DC album which catapulted the band to superstardom just five months after Scott's death — but has never been able to listen to it.

But as the years drift on, the memories of Scott’s cackle, bravado and talent refuse to diminish.

“He loved being in a band, right to the end and he knew he was about to make it big ... and now the legend will always be there,” Renshaw said.

“But mostly I wanted to write about him being my friend and how I loved him for that.”

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Bon Scott
About Bon Scott

Ronald Belford "Bon" Scott (9 July 1946-- 19 February 1980) was an Australian vocalist as well as songwriter, best known for being the prima donna and lyricist of the Australian acid rock band AC/DC from 1974 till his fatality in 1980.

On 19 February 1980, Scott died after an evening out in London. AC/DC quickly taken into consideration disbanding, yet the team hired singer Brian Johnson of the British glam rock band Geordie. AC/DC's succeeding cd, Back in Black, was released only 5 months later on, as well as was a tribute to Scott.

Scott was birthed in Forfar, Scotland, and also elevated in Kirriemuir, prior to relocating to Melbourne with his household in 1952 at the age of 6. Scott created his very first band, The Spektors, in 1964 and ended up being the band's drummer and occasional lead vocalist.

In the July 2004 issue of Standard Rock, Scott was ranked as leading in a checklist of the "100 Greatest Frontmen of All Time". Strike Parader rated Scott as 5th on their 2006 checklist of the 100 Greatest Heavy Steel Vocalists of all time.

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