Puneet Varma (Editor)

Daddy Who Daddy Cool

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Released
  
July 1971

Release date
  
July 1971

Label
  
Sony Music

Artist
  
Daddy Cool

Producer
  
Robie Porter

Genre
  
Rock music

Daddy Who? Daddy Cool httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb9

Recorded
  
1971 Armstrong Studios, Melbourne

Daddy Who?... Daddy Cool (1971)
  
Sex, Dope, Rock'n'Roll Teenage Heaven (1972)

Similar
  
Daddy Cool albums, Rock music albums

Daddy Who?... Daddy Cool was the debut album by Australian rock band Daddy Cool. Released in July, 1971 it was the first on Robie Porter's Sparmac label. It was the first Australian album to make #1 nationally and stayed at #1 for seven weeks, it smashed all previous sales records - gold within a month - an unprecedented 60,000 copies sold in its initial release, and went on to become the first Australian LP to sell more than 100,000 copies.

Contents

The album was originally issued in a textured cover and featured a cartoon rendering of band members by Melbourne artist Ian McCausland (see infobox at right) which became the group's logo. While Daddy Cool's guitarist, Ross Hannaford, was responsible for overall album cover design, McCausland created the band's graphics and much of their visual image. Most of the original songs were written by guitarist, vocalist Ross Wilson except "Bom Bom", which was co-written with Hannaford. The rest of the album contained 1950s R&B covers - The Rivals' "Guided Missiles", Etta James' "Good Rockin' Daddy", Marvin & Johnny's "Cherry Pie", The Rays' "Daddy Cool" and Chuck Berry's "School Days".

Daddy Who?... Daddy Cool was also released in the US on the Warner/Reprise label and the band toured in support of its release. Two singles were lifted from the album: "Eagle Rock" #1 on the Australian national singles chart and "Come Back Again" which reached #3.

The album was re-issued in 1975 (with different sleeve under the title Daddy Who? Daddy Gold!) on Wizard Records (also owned by Porter) and in 1982, with the original artwork but non-gatefold sleeve.

The Australian release on Sparmac Records contains different tracks than the US Release on Reprise Records five months later. The Australian release includes the tracks "Good Rockin' Daddy" and "Cherry Pie" not found on the Reprise Records edition. The US release includes the tracks "Flip", "Lollipop" and "Just As Long As We're Together" not found on the Sparmac Records edition.

In October 2010, it was listed at No. 14 in the book, 100 Best Australian Albums.

Track listing

All songs written by Ross Wilson unless otherwise indicated.

Australian release
  1. "Daddy Cool" (Frank Slay/Bob Crewe) - 2:31
  2. "School Days" (Chuck Berry) - 3:03
  3. "Come Back Again" - 4:51
  4. "At The Rockhouse" - 3:42
  5. "Guided Missile" (Alfred Gaitwood) - 3:02
  6. "Good Rockin' Daddy" (Richard Berry/Joseph Bihari as "Joe Josea") - 2:21
  1. "Eagle Rock" - 4:07
  2. "Zoop Bop Gold Cadillac" - 3:56
  3. "Blind Date" - 4:12
  4. "Bom Bom" (Ross Wilson/Ross Hannaford) - 2:34
  5. "Cherry Pie" (Joseph Bihari as "Joe Josea"/Marvin Phillips) - 3:40
US release
  1. "Daddy Cool" (Frank Slay/Bob Crewe) - 2:31
  2. "School Days (Ring Goes The Bell)" (Chuck Berry) - 3:03
  3. "Come Back Again" - 4:51
  4. "At The Rockhouse" - 3:42
  5. "Guided Missile" (Alfred Gaitwood) - 3:02
  6. "Flip" (Carl Green) - 2:26
  1. "Eagle Rock" - 4:07
  2. "Zoop Bop Gold Cadillac" - 3:55
  3. "Blind Date" - 4:12
  4. "Bom Bom" (Ross Wilson/Ross Hannaford) - 2:34
  5. "Lollipop" (Beverly Ross/Julius Dixon) - 1:36
  6. "Just As Long As We're Together" - 2:32

Daddy Cool members

  • Edmond G Troy - keyboards
  • Wayne Duncan - bass, vocals
  • Ross Hannaford - guitar, vocals
  • Ross Wilson - vocals, guitar, harmonica
  • Gary Young- drums, vocals
  • Additional personnel

  • Robie Porter — piano, steel guitar
  • Jeremy Noone — saxophone
  • Dave Brown — tenor saxophone, flute
  • Additional credits

  • Robie Porter — producer
  • Roger Savage — engineer
  • Ross Hannaford — cover design
  • Ian McCausland — cover graphics
  • Songs

    1Daddy Cool
    2Schooldays
    3Come Back Again

    References

    Daddy Who? Daddy Cool Wikipedia