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Pat Wilson

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Other names
  
Mummy Cool

Employer
  
Role
  
Singer


Name
  
Pat Wilson

Occupation
  
Journalist, singer

Children
  
Daniel Wilson

Pat Wilson patwilsoncomauwpcontentuploads201211patab

Full Name
  
Patricia Mary Higgins

Born
  
11 June 1948 (age 75) (
1948-06-11
)

Spouse
  
Ross Wilson (m. 1969–1989)

People also search for
  
Ross Wilson, Athina Wilson, Dimitri Wilson, Daniel Wilson, Tania Wilson

Pat wilson bop girl


Pat Wilson (born Patricia Mary Higgins; 11 June 1948) is an Australian singer and journalist. Wilson wrote for Go-Set, a 1960s and 1970s pop music newspaper, under the pen-name "Mummy Cool" during 1971–1972. Wilson released several singles in the early 1980s including the hit single "Bop Girl". The song was written by her then husband Ross Wilson of the bands Daddy Cool and Mondo Rock.

Contents

Pat Wilson pat wilson salford singer at strawberrys in manchester 1985 part

Pat wilson bop girl


Early years

Wilson first saw Ross Wilson perform with his band The Pink Finks in about 1965, when she was sixteen. They met when he was working for the Department of Supply. In 1969, Ross left Australia for England to become a member of Procession. Wilson joined him there; they married and returned to Australia.

Ross and three bandmates formed Daddy Cool in 1970 and toured Australia. In early 1971 they performed at the Myponga Festival in South Australia. Concert footage of their performance of "Eagle Rock" shows a pregnant Wilson in the front row (from 1m.43sec, right hand side of the screen). The Wilsons' son Daniel was born just as "Eagle Rock" reached #1 on the National singles charts. At about this time, Wilson started writing her column for Go-Set taking over an advice column called "Dear Lesley Pixie" and using the pen-name "Mummy Cool".

In 1975 Wilson appeared on Australian band Skyhooks' second album Ego is not a Dirty Word on the title track, "Ego is not a Dirty Word". She played finger cymbals. Ross produced the album.

"Bop Girl"

In 1983, Ross wrote "Bop Girl" for Wilson to perform, it became a #2 hit in Australia; Ross also provided backing vocals and appeared in its music video. The single released on Warner Music Group became one of the highest selling singles of 1983, and achieved airplay in various parts of the world, including the United States, where the single peaked at #104 on the Billboard pop chart. Subsequent singles failed to repeat this success.

Eric McCusker when interviewed in Juke Magazine, 22 October 1983, was asked whether he could have written something like Bop Girl, he replied:

"No, that's a very Ross Wilson song isn't it? That's been around for about four years. I think Ross did a demo with some guys from the first Mondo line up and we all liked the song but it was obvious it wasn't a Mondo Rock sound. But that's what I say about doing other things aside from Mondo Rock: it's healthy and you don't feel restricted as a result."

The "Bop Girl" music video was the screen debut of 15-year-old Nicole Kidman playing the role of a young "bop girl". Chosen by director Gillian Armstrong, songwriter Ross recalled that Kidman was to represent "an up and coming starlet with a bright future". Kidman herself insisted that the video be used for both a BBC documentary about her career, and also in an American Cinematheque tribute, with the result that the video returned to Australian music video playlists in 2004. The music video was shot in South Coogee.

This song featured on 2012's Being Lara Bingle.

A follow-up EP called Strong Love was released in 1984 also on Warner Music Group.

Personal life

Wilson was married to musician Ross Wilson for twenty years according to her brief account on ABC-TV's Talking Heads on 9 July 2007, where Peter Thompson interviewed Ross. They have a son Daniel born in 1971.

Singles

  • "Bop Girl" / "Tacky" (1983, Warner Music Group)
  • Albums

  • Strong Love (EP, 1984 Warner Music Group)
  • "Bop Girl" / "Strong Love" / "Bop Girl Goes Surfin'" / "Shimmy Shimmy Ko Ko Bop" / "Killer Bees"
  • "Bop Girl" / "Bop Girl Goes Surfing" / "Strong Love" / "Killer Bees" / "Tacky" (released in US as Bop Girl)
  • Personnel

  • Pat Wilson — vocals
  • James Black — backing vocals, guitar, keyboards, bass on "Strong Love" and "Killer Bees"
  • Ricky Fataar — backing vocals, drums, percussion, co-producer
  • Mark Moffatt — guitar, co-producer
  • Daniel Wilson — other (Bee attack)
  • Ross Wilson — backing vocals (co-lead on "Strong Love"), guitar, co-producer
  • Joe Creighton — bass guitar on "Bop Girl" and "Bop Girl Goes Surfin'"
  • Simon Gyllies — bass guitar on "Bop Girl"
  • J. J. Hackett — drums on "Killer Bees"
  • Chris Haigh — bass on "Shimmy Shimmy Ko Ko Bop"
  • M. Holden — fiddle on "Bop Girl"
  • References

    Pat Wilson Wikipedia