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I nearly dropped my breakfast when I read it this morning. An Australian rock icon gone so suddenly. RIP Billy. Most people I know ...
'Genius' showman dies
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February 28, 2007 - 6:28AM
Australian rock legend Billy Thorpe has died after suffering a major heart attack.
"Mr Billy Thorpe did pass away at St Vincent's Hospital in the early hours of this morning," St Vincent's spokesman David Faktor told the Nine Network.
"I understand he passed away from a heart attack. His family were with him when he passed away."
Emergency crews attended his home in Sydney just after midnight (AEDT), where the 60-year-old was suffering from chest pains.
He was accompanied by his family when ambulance officers took him to St Vincent's Public Hospital.
He remained in emergency in a serious condition but went into cardiac arrest around 2.30am (AEDT).
Hospital staff were unable to revive him.
Thorpe was born in England but emigrated with his family to Brisbane in the 1950s.
He moved to Sydney in 1963 and recorded his first song the next year with his band Billy Thorpe and the Aztecs.
They went on to perform at sellout venues across Australia and had a string of hits in the 60s and 70s, including Some People I Know.
His music career spanned five decades and he also wrote two autobiographies.
The former manager of Billy Thorpe, who died today from a heart attack, says the performer was a "genius" showman.
Mr Browning, who went on to manage ACDC, said Thorpe created what became known as the pub music scene, and was "king" in Melbourne.
"He was amazing, I remember standing on the side on the stage at the Myer Music Bowl in front of 200,000 people and watching Billy work the crowd," he told the Seven Network.
"I don't think there has ever been anyone in Australia that has been able to work the crowd like Billy Thorpe.
"He was just amazing, an actual genius as a showman."
'Impossible to comprehend'
Billy Thorpe shaped Australia's pub music scene, music journalist and historian Glenn A Baker says.
"It seems impossible to comprehend," Mr Baker told ABC Radio this morning.
The music journalist was to accompany Thorpe to Morocco, where Thorpe was working on a recording project.
"Thorpe was just always involved in something," he said.
"He had so much music in him and there was just such an extraordinary sort of appetite for what he was doing."
Thorpe was born in England but emigrated to Brisbane with his family in the 1950s and later moved to Sydney in 1963 to jumpstart his music career.
Billy Thorpe and the Aztecs became a major rock outfit, selling out concert venues and producing chart-topping songs in the 60s and
70s.
"Thorpe came up in that crop of 60s teen idols but there was a greater dimension to him," Mr Baker said.
"After he was a teen idol he went to Melbourne for a few years ... he completely re-orientated himself and then turned Australian rock on its ear with a thunderous, pulverising music.
"The Aztecs just become a byword for really the origins of Australian pub rock.
"It's the one form of music we've done better and more convincingly than any other.
"This sort of loud, roaring, howling, ferocious, sort of pub-based bluesy rock and roll and Thorpe was that incredibly powerful voice.
"There was something that was just primal about Thorpe's blood-curdling roar. There was nobody like him on the stage."
AAP


