NICK BARKER releases new single ‘Hell Sux’ on 22nd November, out on Golden Robot Records
Nick Barker has been a familiar painting hanging on the walls of the Australian music scene since the late 1980s. He further rose to prominence with his band The Reptiles, releasing the hit cover version of Steve Harley’s ‘Make Me Smile’.
‘Hell Sux’ is the opening track from Barker’s personal favourite album,1998’s Damn Mermaids. At the time, Barker played as part of a raw 3-piece band featuring Linc Jones on bass and the late Craig Whitelock on drums. Recorded live and loud, ‘Hell Sux’ is all Marshall amps and 1958 Les Paul Juniors.The remastered version of ‘Hell Sux’ drops on all digital platforms via Golden Robot Records on November 22nd.
Barker recently also released a remastered version of the original track ‘Where I Wanna Be’ (feat. Felicity Urquhart). ‘Where I Wanna Be’ and the upcoming single ‘Hell Sux’ both come from the upcoming release Ones You Missed–Vol.1.
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ABOUT NICK BARKER
Nick Barker left his suburban home at 17 and began his career as a bass player in Melbourne’s eclectic inner city post-punk scene, cutting his teeth in iconic venues like the Ballroom and the Prince of Wales with bands such as The Curse, Beach House and A Singing Dog, precursor to the now infamous Lubricated Goat. The most notable of these was The Wreckery, with whom he played on five albums.
In 1988, Nick’s new band, Nick Barker and the Reptiles, began playing bars around town, sparking interest from The White Label. They had their first break through with the Chris Bailey-produced single, ‘Another Me’, followed by four crazy years of booze-soaked pub rock. The Reptiles released two albums: Goin’ to Pieces in 1989, which included the hit cover version of Steve Harley’s ‘Make Me Smile’ and After the Show in 1991, recorded in Melbourne and Memphis, and produced by Joe Hardy (ZZ Top, Georgia Satellites, Steve Earle). Sadly, The Reptiles fell apart in 1993 after the release of Loose, an EP that gave an insight into the band’s true potential.
Nick released his first solo album in 1994. Happy Man spawned the single ‘Time Bomb’, which ended up at number 20 on Triple J’s Hottest 100 in 1994. In 1996, he followed up with the dark and gritty, Damn Mermaids. This was his personal favourite, although the album marked the end of his ten-year association with Mushroom Records. Nick kept moving and in 1998 landed a major role in the 1998 Australian movie, ‘Amy’, alongside Rachael Griffith and Ben Mendlesohn, also writing and recording five songs for the soundtrack.
He released another four albums over the next ten years: Returned Service, a live solo record, and Backyard 6, both on Mick Thomas’s Croxton Records label; C-sides, an album of stripped down re-recordings of his favourite songs as part of Liberation’s Acoustic series; and Blackwater Blues in 2009, recorded live on a 16 track in Mick Thomas’s backyard studio.
Nick’s last two albums were released under The Heartache State name, with what was supposed to be a collective quickly becoming another vehicle for his songwriting. 2014’s self-titled CD was released, which was then followed by Last of the Buffalo in 2016 through Golden Robot Records.
A tireless songwriter and performer, Nick has toured the UK, Europe, North and South America and Asia. He’s written songs with the likes of Tim Rogers, Paul Kelly, Jimmy Barnes, Earl Slick, Mick Thomas and Felicity Urquhart – just to name a few.
Nick has seen the Australian music industry spin, chase its tail, die, resurrect and do it all over again. Thirty-five years later, he’s still here and no one is more surprised than him.
Golden Robot Records will release his back catalogue on digital, vinyl and a Box Set. He is excited with the opportunity to get back into the studio with what he says is ‘a new direction and fistful of bloody good songs.’