Cold Chisel

Cold Chisel
A stage shot with four men clearly visible. The man at left is leaning at a rectangular box, he has a microphone nearby. The second man is shown in right profile, he is playing a guitar and singing into a microphone while seated. The third man is standing in the middle of the stage with arms at his sides, he carries a microphone in his right hand. The fourth man is also seated while playing a guitar and at a microphone. A fifth man is obscured seated behind and to the right of the middle one. The men are surrounded by stage equipment including speakers, lights and additional microphones. A drum kit is partly visible but the drummer is obscured.
Don Walker, Ian Moss, Jimmy Barnes, Charley Drayton (behind him) and Phil Small at AIS Arena, Canberra in November 2011
Background information
Also known as
  • Orange
  • The Barking Spiders
OriginAdelaide, South Australia
Genres
Years active
  • 1973 (1973)–1983 (1983)
  • 1997 (1997)–1999 (1999)
  • 2003
  • 2009 (2009)–present
Labels
Members
Past members
Websitecoldchisel.com.au

Cold Chisel are an Australian pub rock band, which formed in Adelaide in 1973 by mainstay members Ian Moss on guitar and vocals, Steve Prestwich on drums, Lez Kaczmarek on bass and Don Walker on piano and keyboards. They were soon joined by Jimmy Barnes (at the time known as Jim Barnes) on lead vocals and, in 1975, Phil Small became their bass guitarist. The group disbanded in late 1983 but subsequently reformed several times. Musicologist Ian McFarlane wrote that they became "one of Australia's best-loved groups" as well as "one of the best live bands", fusing "a combination of rockabilly, hard rock and rough-house soul'n'blues that was defiantly Australian in outlook."

Eight of their studio albums have reached the Australian top five, Breakfast at Sweethearts (February 1979), East (June 1980), Circus Animals (March 1982, No. 1), Twentieth Century (April 1984, No. 1), The Last Wave of Summer (October 1998, No. 1), No Plans (April 2012), The Perfect Crime (October 2015) and Blood Moon (December 2019, No. 1). They have achieved six number one albums on the ARIA Charts; the latest being their 2024 compilation 50 Years – The Best Of.[1] Their top 10 singles are "Cheap Wine" (1980), "Forever Now" (1982), "Hands Out of My Pocket" (1994) and "The Things I Love in You" (1998).

At the ARIA Music Awards of 1993 they were inducted into the Hall of Fame. In 2001 Australasian Performing Right Association (APRA), listed their single, "Khe Sanh" (May 1978), at No. 8 of the all-time best Australian songs. Circus Animals was listed at No. 4 in the book, 100 Best Australian Albums (October 2010), while East appeared at No. 53. They won The Ted Albert Award for Outstanding Services to Australian Music at the APRA Music Awards of 2016. Cold Chisel's popularity is almost entirely confined to Australia and New Zealand, with their songs and musicianship highlighting working class life. Their early bass guitarist (1973–75), Les Kaczmarek, died in December 2008; Steve Prestwich died of a brain tumour in January 2011.

  1. ^ "Cold Gold". ARIA. 23 August 2024. Retrieved 24 August 2024.