The Mexican Spitfires - History

History

The Mexican Spitfires were an inner-city–suburban Sydney band with a collection of songs about Sydney. Their songs dealt with aspects of daily life, such as:

  • Romance on Ivy Street, Redfern, which is a dilapidated street familiar to Sydney University students who walk coming to or from Redfern Station, in the song "Ivy Street".
  • Treading the moral tightrope between the City and Kings Cross down Park Street with the song "Sydney Town".
  • Meeting on the steps of Sydney Town Hall in the aptly named "Town Hall Steps".
  • Spending time in Katoomba in the nearby Blue Mountains in "Until".
  • "Rookwood" talks about Rookwood Cemetery.

Similar lyrical territory was also being covered by Paul Kelly & The Coloured Girls and John Kennedy's Love Gone Wrong.

With three songwriters in O'Reilly, Quinlan and McCowage, the band had no shortage of original material and right from the first performance, set lists consisted predominantly of original material. Harking back to their earlier experiences in Prince Vlad & the Gargoyle Impalers, the band displayed a certain 1960s pop sensibility with strong harmonies from Quinlan and O'Reilly and covered songs such as The Beatles "If I Needed Someone" and The Monkees "Mary Mary".

In July 1986, The Mexican Spitfires played their first gig to a packed audience at the Lismore Hotel, located on Pitt Street in Sydney. They were discovered by Red Eye Records that same night and were subsequently signed to a record deal by that label. The band's debut six-track 12-inch EP Lupe Velez was released in 1988. The EP was produced by Jon Schofield of the Coloured Girls, engineered by Phil Punch, and featured a keyboard appearance by Russell Parkhouse (ex-The Riptides). The first EP was an immediate success on the independent charts, moving straight into the top 5 in Sydney and scoring the band significant airplay on 2JJ (now 2JJJ), particularly for the songs "Sydney Town", "You Can't Run" and "Town Hall Steps". Lupe Velez received favourable reviews in English musicmagazine NME and in the Australian music press.

According to London-based rock critic Andrew Mueller as quoted in the "Who's Who of Australian Rock" the Mexican Spitfires produced

"Impressive songs in the Kelly/Kennedy vein with a slightly English sounding pop touch."

The EP was also favourably received in Germany and Italy, where "You Can't Run" received significant airplay on Radio Marte, Radio Luna and Radio Delfino in Catania. The video for the song "Sydney Town" made its debut on SBS's world music show Rock Around The World before being shown on ABC's Rage. The band also performed "Ivy Street" on the Network TEN programme Ridgey Didge.

After their debut, The Mexican Spitfires returned to the Electric Avenue Studio of Phil Punch to record their second six-track 12-inch EP Elephant during 1989 and 1990. That EP has not been released in any format, despite interest from indie pop labels such as Catania's No Tyme Records.

Only two tracks, "Sydney Town" and "You Can't Run (Forever)", have ever been released on a CD as of the date of this entry. The two tracks are featured on the compilation of Red Eye Records artists Asides and Besides:The First Five Years, whilst "Sydney Town" is featured on the Sony Music double CD compilation Somewhere in Sydney: 30 Songs from the Harbour City, which was released in 2000 to coincide with the Sydney Olympic Games.

During the mid to late 1980s, The Mexican Spitfires played most of the legendary Sydney pubs of the time, such as: the Hopetoun, the Sandringham Hotel in Newtown (aka the "Sando"), Paddington Green, and Harold Park. In 1988, they toured Melbourne with other Red Eye acts The Crystal Set, Curious (Yellow) and The Bhagavad Guitars. The band also played with other bands such as: The Triffids, Roaring Jack, Penguins On Safari (later The Whitlams), The Wet Taxis, The Last Metro, The Upbeat, Billy Baxter and The Hollowmen and John Kennedy of John Kennedy's Love Gone Wrong.

Following McCowage's departure in 1989, C.T. Wally O'Cool joined the band on lead guitar. That lineup supported The Proclaimers on the Sydney and Canberra leg of their 1989 tour supplemented by Dominic Killalea of The Upbeat filling in on drums. O'Reilly has since gone on to perform with the Sydney Gospel Music choir The Elementals and recorded Live At The Basement.

Whilst The Mexican Spitfires have not played live as a band since early 1989, their music has been played on radio stations like 88.1 FM WMBR Cambridge, Massachusetts, and fans of their music can be found in Australia, Japan, Germany, Italy and the USA.

Read more about this topic:  The Mexican Spitfires

Famous quotes containing the word history:

    The steps toward the emancipation of women are first intellectual, then industrial, lastly legal and political. Great strides in the first two of these stages already have been made of millions of women who do not yet perceive that it is surely carrying them towards the last.
    Ellen Battelle Dietrick, U.S. suffragist. As quoted in History of Woman Suffrage, vol. 4, ch. 13, by Susan B. Anthony and Ida Husted Harper (1902)

    A country grows in history not only because of the heroism of its troops on the field of battle, it grows also when it turns to justice and to right for the conservation of its interests.
    Aristide Briand (1862–1932)

    I think that Richard Nixon will go down in history as a true folk hero, who struck a vital blow to the whole diseased concept of the revered image and gave the American virtue of irreverence and skepticism back to the people.
    William Burroughs (b. 1914)