Archibald William Roach AM (8 January 1956 – 30 July 2022) was an Australian singer, songwriter and Aboriginal activist. Often referred to as "Uncle Archie."
Born in Mooroopna, north Victoria, and brought up in Framlingham mission near Warrnambool, in south-west Victoria, he was taken from his parents, Nellie Austin and Archie Roach Sr, at the age of “three or four”, along with his two sisters, and raised in Melbourne by a white family, Alex and Dulcie Cox, who had moved to Australia from Scotland. They were told that his parents had died in a house fire.
Growing up as a member of the Cox family, Roach listened to his foster father’s record collection, which included albums by the Ink Spots, Nat King Cole and Mahalia Jackson. He went to church, and here he heard a woman playing a Hank Williams song on the guitar. Roach decided that he too would become a guitarist. His life changed dramatically when he was 15, when he received a letter from a blood sister, Myrtle, then living in Sydney, whom he had never heard of until then. She told him that his real mother, Nellie, had just died, and that he was one of seven siblings. A few months later he left home in a quest to track them down, taking his guitar with him.
He was lucky to survive. It took time for him to find his sister, and as he explained in his memoir, he spent years as an alcoholic, drinking in the parks and “empties” (the vacant buildings) of Sydney, Melbourne and Adelaide. He suffered from epilepsy, spent time in hospital and in prison, charged with vagrancy, and attempted suicide, after a failed bid to dry out. But at 17, at a Salvation Army centre in Adelaide, he met another homeless Indigenous Australian teenager with a similar history to his own, who would change his life.
Ruby Hunter was another child of the stolen generations, and also a musician. They married, and became inseparable partners, but, as the mother of his two children, Hunter threatened to leave unless he stopped drinking. “It turned my life around,” he said. Roach began working in a homeless shelter while also concentrating on music and songwriting. He wrote Took the Children Away after being encouraged by an uncle to write about his own experiences. He sang it on a community radio station, then in pubs and on TV, and came to the notice of one of Australia’s best-known singer-songwriters, Paul Kelly.
Kelly invited Roach to open for him at Melbourne Concert Hall, where Took the Children Away startled an audience that had never heard of Roach. It was at first greeted by silence, said Roach, “and then the clapping started. It sounded like rain that starts with a pitter-patter and builds up and becomes a downpour. It was the most amazing experience I had ever had.”
Archie with Slim Dusty |
Soon afterwards, Roach was offered a recording contract. His first solo album, Charcoal Lane (1990), was produced by Kelly and Steve Connolly, and won Aria awards for best new talent and best Indigenous album. It included Took the Children Away and a powerful song written by Hunter, Down City Streets, which described her time as a homeless alcoholic. This brought her to national attention, and four years later she recorded her own solo album.
Roach went on to record a series of solo albums, including Jamu Dreaming (1993) and Looking for Butter Boy (1997). In 2008 he sang Took the Children Away, with Hunter joining him on backing vocals, when the then prime minister, Kevin Rudd, gave a public apology to the stolen generations.
Roach and Hunter also performed with the Black Arm Band, a political multimedia project involving white and Indigenous performers, who made a powerful appearance at the British Womad festival in 2009. They both spent time teaching music and performing in remote Indigenous communities, and offered an open house to homeless and disadvantaged young people. She died in 2010, the start of a sad and difficult era for Roach. Later that year he suffered a stroke, and the following year – after returning to live performance – he was diagnosed with lung cancer and had a lung removed. Announcing that he “wanted to write about coming through pain in a positive way”, he recorded his 2012 album Into the Bloodstream “with an oxygen bottle on standby”.
In
2015 he was made a Member of the Order of Australia in the Queen’s Birthday
Honours for his “significant service to the performing arts as a singer,
songwriter and guitarist, and to the community as a spokesman for social
justice. In November 2020, he was
inducted into the Aria hall of fame later that month. Roach, who lived with
chronic obstructive pulmonary disease for years, was taken from Warrnambool
base hospital in an ambulance to accept the award via a broadcast from the
nearby Lighthouse theatre. He performed Took the Children Away in the theatre
while breathing through a nasal cannula and while an ambulance waited outside.
He died on 30 July 2022 at Warrnambool Base Hospital.
(Edited from Guardian article by Robin Denselow)
8 comments:
For “Archie Roach – My Songs 1989 – 2021(2022 Bloodlines) (3 CD Wallet)” go here;
https://workupload.com/file/Ud5uTLNCDvT
1990s
1-1 Hung Over
1-2 Open Up Your Eyes
1-3 Bicentennial Blues
1-4 No Celebrations
1-5 Took The Children Away
1-6 Charcoal Lane
1-7 Summer Of My Life
1-8 Tell Me Why
1-9 Weeping In The Forest
1-10 A Child Was Born Here (ft. Tiddas)
1-11 From Paradise
1-12 Walking Into Doors
1-13 Beggar Man
1-14 The River Song
1-15 Dancing Shoes (ft. Tiddas)
1-16 Colour Of Your Jumper
2000s
2-1 Move It On
2-2 Small Child
2-3 Morning Star (ft. Tiddas)
2-4 Mission Ration Blues
2-5 Alien Invasion
2-6 This Woman
2-7 I Don't Wanna Go
2-8 Mulyawongk
2-9 Take Your Time
2-10 Travellin Bones
2-11 Lighthouse, Song For Two Mothers
2-12 Spirit Of Place
2-13 Old People Singing
2-14 Your Old Ones
2010s
3-1 Into The Bloodstream
3-2 We Won't Cry (ft. Paul Kelly)
3-3 Old Mission Road
3-4 Song To Sing
3-5 Let Love Rule (ft. Dhungala Children's Choir)
3-6 Get Back To The Land
3-7 Love Sweet Love (ft. Emma Donovan)
3-8 Mighty Clarence River
3-9 One For Each Person And One For The Pot
3-10 Always Be Here (ft. Sally Dastey)
3-11 Rally Around The Drum
3-12 Nopun Kurongk
3-13 Place Of Fire
3-14 One Song
This stunning collection of 44 songs curated by Archie from across his stellar career includes his acclaimed One Song, described as a lullaby for humanity.
A big thank you goes to Dennis for suggesting today’s birthday singer also for the loan of the above 3CD set.
Hello Bob
If you want more from this great man, I have these 3 cds 1990, 1992 and 1997 that I can upload.
For me his best period with "Took the children away"
You can check the covers here:
https://www.mediafire.com/file/8hg8jh3y1c0bxke/ROACH_Archie_Covers.zip/file
Cheers
Don Dan
To stay in my main collection of female singers, it could be interesting to listen to Archie's wife: Ruby Hunter (1955-2010)
Here are two albums 1994 and 2000
https://www.mediafire.com/file/2tbs9f8glx8r1l5/Hunter_Ruby_%2528Australie_1955-2010%2529_1994_Thoughts_Within.zip/file
https://www.mediafire.com/file/jdx9xr7ripq988x/Hunter_Ruby_%2528Australie_1955-2010%2529_2000_Feeling_Good.zip/file
Have fun !
Don Dan
https://www.youtube.com/c/DonDanMusicChannel
Thanks DD. Makes for a great addition to Archie....may he rest in peace.
- Denis
Thank you muchly! I needed to hear this.
Hello Don Dan, I'd love to hear those other albums of Archie and thanks for Ruby Hunter who is now in my birthday book. Regards, Bob
Here you are...
https://www.mediafire.com/file/g8j4i0ak4ykfx8l/Roach_Archie_%25281956-2022%2529_1990_Charcoal_Lane.zip/file
https://www.mediafire.com/file/iyfusw4ricg0tso/Roach_Archie_%25281956-2022%2529_1992_Jamu_Dreaming.zip/file
https://www.mediafire.com/file/u7drkz28602jwb2/Roach_Archie_%25281956-2022%2529_1997_Looking_For_Butter_Boy.zip/file
Cheers
Don Dan
https://www.youtube.com/c/DonDanMusicChannel
BEAUTIFUL MY FRIEND THANK YOU
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