Stevie Wright, Lead Singer Of The Easybeats, Dies At 68

Publish Date
Monday, 28 December 2015, 2:44PM

Stevie Wright, who fronted the band the Easybeats in the 1960s and is widely regarded as Australia’s first international pop star, has died at the age of 68.

The Aria Hall of Famer reportedly became ill on Boxing Day and was taken to Moruya hospital on the NSW south coast, where he died on Sunday night.

Rock historian Glenn A Baker confirmed to radio station 6PR he had been informed of the rock legend’s death.

The Easybeats, with renowning songwriting duo Harry Vanda and George Young in their lineup, were one of the first Australian pop bands to make an international breakthrough in the 1960s. 

Their classic 1966 song Friday On My Mind, cowritten by Vanda and Young, was a No 1 hit in Australia, reached No 6 in the UK and made the top 20 in the US.

Recorded at the Abbey Road studios in London, it was voted the best Australian song ever in a poll celebrating 75 years of the Australasian Performing Rights Association in 2001. The song was later covered by David Bowie on his Pin-Ups album.

The Easybeats broke up in 1969 and Wright, also known as Little Stevie, became a top solo artist with his epic song Evie. But he went on to battle drug and alcohol addiction for two decades.

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