Jeff Duff | |
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Background information | |
Birth name | Geoff Stephen Duff |
Also known as | Duffo Cyril Trotts |
Born | 1956 |
Origin | Melbourne, Australia |
Genres | jazz-rock, glam/pop |
Years active | 1971–present |
Associated acts | Kush Jeff Duff Survival Band Jeff Duff & the Duffers Duffo Jeff Duff Orchestra Duffhead Jeff Duff & Friends Duff & Rhodes Prophets of Groove Jeff Duff Stuff Jeff Duff & the Prophets Alien Sex Gods Jeff Duff Band |
Website | [1] |
Geoff "Jeff" Stephen Duff, or Duffo, (born 1956) is an Australian singer/cabaret performer in the tenor range, that in his career has used various personae, wardrobe, and satire as features of his performance. Duff's show 'Ziggy' is a portrayal of the music of David Bowie, whom he met while Bowie was a Sydney resident.
Jeff Duff began his musical career in Melbourne in 1971 as lead singer of jazz-rock fusion band Kush (1971–75)
Kush was formed with Jeff Duff on Vocals, John Santos (aka Montesante) and Colin Chapman on trumpet, Ron Anderson on piano and saxophone, Stephen Ball on keyboards, Tom Cowburn on guitar, harmonica and backing vocals, John Ellis on clarinet, flute and saxophone, Rob Matthews on bass guitar, and Graham McDonald on drums. They released covers of "Peter Gunn", "MacArthur Park" and "Walk on the Wild Side" as well as originals such as "(Livin' on) Easy Street"
Kush are notable for performing to 45000 people at the 1974 Sunbury Pop Festival, "conceived and promoted as Australia's Woodstock".
Duff relocated to London in 1978 as "the waif-like androgynous oddball Duffo" His keyboard player and arranger for most of this period was Sev Lewkowicz.
At this time his single, "Give Me Back Me Brain" reached No. 60 on the UK mainstream charts in 1979
Powderworks issued Duff's third album, Bob the Birdman, in Australia."
the quote above (by Ian McFarlane), and Jeff's original song titles (John and Betty Go to LA; Give Me Back Me Brain; Here Come the Freaks) demonstrates his varied performance personae, and satire as a feature of his music. His 1999 compilation, Martian Girls Are Easy (more satire) is a 40-track, double CD anthology covering Duff's solo career from 1978, described by music historian, Ian McFarlane as showing the "satirical, new wave origins of 'Give Me Back Me Brain', through the soulful classical arrangement of Lou Reed's 'Walk on the Wild Side", dipping into funk on the way and then back to his glam roots"
Jeff appears as 'Secta' in the Australian science Fiction movie Sons of Steel, released in 1989, featuring Duff single, 'Here Come the Freaks'.