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One could easily make the case for designating
the Master's Apprentices as the best Australian rock band of the '60s. Featuring singer
Jim Keays and songwriter/rhythm guitarist
Mick Bower, the band's earliest recordings combined the gritty R&B/rock of Brits like
the Pretty Things with the minor-key melodies of
the Yardbirds. The compelling "Wars or Hands of Time" and the dreamy psychedelia of "Living in a Child's Dream" were undiscovered classics, although the latter was a Top Ten hit in Australia.
Bower left the group after suffering a nervous breakdown in late 1967, and
the Masters grew steadily less interesting, moving from flower pop and hard rock to progressive and acoustic sounds. Plagued by instability (undergoing eight personnel changes between 1966 and 1968), the group moved to England in the early '70s, achieving some cult success with progressive rock albums before breaking up in 1972. AMG.
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