Available Formats
The La De Das' The Happy Prince
By (Author) Professor or Dr. John Tebbutt
Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Bloomsbury Publishing USA
11th December 2025
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Music reviews and criticism
Paperback
128
Width 127mm, Height 197mm
This is the untold history of a lost of relic of Oceania's psychedelic 1960s, The Happy Prince.
Recorded in Sydney by the La De Das, an Aotearoa/New Zealand band, this was the first LP in Australia that told a single story, creating an audio world. The La De Das were and are one of New Zealands most loved bands. By 1967 they had numerous hit singles and two albums of diverse music. What drove them to experiment with an art pop form
This book answers that question by digging into archives, dusting off historical memories of those who were there. Released in 1969, this album is a collection of original songs based on an Oscar Wilde story, published in 1888. The tracks include narration by Australias pop poet Adrian Rawlins. It was a technical and artistic statement, the likes of which Australian music had not previously heard. At EMIs studios in Sydney, the production experimented with 8-track recording, using electronically synchronized four track machines. EMI provided an in-house producer but the album was independently funded. At the time, it was hailed in music journal Go Set as the best thing ever recorded in Australia. Yet the album disappeared, rarely promoted and never charting. That line up of the band did not record another album. This book finally tells their story.
John Tebbutt is a cultural history scholar. He has written previously on music, including as co-author of Music City Melbourne (Bloomsbury, 2022), and on radio for various academic journals and handbooks. He has produced radio programs from his research that were broadcast by Radio National (Australian Broadcasting Corporation). John resides in Meeniyan, Victoria Australia.