I don’t know what to say about this so I’m putting it here in a hope of inciting some discussion. A bit before my time really. This was emailed in. Thanks John!

A few thoughts about the beginning of punk in W.A, by John Hondros.

Bilbo played together from 1969 – 1971. They were regulars at dances and

an occasional pub but never really broke through as their “punk” sound

and long extemporisations had yet to find a musical home. The band

consisted of Paul Blackbee on guitar, Johnno Podmore drums and John

Hondros on bass. Ironically their biggest success came at their last

impromptu performance at the James St Art Tech “Rock it Out” dance

attended by the art and music fraternity of Perth at the end of 1971.

Paul Blackbee managed to talk the night’s lead band (Fatty Lumpkin) into

letting them hand over their instruments during a break and it went on

from there with nearly 20 minutes of solid “new wave” sound until the

guys from FL stepped in to end it. The crowd was not happy it ended and

FL were not happy to follow what they thought would be a disaster.

In a moment of ironic brilliance Paul Blackbee renamed the band (that up

until then had been Thrash for the previous 18 months or so) as Bilbo

(playing on Fatty Lumpkins use of a Tolkien name). The audience raged.

In the good old techy art way the crowd loved it but howled down the

lead band for ending Bilbo Baggins. It was one of those nights musos

spoke of for months. Anyway, Johnno Podmore went on and did some

drumming with the Troubadours and then many other NSW pub bands. Paul

Blackbee later joined the “Swinging Blue Jeans” playing sax, I believe.

John Hondros joined the small cohort of “singer songwriters” of the day

such as Christopher May (now deceased), Ross Ryan, Piers Partridge and

Keith MacDonald doing wine house gigs.

Have to say that Thrash (AKA Bilbo) was one of the best bands no one had

heard of except for other alternative musos of the day. This was the

real and forgotten beginning of a “new wave” of music before The

Scientists and it all happened on one Saturday night in late December 1971.

Hope this might add a small something to the picture.