This 1931 version of ‘Along the Road to Gundagai’, composed by Jack O’Hagan in 1921, is performed by popular singer of the day Peter Dawson. This clip features the lesser known opening verse of the song.
Summary by Martin Ford
Peter Dawson made this professional recording in London and the sound quality is amazingly good. There is a strong backing band and backing vocals under the chorus. Dawson was one of the biggest recording stars in England and Australia in the 1920s and ’30s, recording many of the most popular and operatic songs of the day. Although it’s a popular song, it is sung here by Dawson in a rather high style, perhaps a reflection of Dawson’s opera background.
This 1931 recording of composer Jack O’Hagan’s 'Along the Road to Gundagai’ is performed by Peter Dawson, the most popular Australian singer of the day.
Along the Road to Gundagai was written by Jack O’Hagan in 1921 and recorded by Peter Dawson in 1931. O’Hagan was a major Australian songwriter between the First and Second World Wars and this recording of his most famous song remains instantly recognisable.
Known as much for performing opera, Adelaide-born Peter Lawson released a number of popular songs in the 1920s and ’30s with great commercial success. Along the Road to Gundagai reportedly sold 50,000 copies of the 78 rpm shellac discs in just three months.
The song went on to be a favourite with soldiers in the Second World War. Gundagai, a small town in New South Wales, was also in the title of two other of O’Hagan’s songs, Where the Dog Sits on the Tuckerbox (Five Miles from Gundagai) and When a Boy from Alabama Meets a Girl from Gundagai, which was released in 1942 when American troops were in Australia during the Second World War: with such good timing, it was a hit.
Strangely, O’Hagan had decided early in his career that Australians weren’t very interested in songs about Australia, so he wrote a song called Down Carolina Way. On showing it to an entrepreneur he was rebuked and told to write a song about Australia. He reportedly wrote Along the Road to Gundagai in response.
Many of O’Hagan’s subsequent songs were Australian in content, including Our Don Bradman, and Things is Crook, in Tallarook. Along the Road to Gundagai was used as the as the theme song for the Dad and Dave radio show in the 1930s and ’40s and has also been recorded by the likes of Slim Dusty and Barry Humphries.
O’Hagan was awarded an OBE in 1973 and died in 1988, aged 88. Along the Road to Gundagai remains one of the great Australian folk songs and Peter Dawson’s recording of it one of the best-known versions.
Notes by Martin Ford
The National Film and Sound Archive of Australia acknowledges Australia’s Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the Traditional Custodians of the land on which we work and live and gives respect to their Elders both past and present.