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Original punk Chris Bailey of The Saints dies aged 65

The news was revealed in a post which referred to their 1976 debut (I’m) Stranded, an anti-establishment anthem that saw the group relocate to London.
The news was revealed in a post which referred to their 1976 debut (I’m) Stranded, an anti-establishment anthem that saw the group relocate to London. The news was revealed in a post which referred to their 1976 debut (I’m) Stranded, an anti-establishment anthem that saw the group relocate to London.

Chris Bailey, a child of Irish parents who founded seminal Australian punk band The Saints, has died aged 65.

The news was revealed in a post by the band which referred to their debut song (I’m) Stranded, an anti-establishment anthem prompted by the heavy-handed policing in their city of Brisbane in the 1970s.

“It is with great pain in our hearts that we have to inform you about the passing of Chris Bailey, singer and songwriter of The Saints, on April the 9th 2022,” the band posted.

A police officer looks on
A police officer looks on The Saints were motivated by animus towards the authorities in Queensland, especially the police who would frequently break up the band’s shows (Anthony Devlin/PA)

“Chris lived a life of poetry and music and stranded on a Saturday night.”

The post on the band’s Facebook page was signed “Family and friends”.

Bailey was born to Irish parents in Nanyuki, Kenya, in 1957 and grew up in Belfast until the age of seven when his family emigrated to Australia.

They settled in Brisbane, which was where Bailey met guitarist Ed Kuepper and drummer Ivor Hay in high school and the trio formed The Saints in 1973.

The single of (I’m) Stranded was released three years later, making the band the first punk group outside of the US to release a record. It was followed in 1977 by the album of the same name which saw the The Saints relocate to London.

Alasdair Ward joined them on bass but the band’s progress suffered after they fell out with their label EMI while in the UK capital.

Kuepper and Hay left the band in 1979, though the latter rejoined Bailey in The Saints in London for a time while Ward eventually departed to join The Damned.

Bailey continued to release albums as The Saints until 2012’s King of the Sun and toured under the band’s name. He also maintained a significant solo output with seven separate LPs and collaborated frequently including with Nick Cave and Concrete Blonde’s Johnette Napolitano.