David McComb
David Richard McComb (17 February 1962 – 2 February 1999) was an Australian musician, singer-songwriter, guitarist, and poet, best known as the lead vocalist and primary songwriter for the rock band The Triffids.[1][2] Born in Perth, Western Australia, as the youngest of four sons to plastic surgeon Harold Keith McComb and geneticist Kathleen Athel McComb, McComb grew up in a family that valued intellectual and creative pursuits.[1] He attended Christ Church Grammar School from 1967 to 1978, later earning a Bachelor of Arts in journalism and literature from Curtin University of Technology in 1981, and studying art history at the University of Melbourne in the 1990s.[1] His early exposure to literature and poetry profoundly influenced his lyrical style, which often blended vivid storytelling with themes of love, loss, and the Australian landscape.[2] In 1978, at age 16, McComb co-founded The Triffids in Perth with school friend Allan MacDonald, recruiting his brother Robert McComb on violin and other local musicians, including bassist Martyn Casey.[1][2] The band quickly gained recognition, winning the 6NR Band of the Year award in 1980, and released their debut album Treeless Plain in 1983, followed by critically acclaimed works Born Sandy Devotional (1986) and Calenture (1987).[1] Signing with Island Records in 1986 elevated their international profile, particularly in the UK and Europe, with standout singles like "Wide Open Road" and the collaboration "Bury Me Deep in Love" with Midnight Oil's Rob Hirst.[1][2] The Triffids disbanded in 1989 after five albums, having established McComb as a distinctive voice in Australian indie rock, noted for his extraordinary songcraft and refusal to compromise artistic integrity.[3][2] Post-Triffids, McComb pursued a solo career and collaborations, releasing the album Love of Will in 1994 and performing with groups like the Red Ponies and the Blackeyed Susans.[1][3] He also published poetry, with his collection Beautiful Waste appearing posthumously.[2] McComb's life was marked by health challenges, including a congenital heart condition that necessitated a heart transplant in 1996, compounded by struggles with alcohol and heroin addiction.[2] He died on 2 February 1999 in Northcote, Victoria, at age 36 from heroin toxicity and complications following heart surgery.[1] His legacy endures through inductions into the Western Australian Music Hall of Fame in 2006 and the ARIA Hall of Fame in 2008, as well as the 2022 documentary Love in Bright Landscapes, which highlights his profound influence on Australian music and poetry.[1][2]Early life
Childhood in Perth
David Richard McComb was born on 17 February 1962 in Perth, Western Australia, as the youngest of four sons to Harold Keith McComb, a plastic surgeon originally from Queensland, and Kathleen Athel McComb (née Hockey), a geneticist from New South Wales.[1][4] His older brother Robert (Rob) McComb would later become a musician and join him in The Triffids.[2] The family resided in The Cliffe, a historic home in the affluent riverside suburb of Peppermint Grove, where McComb spent his early years in a supportive medical family environment marked by intellectual and creative influences.[1][2] McComb's upbringing in Perth's coastal setting included family beach holidays captured in home movies filmed by his father, fostering a gentle and introspective personality described by his parents as singular from birth.[2] His mother Athel recalled that "his life was singular," while his father Harold noted he was a quiet boy who "would have dissolved" under harsh discipline, highlighting the nurturing household dynamic.[2] These early experiences in Perth's suburban landscape, away from the beach-bum culture prevalent in the area, shaped his worldview through familial stability rather than overt adventure.[4] From a young age, McComb displayed signs of creativity, including an interest in music, reading, and writing poetry, as well as collaborative hobbies like making comics with childhood friend Alsy MacDonald.[2] These pursuits, evident in his pre-teen and early adolescent years, laid the foundation for his later artistic endeavors, emerging from the isolated yet vivid cultural interstice of 1960s and 1970s Perth.[2]Education and early interests
McComb attended Christ Church Grammar School in Claremont, Perth, from 1967 to 1978, where he demonstrated strong academic aptitude as a gifted student. He consistently won prizes in English Literature and Divinity throughout high school, reflecting his early engagement with literary and philosophical subjects.[1][5] Following high school, McComb pursued studies in journalism and literature at the Western Australian Institute of Technology (now Curtin University) in the early 1980s, earning a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1981. His coursework emphasized analytical writing and cultural critique, building on his school achievements in literature. During this period, he continued to nurture his creative inclinations in a structured academic environment.[1][5] McComb's early musical experiments began during his teenage years at school, where he started playing guitar and composing songs. These initial efforts drew from the punk and folk scenes, influenced by artists such as David Bowie, Patti Smith, Bob Dylan, and Leonard Cohen, blending raw energy with introspective storytelling. His literary background further shaped these pursuits, fostering a poetic sensibility evident in the witty and sardonic lyrics of his early compositions.[5]Musical career
The Triffids
David McComb and school friend Alsy MacDonald formed the precursor band Dalsy in Perth, Western Australia, in 1976 at the age of 14. The group evolved through names like Blök Musik and Logic, officially adopting the name The Triffids in May 1978, with Robert McComb on guitar and violin and other early collaborators, drawing initial inspiration from the punk rock movement.[6][7] The band quickly gained local recognition, winning the 6NR Band of the Year award in 1980.[1] The Triffids relocated from Perth to Sydney in the early 1980s to access better recording opportunities and touring circuits, signing with independent label Hot Records, which released their debut full-length album Treeless Plain in 1983.[8] This raw, rural-tinged record marked their entry into the Australian indie scene, followed swiftly by the 1984 EP In the Pines, recorded in a shearing shed near Esperance in remote Western Australia for an intimate, acoustic sound, and the mini-album Raining Pleasure that same year, notable for keyboardist Jill Birt's ethereal vocals on the title track.[9][10] The band's breakthrough arrived with Born Sandy Devotional in 1986, issued on White Hot (an imprint of Mushroom Records) and produced by Gil Norton at Mark Angelo Studios in London; tracks like "Wide Open Road" captured the desolation and longing of Australian landscapes through McComb's poetic lyrics and sparse arrangements, earning widespread critical acclaim for its evocative portrayal of isolation despite the overseas recording.[11][12] Their 1987 follow-up, Calenture on major label Island Records, delved into themes of insanity and deception with a more polished production, though it drew mixed reactions for shifting toward a broader rock sound.[13][14] By the mid-1980s, The Triffids had relocated to London, where they built a stronger international following through extensive tours across Europe—particularly in the UK, Scandinavia, and the Low Countries—and brief forays into the US, performing in clubs and supporting acts amid growing overseas recognition that outpaced their domestic success.[11][9][15] However, persistent challenges plagued the group, including label disputes with Hot and Mushroom Records over distribution and the pressures of international expansion, which strained finances and contributed to internal tensions among members.[8][16] These dynamics, compounded by the exhaustion of constant touring and creative shifts under major-label scrutiny, culminated in the band's disbandment in 1989 after the release of Calenture.[17][18]Black Eyed Susans and collaborations
Following the disbandment of The Triffids in 1989, David McComb co-founded The Blackeyed Susans in Perth that March as a part-time project during an extended break from his previous band.[19] The initial lineup included McComb on vocals and guitar, alongside Phil Kakulas (bass, guitar, and vocals; formerly of The Triffids), Rob Snarski (vocals and guitar), Alsy MacDonald (drums and percussion), and Ross Bolleter (keyboards).[19] This ensemble marked a shift toward a more eclectic sound incorporating country, jazz, and blues influences, distinct from The Triffids' indie rock style. The band's early output featured McComb's prominent songwriting and vocal contributions. Their debut EP, Some Births Are Worse Than Murders (1990), included four tracks co-written by McComb, reaching number one on the Australian independent charts.[19] In mid-1990, McComb traveled to London, where he recorded material with Snarski and Kenny Davis Jr. (formerly of The Jackson Code), contributing to the follow-up EP ...Depends on What You Mean by Love (released late 1991).[20] The band then relocated activities to Sydney and later Melbourne, issuing the EP Anchor Me (1991) with McComb's involvement before compiling these efforts into the album Welcome Stranger (1992), which they toured across Australia to promote.[19] McComb continued contributing to the band's debut full-length studio album, All Souls Alive (December 1993), providing lead vocals on one track and co-writing eight of its ten songs with Kakulas; the album also featured a cover of Leonard Cohen and Phil Spector's "Memories" and was recorded primarily in Melbourne, reflecting the group's evolving jazz and blues leanings.[19] Internationally released in 1994 and produced by Kakulas, it showcased McComb's input in shaping the band's atmospheric, collaborative aesthetic before his partial departure later that year.[19] Beyond The Blackeyed Susans, McComb engaged in notable collaborations during this period. In 1991, he partnered with composer Adam Peters to cover Leonard Cohen's "Don't Go Home with Your Hard-On" for the tribute album I'm Your Fan: The Songs of Leonard Cohen, an effort that introduced Cohen's work to a broader audience through diverse interpretations.[21] These projects highlighted McComb's versatility in ensemble settings, blending his songwriting with external influences amid Australian tours and studio sessions.[19]Solo career
McComb began his solo career in the late 1980s following the dissolution of the Triffids, initially collaborating with cellist Adam Peters on the single "I Don't Need You," released in 1989 by Island Records in the UK.[22] This track marked an early departure from band dynamics, blending McComb's introspective songwriting with Peters' atmospheric arrangements. In 1991, while based in London, he issued the single "The Message" on the Foundation label, featuring the title track alongside "I've Heard Things Turn Out This Way" and "Song of No Return," which showcased a more experimental, electronic edge produced with engineer Steve Street.[23] That same year, McComb contributed to the Leonard Cohen tribute album I'm Your Fan, performing "Don't Go Home with Your Hard-On" with Peters, highlighting his affinity for Cohen's lyrical depth.[21] Relocating to Melbourne in 1992, McComb assembled the backing band the Red Ponies in 1993, comprising musicians including pedal steel player Graham Lee, violinist Warren Ellis, pianist Bruce Haymes, drummer Peter Luscombe, and bassist Michael Vidale, drawn partly from his prior collaborations.[24] This ensemble supported the recording of his sole full-length solo album, Love of Will, at Platinum Studios in Melbourne from June to August 1993, with mixing at Metropolis and Sing Sing Studios; the album was released in March 1994 by White Label, a Mushroom Records subsidiary.[25] Featuring tracks such as "Setting You Free," "Clear Out My Mind," and "Day of My Ascension," Love of Will delved into personal themes of redemption, isolation, and emotional resilience, reflecting McComb's evolving style as a bridge from his Black Eyed Susans work. Three EPs followed in 1994 on White Label—"Setting You Free," "Clear Out My Mind," and another supporting the album—each emphasizing select tracks with additional mixes.[1] The Red Ponies enabled an active performance schedule in the mid-1990s, including a Triple J live session in Sydney on March 14, 1994, and a European tour that spring, where they supported Hunters & Collectors on dates like April 19 in Malmö, Sweden, and appeared on the BBC's Later... with Jools Holland.[24] Back in Australia, McComb and the Red Ponies conducted tours and club shows through the mid-1990s, performing material from Love of Will in venues across Melbourne and other cities, often to receptive audiences familiar with his Triffids legacy.[26] These outings underscored his commitment to independent output until health issues curtailed activities later in the decade.[1]Health and death
Addiction struggles
David McComb's struggles with substance abuse began in his late teens, coinciding with the formation of The Triffids in Perth around 1978, when he started using alcohol and amphetamines amid the pressures of emerging as a young musician in the local scene.[1] These habits escalated during the 1980s as the band toured extensively in Australia and internationally, particularly after relocating to London in 1985, where the stress of grueling schedules and industry expectations intensified his reliance on substances, leading to heroin addiction.[4][1] By the early 1990s, McComb's addictions had severely impacted his personal life and creative output, contributing to strained relationships, including with his long-term partner Joanne Alach, and forcing interruptions in his musical work as he grappled with deteriorating health during a 1994 tour.[1][4] He experienced multiple hospitalizations and interventions related to his substance use, which compounded the challenges of maintaining his career post-The Triffids disbandment in 1989.[27] McComb made several attempts at recovery, including stints in rehabilitation facilities in Australia during the early 1990s, and briefly pursued studies in art history at the University of Melbourne from 1992 to 1994 as part of his efforts to rebuild stability.[1] These struggles were emblematic of a broader pattern of substance abuse in the Australian rock music scene of the 1980s and early 1990s, where heroin and alcohol were prevalent among artists facing similar touring rigors and cultural pressures, though McComb's experiences were deeply tied to his introspective songwriting and the isolation of life on the road.[28][4]Heart condition and transplant
In the mid-1990s, David McComb was diagnosed with cardiomyopathy, an inherited heart condition that was exacerbated by his history of heavy alcohol consumption and drug use.[29][30] The diagnosis came after he fell ill while in New York in 1994, marking the onset of a prolonged period during which he was placed on the waiting list for a heart transplant.[31] McComb underwent a successful heart transplant in May 1996.[1] The procedure initially brought optimism, as he appeared to recover well in the immediate aftermath, adapting to necessary lifestyle changes such as medication regimens and restrictions on physical exertion to support the new organ.[1] During his recovery from 1996 to 1998, McComb experienced some challenges typical of post-transplant patients, including monitoring for potential rejection, though no major episodes were reported in this period.[1] This phase allowed for a brief return to musical activities, with performances such as guest appearances alongside Maurice Frawley in Sydney in February 1997 and solo shows in Melbourne, including at The Standard Hotel on New Year's Eve 1998.[26][32] These outings reflected a cautious resumption of his career amid ongoing health management.Death and immediate aftermath
David McComb died suddenly on 2 February 1999 at his home in Northcote, a suburb of Melbourne, Victoria, at the age of 36. Just days earlier, on 30 January, he had been involved in a minor car accident that resulted in injuries requiring hospital treatment, from which he was discharged. The circumstances of his death were compounded by his ongoing vulnerability from a heart transplant performed in 1996 to address cardiomyopathy.[1][4] The Victorian State Coroner conducted an inquest and ruled that McComb's death resulted from heroin toxicity, exacerbated by mild acute rejection of the transplanted heart, classifying it as an accidental overdose. McComb was discovered deceased at his residence, and the findings highlighted the interplay between drug use and his post-operative condition as the fatal factors.[1][33] Funeral services were arranged in Perth, Western Australia, his birthplace, with his ashes subsequently scattered at the family's farm in Jerdacuttup. The music community expressed profound shock at the news, with peers mourning the loss of a key figure in Australian indie rock. Close friend and collaborator Megan Simpson Huberman later reflected on his complex personality, stating, "His nature was both shy and extroverted, generous and ruthless, dark with sudden flashes of extreme sweetness."[1][34] Immediate responses included statements from family members, including his brother Robert McComb, a fellow musician and former Triffids bandmate, who conveyed deep personal grief amid the family's private mourning. Bandmates from The Triffids and The Black Eyed Susans issued tributes emphasizing McComb's songwriting genius and warmth, while Australian media outlets like The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald covered the event extensively, framing it as a tragic end to a promising career. His long-term partner, Joanne Louise Alach, inherited his home, underscoring the personal impact on those closest to him.[1][19] In the short term, McComb's death prompted a temporary halt to ongoing projects, notably interrupting a summer tour by The Black Eyed Susans that had been underway into early 1999.[19]Style and influences
Songwriting approach
David McComb's songwriting was characterized by a preference for narrative-driven songs that employed vivid imagery of Australian landscapes to evoke themes of emotional isolation and personal turmoil.[35] In tracks like "Wide Open Road," he used the expansive Western Australian outback as a metaphor for the desolation following a failed relationship, creating a sense of vast, empty space that mirrored inner loneliness.[36] This approach drew from his deep connection to place, infusing lyrics with melancholic power rooted in the Australian environment.[37] Central to McComb's oeuvre were recurring themes of love, loss, and redemption, often drawn from autobiographical experiences but rendered universal through subtle emotional depth.[38] His songs frequently explored unrequited love and despair, as seen in the conceptual framework of albums like Born Sandy Devotional, where personal narratives of heartache intertwined with broader communal malaise.[38] McComb universalized these elements by avoiding overt confession, instead allowing listeners to project their own stories onto the evocative settings.[39] McComb employed literary techniques such as metaphor, repetition, and structured storytelling to build emotional resonance in his compositions.[38] Repetition, a signature device, amplified themes of longing and futility, while metaphors grounded abstract feelings in tangible imagery, as in the prehistoric ritual motifs of "Jerdacuttup Man."[38] His process was disciplined and iterative, involving constant revision through journals and drafts to refine lyrics before integrating them into musical forms.[38] Primarily composing on acoustic or electric guitar, he occasionally incorporated piano for more introspective pieces, evolving from the raw, punk-influenced simplicity of early Triffids work to richer, bespoke orchestral arrangements in later projects with collaborators like Martyn Casey and Graham Lee.[38] This collaborative refinement allowed songs to adapt dynamically, tailoring instrumentation to enhance lyrical narratives without overpowering them.[38]Literary and musical inspirations
David McComb's literary influences were rooted in a broad appreciation for American prose and Australian poetry, shaped during his studies in journalism and literature at Curtin University of Technology, where he earned a BA in 1981. He drew from Southern Gothic traditions, echoing the dark, elliptical narratives of writers like Flannery O'Connor and William Faulkner, whose explorations of psychological turmoil and rural isolation resonated in his thematic concerns with loss and dislocation. Australian poetry provided a foundational influence, infusing his work with vernacular rhythms and a sense of place, while subtler allusions appeared to figures such as Dorothy Parker and Rainer Maria Rilke, reflecting an eclectic engagement with both high and low cultural forms. McComb's reading habits were wide-ranging but selective; he was not a voracious consumer of contemporary poetry and maintained distance from formal poetry scenes, preferring private, introspective exploration that informed his verbal dexterity without overt imitation.[40][41][1] These literary sources deeply informed McComb's songwriting, particularly with The Triffids, where books and poetry translated into lyrics rich with metaphor and narrative depth. For instance, the closing track "Tender Is the Night" on Born Sandy Devotional (1986) echoes F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel of the same name through its themes of doomed youth and longing, while broader allusions to Southern Gothic styles appear in tales of emotional desolation across albums like In the Pines (1984). McComb's university exposure to novelist Elizabeth Jolley further honed his command of everyday language, transforming clichés into poignant, rhythmic expressions that bridged prose and verse. His unpublished poetry, collected posthumously in Beautiful Waste (2009), demonstrates this overlap—rhythm and cadence link the forms, yet the poems stand independently, confronting themes of addiction, nature, and the metaphysical without the performative constraints of song.[2][42][40][9] McComb's musical inspirations spanned punk, folk, and beyond, beginning with the raw energy of New York punk acts like Television, Patti Smith, and Richard Hell & the Voidoids, which fueled the DIY ethos of his early Triffids recordings. Folk and country elements from Bob Dylan and Leonard Cohen profoundly shaped his lyricism, evident in the introspective storytelling and poetic economy of songs like "Wide Open Road," while Gram Parsons' blend of blues and country added a widescreen atmospheric quality to the band's sound. Later influences included David Bowie's theatricality, Al Green's soul, and even hip-hop pioneers like Ice-T and Run-D.M.C., as revealed in a 1991 Triple J session where McComb selected tracks ranging from Prince's "Condition of the Heart" to Kraftwerk's "Ohm Sweet Ohm."[9][2][43] In his solo career, particularly on Love of Will (1994), McComb's inspirations evolved toward greater introspection, incorporating scripture-inspired narratives and a subdued folk minimalism that amplified personal vulnerability amid his health struggles. This shift retained core folk influences like Cohen and Dylan but emphasized emotional rawness over the expansive Triffids arrangements, reflecting a matured integration of literary depth with musical restraint.[44][9]Legacy
Critical reception
During his time with The Triffids, David McComb's songwriting received widespread critical acclaim, particularly for the 1986 album Born Sandy Devotional, which was hailed as a landmark in Australian music. Mat Snow of New Musical Express described it as "a masterpiece... music of an order to be taken seriously," praising its bold reclamation of rock's narrative territory and its challenge to the genre's conventions.[12] Similarly, Adam Sweeting in Melody Maker called it "a classic, 10 songs of love and life in a hostile sub-tropical landscape," highlighting McComb's lyrics for their "real writer's insight," as exemplified by the vivid storytelling in "The Seabirds."[12] Jonh Wilde of Sounds echoed this enthusiasm, labeling it "the best, most brilliantly brusque LP of the year so far," with McComb's words forming "a lyrical wall and a mercurial lacing of melody" that evoked a near-miraculous intensity.[12] McComb's solo career, marked by the 1994 album Love of Will, elicited more mixed responses from critics, who admired its mature introspection but often noted its challenging accessibility. New Musical Express characterized the record as "a full-blown foray into country rock" that effectively reconciled McComb's brooding, Leonard Cohen-esque lyricism with a rawer edge, signaling artistic growth amid personal struggles.[45] However, reviewers pointed to its inward, sometimes self-loathing tone as a shift from the Triffids' expansive landscapes, rendering it less immediate for broader audiences, though deeply affecting for those attuned to its emotional depth.[44] McComb cultivated a dedicated cult following in Australia and Europe, where The Triffids' melodramatic style resonated strongly, yet their indie label status constrained commercial breakthrough despite consistent praise.[46] This recognition underscored his role as a pivotal figure in 1980s Australian alternative music, blending post-punk grit with literary folk influences to elevate the scene's global profile.[1]Awards and honors
Throughout his career and posthumously, David McComb received several notable recognitions from Australian music industry bodies for his songwriting and contributions to bands like The Triffids. In 2001, as part of its 75th anniversary celebrations, the Australasian Performing Right Association (APRA) named McComb's 1986 composition "Wide Open Road"—performed by The Triffids—one of the top 30 Australian songs of all time.[47] McComb was posthumously inducted into the West Australian Music Industry Association (WAM) Hall of Fame on 21 February 2006, honoring his role as a composer and performer.[48] In 2008, The Triffids—led by McComb as singer-songwriter and guitarist—were inducted into the ARIA Hall of Fame, acknowledging the band's enduring influence on Australian music, with specific tribute to McComb's creative legacy during the ceremony.Posthumous works
Tribute projects
Following David McComb's death in 1999, the Friends of David McComb collective—comprising longtime collaborators including his brother Robert McComb and former Triffids members—undertook a project to unearth and record his unreleased songs from the late 1990s. This effort culminated in the album Truckload of Sky: The Lost Songs of David McComb Vol. 1, released in March 2020 on the Mistletone label, which features 12 tracks drawn from demo cassettes and notebooks discovered among his possessions.[49] The album was produced primarily by Graham Lee, a pedal steel guitarist who had worked with McComb on his solo projects and contributed to mixing and liner notes, alongside contributions from artists such as Rob Snarski of The Blackeyed Susans and JP Shilo.[50] Performances supporting the release included live sets at venues like the Adelaide Fringe in March 2020 and the Brunswick Ballroom in Melbourne in October 2022, featuring rotating lineups of McComb's musical associates interpreting the material.[51][52] Other musical tributes have included covers of McComb's compositions by Australian artists connected to his circle. The Blackeyed Susans, formed by ex-Triffids members Rob Snarski and Michael Kellie, recorded several of his songs, such as "A Curse on You" and "Ocean of You," for the 2009 tribute compilation Deep in a Dream: An Evening with the Songs of David McComb, a live recording from a Melbourne concert benefiting heart research in McComb's name.[53] Post-1999 benefit concerts honoring McComb took place in Perth and Melbourne, including Triffids reunion performances at the 2008 ARIA Hall of Fame induction and informal sets by surviving band members at local venues to raise funds for medical causes related to his heart condition.[54] A companion book to the Truckload of Sky album, titled Various Artists' Truckload of Sky: The Lost Songs of David McComb Vol. 1 and authored by Glenn D'Cruz as part of the 33 1/3 Oceania series, was published in September 2025 by Bloomsbury Academic. The volume includes essays analyzing McComb's unpublished lyrics and the creative process behind the album's revival, drawing on interviews with collaborators to contextualize his final body of work.[55] McComb-focused performances have continued at festivals, such as Triffids reunion sets at WOMADelaide in 2015 and subsequent McComb tribute shows by groups like Wide Open Road in Adelaide, emphasizing his songwriting legacy through faithful renditions of Triffids catalog material.[56] In recent years, tributes have included minor covers and radio specials; for instance, a 2024 live performance of Triffids songs by Robert McComb and associates was documented online.[57]Documentaries and media
In 2021, the documentary Love in Bright Landscapes, directed by Jonathan Alley, provided an intimate portrait of McComb's life, drawing on archival footage, home movies, 35mm slides, and letters to explore his songwriting, poetry, and personal struggles.[58][59] The film features interviews with family members such as his sister Sally Collins, bandmates including Dave Faulkner and Martyn Casey, and musicians like Paul Kelly and Lenny Kaye, narrated by author DBC Pierre, and highlights McComb's heart condition as a recurring theme in his story.[60] Originally proposed in 2009 and completed after 13 years of production, it premiered at the Melbourne International Film Festival before a wider Australian cinema release in May 2022, emphasizing his underrecognized influence on Australian music.[2][61] A 2022 feature in The Australian Financial Review described McComb as "the greatest Australian songwriter you've never heard of," linking the documentary's release to renewed interest in his cult status and arguing that his work has been overshadowed despite its emotional depth and innovation.[27] McComb's inclusion in broader Australian music histories appears in books such as Vagabond Holes: David McComb and The Triffids (2009), a collection of essays, stories, poems, and artworks by friends, family, and fans edited by Chris Coughran and Niall Lucy, which contextualizes his role in Perth's indie scene.[62] Similarly, Save What You Can (2012) by Bleddyn Butcher chronicles the Triffids' trajectory with McComb at its center, portraying him as a pivotal figure in 1980s Australian rock.[63] Marking the 25th anniversary of McComb's death in February 2024, tributes included social media reflections from institutions like the Australian Music Vault, which highlighted his enduring legacy as The Triffids' lead singer and songwriter.[64] Podcasts contributed to this commemoration, such as an ABC Radio episode revisiting the documentary and McComb's influence, while live events like a May 2024 discussion and performance of his songs at Ireland's Spirit Store further amplified his story.[65][57] McComb's online presence has grown through platforms like Bandcamp, where releases such as Truckload of Sky: The Lost Songs of David McComb (2020) by Friends of David McComb make previously unreleased material available, alongside reissues of Triffids albums like In the Pines (2024).[66][67] Fan-maintained sites, including the official Triffids website, preserve his archives, including poetry scans and interviews, with updates continuing into 2025 via community-driven content on Vimeo and social media. Recent profiles have increasingly addressed McComb's literary side, with the 2021 documentary incorporating his poetry alongside music, and the 2009 collection Beautiful Waste: Poems by David McComb—posthumously published from his manuscripts—receiving renewed attention in 2022 reviews that praise its raw exploration of isolation and landscape, themes echoing his lyrics.[58][68][39]Discography
Albums
David McComb's solo career produced one full-length studio album, Love of Will, released in March 1994 on White Label Records, a subsidiary of Mushroom Records.[25] The album, recorded and mixed between June and August 1993 at Platinum Studios in Melbourne with additional mixing at Metropolis and Sing Sing Studios, was produced by Nick Mainsbridge and featured McComb on vocals, guitar, and keyboards, alongside contributions from musicians including Daniel Denholm on keyboards and programming, Warren Ellis on violin, and Graham Lee as musical director.[69] It was issued in CD and cassette formats in Australia, the UK, and Europe, with no reissues during McComb's lifetime.[25] The 13-track album showcases McComb's introspective songwriting, blending folk-rock elements with poetic lyrics; highlights include the opening track "Clear Out My Mind," the co-written "Nothing Good" (with Will Akers), and the closing "Pack Up Your Troubles," emphasizing themes of longing and redemption.[25] During his tenure with The Black Eyed Susans from 1989 to 1993, McComb made significant contributions as co-founder, songwriter, guitarist, and vocalist to the band's early full-length releases. The debut album Welcome Stranger, released in August 1992 on Waterfront Records, compiled tracks from the band's initial EPs along with new material and was available on CD and vinyl.[70] McComb co-wrote and performed on several songs, including the melancholic "Ocean of You," which highlights his lyrical depth amid the band's chamber pop and alt-country sound.[70] The follow-up All Souls Alive, issued in December 1993 on Torn & Frayed Records (with a US release in 1994 on Amphetamine Reptile Records), featured McComb's co-writing credits on most original tracks alongside Phil Kakulas, with the album released on CD and vinyl.[71] Key highlights include "A Curse on You" (co-written with Kakulas and Graham Lee) and "Every Gentle Soul" (co-written with Will Akers), where McComb's influence is evident in the album's evocative, soulful arrangements blending folk and indie rock.[71] As the primary songwriter for The Triffids, McComb penned the majority of tracks on the band's early albums, such as Treeless Plain (1983, Hot Records) and Raining on the Moon (1985, Hot Records), both released on vinyl and later CD, though full details are covered in the band's discography.[72] These works established his reputation for vivid, narrative-driven compositions before his solo and collaborative efforts.[72]Posthumous releases
Posthumously, unreleased and unfinished songs by McComb have been compiled and completed by collaborators as part of the Truckload of Sky series. Truckload of Sky: The Lost Songs of David McComb, Vol. 1 was released in February 2020 by The Friends of David McComb on Hidden Track Records, featuring 12 tracks including "Kneel So Low" and "Kiss Him (He's History)".[66] Vol. 2 followed in 2023, continuing the effort to preserve his songcraft with additional lost recordings.[73]Singles and EPs
David McComb's solo singles and EPs, released primarily in the late 1980s and early 1990s, showcased his evolving style beyond his work with The Triffids, blending introspective songwriting with experimental production. These non-album releases often featured collaborations and limited formats, reflecting his independent approach during a transitional period in his career. While they achieved minimal commercial chart success, they received notable airplay on Australian independent radio stations, helping to build a dedicated following among alternative music listeners. His debut solo EP, I Don't Need You, was released in 1989 in collaboration with Adam Peters on Island Records. Issued as a 12-inch vinyl single/EP, it included the title track "I Don't Need You" (Baker's Mix), "Willie The Torch," and additional mixes, emphasizing atmospheric rock elements with McComb's distinctive lyrical delivery.[74] In 1991, McComb issued The Message on The Foundation Label, a vinyl EP produced with a dance-oriented edge that marked a brief departure into electronic influences. The release featured "The Message" (KSDS Mix), the previously unreleased "Song of No Return," and "I've Heard Things Turn Out This Way," highlighting his willingness to experiment with club-friendly sounds during his time in London.[75] McComb's 1993 single "Setting You Free," released on White Label Records to promote his album Love of Will, appeared in multiple formats including CD and cassette. The CD version included B-sides such as "Home for Fallen Angels," "You've Got a Funny Way of Showing You Love Me," and "My Friend Sleep," offering fans deeper cuts that expanded on themes of personal liberation and emotional complexity.[76] Additional singles from the Love of Will era included "I Want to Conquer You" and "Clear Out My Mind," both issued in 1994 on White Label Records as CD singles with various B-sides, further exploring his mature songcraft through sparse arrangements and poignant narratives.[77] In terms of compilation appearances, McComb contributed to the 1991 Leonard Cohen tribute album I'm Your Fan with the track "Don't Go Home with Your Hard-On," recorded alongside Adam Peters, providing a raw, alternative rock reinterpretation that underscored his admiration for Cohen's lyrical depth.[78] Regarding collaborations, McComb's involvement with The Black Eyed Susans during their early years included contributions to their 1991 EP Throwing Horseshoes, which featured tracks from London sessions co-produced by McComb, such as atmospheric pieces blending folk and indie elements with bandmates Rob Snarski and Kenny Davis Jr.[19]| Release | Year | Format | Label | Key Tracks |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| I Don't Need You (with Adam Peters) | 1989 | 12" Vinyl EP | Island Records | "I Don't Need You," "Willie The Torch" |
| The Message | 1991 | Vinyl EP | The Foundation Label | "The Message," "Song of No Return" |
| "Setting You Free" | 1993 | CD/Cassette Single | White Label Records | "Setting You Free," "Home for Fallen Angels" |
| "I Want to Conquer You" | 1994 | CD Single | White Label Records | "I Want to Conquer You" (with B-sides) |
| "Clear Out My Mind" | 1994 | CD Single | White Label Records | "Clear Out My Mind" (with B-sides) |
| I'm Your Fan (compilation track with Adam Peters) | 1991 | Various | EastWest Records | "Don't Go Home with Your Hard-On" |
| Throwing Horseshoes EP (Black Eyed Susans collaboration) | 1991 | EP | Waterfront Records | London Sessions tracks (co-produced) |