Blerta

Musical and theatrical co-operative in New Zealand


title: "Blerta" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["musical-groups-established-in-1971", "musical-groups-disestablished-in-1975", "apra-award-winners", "new-zealand-musical-groups", "theatre-companies-in-new-zealand", "1971-establishments-in-new-zealand", "1975-disestablishments-in-new-zealand", "new-zealand-artist-groups-and-collectives"] description: "Musical and theatrical co-operative in New Zealand" topic_path: "arts" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blerta" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Musical and theatrical co-operative in New Zealand ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox musical artist"]

FieldValue
nameBlerta
aliasBruno Lawrence's Electric Revelation and Travelling Apparition
originNew Zealand
genreMusical and theatre company
years_active1971–1975
past_membersBruno Lawrence
Geoff Murphy
Kemp Turirangi
Alan Moon
Corben Simpson
Murray Crooks
Tony Littlejohn
Beaver
Fane Flaws
Eric Foley
Chris Seresin
Bill Stalker
Christine Barnett
Ian Watkin
Bill Gruar
Patrick Bleakley
Tim Piper
Greg Taylor
::

| name = Blerta | image = | caption = | alias = Bruno Lawrence's Electric Revelation and Travelling Apparition | origin = New Zealand | genre = Musical and theatre company | occupation = | instrument = | years_active = 1971–1975 | label = | associated_acts = | website = | current_members = | past_members = Bruno Lawrence Geoff Murphy Kemp Turirangi Alan Moon Corben Simpson Murray Crooks Tony Littlejohn Beaver Fane Flaws Eric Foley Chris Seresin Bill Stalker Christine Barnett Ian Watkin Bill Gruar Patrick Bleakley Tim Piper Greg Taylor}}

Blerta ("Bruno Lawrence's Electric Revelation and Travelling Apparition") was a New Zealand musical and theatrical co-operative active from 1971 until 1975.

It was the idea of Bruno Lawrence to arrange a group of musicians, actors and friends, who would travel around New Zealand on a tour to get away from the pressure of the music and movie scene. He organised the travelling group, and in October 1971, they departed on their tour. The group travelled around New Zealand in a very distinctive red bus, concluding in January 1973 at the first large outdoor music festival in New Zealand, The Great Ngaruawahia Music Festival, before heading up the eastern seaboard of Australia, and performing at the 1973 Aquarius Festival at the Northern Rivers NSW hippie town of Nimbin.

The group lived in a commune for many years. Three families lived together, including those of Bruno Lawrence and Geoff Murphy. The group came to the attention of the New Zealand film industry and were employed at times to create work for TVNZ. The group were labelled as hippies during that time and were looked down upon by some in the industry, despite the quality and nature of their work. Nevertheless, the band had a significant hit with their song "Dance All Around The World", which reached #13 in the N.Z. music charts in June 1972.

The line-up changed throughout the years that Blerta travelled. Members included Lawrence, Fane Flaws, Beaver, Geoff Murphy, Tony Barry, Patrick Bleakley, Ian Watkin and Mick Lieber, as well as many others, of which some had previously worked with Bruno in bands and others joined along the way. The original line up was Bruno Lawrence, Corben Simpson, Kemp Turirangi, Geoff Murphy, Alan Moon, Tony Littlejohn, Beaver, Eric Foley, and Chris Seresin. The great adventure and experience of Blerta finished in 1975, with the troupe embarking on one last tour.

Although Bruno Lawrence and Geoff Murphy were friends for many years, the two had a falling out five years prior to Lawrence's death. They never reconciled, and Murphy was absent from Lawrence's funeral.

Discography

::data[format=table]

Date of releaseTitleLabelChartedCountryCatalog number
1972Joy Joy
1974This Is The LifeEMI
1976Wild Man
2001The Return Trip..EMI535096.2
::

References

References

  1. "Blerta Revisited {{!}} Film {{!}} NZ On Screen".
  2. Newman, Keith. (9 May 2013). "BLERTA – AudioCulture".
  3. "Blerta {{!}} Biography & History {{!}} AllMusic". AllMusic.
  4. "Blerta". Bruce Sergent.
  5. Ratified in the [[Corben Simpson]] entry.
  6. Noted. "From our archive: Bruno did his thing – The Listener".

::callout[type=info title="Wikipedia Source"] This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page. ::

musical-groups-established-in-1971musical-groups-disestablished-in-1975apra-award-winnersnew-zealand-musical-groupstheatre-companies-in-new-zealand1971-establishments-in-new-zealand1975-disestablishments-in-new-zealandnew-zealand-artist-groups-and-collectives