Noosha Fox

Australian singer


title: "Noosha Fox" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["australian-women-singers", "australian-pop-singers", "australian-expatriates-in-the-united-kingdom", "living-people", "1944-births"] description: "Australian singer" topic_path: "geography/australia" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noosha_Fox" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Australian singer ::

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

FieldValue
nameNoosha Fox
backgroundsolo_singer
birth_nameSusan Traynor
birth_date
birth_placeAustralia
occupationSinger
genrePop
years_activeLate 1960s–current
associated_actsFox
::

| name = Noosha Fox | image = | caption = | image_size = | background = solo_singer | birth_name = Susan Traynor | alias = | birth_date = | birth_place = Australia | death_date = | death_place = | occupation = Singer | instrument = | genre = Pop | years_active = Late 1960s–current | associated_acts = Fox | website = Noosha Fox (born Susan Traynor, 8 December 1944) is an Australian singer. She is known as the lead singer of the British-based pop band Fox, who had three UK chart hits in 1975 and 1976. She also had a number 31 hit as a solo performer with "Georgina Bailey".

Career

Susan Traynor was born in Australia in 1944. She began her music career as a singer in Sydney-based folk rock band Wooden Horse, who moved to England in 1970 and released two LPs. After the band split up, she provided background vocals on American singer and songwriter Kenny Young's 1973 solo album, Last Stage For Silverworld.

She then formed Fox, the band that included Young and Northern Irish singer-songwriter Herbie Armstrong. She adopted the stage name Noosha, a corruption of an anagram of her first name (nussa), and in performances wore dresses and accessories in 1920s and 1930s style. With Fox, Noosha achieved three top 20 hits on the UK Singles Chart: "Only You Can" and "Imagine Me, Imagine You" in 1975 and "S-S-S-Single Bed" in 1976. She left after their third album, Blue Hotel, to launch a solo career. Her first single, "Georgina Bailey", written and produced by Young, briefly entered the Top 40 in the UK Singles Chart, reaching number 31 in 1977.

In 1979, Noosha Fox tried to restart her solo career with a single, "The Heat Is On", written by Florrie Palmer and Tony Ashton, on Chrysalis Records. A later version of the song, by ABBA's Agnetha Fältskog, was a European hit four years later. In 1980, Fox provided guest vocals for the songs "Perfect Strangers" and "Havana Moon" on Tim Renwick's self-titled debut album.

Fox recorded several singles in the early 1980s for the Earlobe label but none were successful, and she withdrew from the music industry. Although she did not write her own songs, her performance style has been credited with influencing Kate Bush and Alison Goldfrapp. It was reported in 2007 on BBC Radio 4's The Music Group that Fox was recording a solo album of electropop but it was not released.

On 1 August 2022, renowned music producer Shel Talmy released a 5-track downloadable EP of original songs by Noosha which had been recorded in 1978.

Personal life

Fox has been married since 1973 to physician and academic Michael Goldacre, with whom she has four children, one of whom is Ben Goldacre, a physician and academic best known for his "Bad Science" weekly column. Ben Goldacre announced that Fox was his mother after seeing her perform "S-S-S-Single Bed" on a BBC4 repeat of Top of the Pops, and stated that she was working on new material.

Discography

::data[format=table]

YearTitleFormatLabelCatalogue refChart position
1977"Georgina Bailey" / "Pretty Boy"7" singleGTOGT 106No. 91 AUS, No. 31 UK
1979"The Heat Is On" / "Some Enchanted Evening"7" singleCHRYSALISCHS 2337
1979"Skin Tight" / "Miss You"7" singleCHRYSALISCHS 2383
1981"More Than Molecules" / "Odd Peculiar Strange"7" singleEARLOBEELB S 101
1981"Hot As Sun" / "The Cheapest Night"7" singleEARLOBEELB S 105
::

:Source:{{cite book | first= David | last= Roberts | year= 2006 | title= British Hit Singles & Albums | edition= 19th | publisher= Guinness World Records Limited | location= London | isbn= 1-904994-10-5 | page= 211}}

References

References

  1. (2003). "Jörg Amtage und Matthias Müller präsentieren Alle Hits aus Deutschlands Charts 1954-2003". Pro Business.
  2. "Wooden Horse II".
  3. "Last Stage For Silverworld".
  4. Wilson, Dave. "Rock Formations: Categorical Answers to how Band Names Were Formed". Cidermill Books.
  5. (4 May 2012). "Before Goldfrapp, before Kate Bush, there was Noosha Fox".
  6. [http://thiswayupzine.blogspot.com/2019/02/fantastic-noosha-fox.html John Connors, "Fantastic Noosha Fox", ''This Way Up'', 2019]. Retrieved 21 May 2020
  7. "Tim Renwick - Tim Renwick {{!}} Credits". [[AllMusic]].
  8. "Series 1, Episode 5".
  9. Ian Fairlie. (2009). "Book Reviews: Bad Science, by Ben Goldacre". Medicine, Conflict and Survival.
  10. Goldacre, Ben. (24 February 2015). "What eight years of writing the Bad Science column have taught me". The Guardian.
  11. Petridis, Alexis. (29 May 2011). "Alexis Petridis on pop's worst year". [[The Guardian]].
  12. Kent, David. (1993). "Australian Chart Book 1970–1992". Australian Chart Book.

::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. ::

australian-women-singersaustralian-pop-singersaustralian-expatriates-in-the-united-kingdomliving-people1944-births