As a
pop/
rock/
old time music venue Cloudland hosted thousands of dances and concerts in the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s, including a number of notable events. It hosted three of the six concerts performed by rock 'n' roll legend
Buddy Holly on his only Australian tour in February 1958. Early 1960s saw Saturday afternoon rock and roll dances sponsored by Coca Cola and was known as 'the hi fi club' the resident band were 'the hucklebucks', with 'the planets' and 'the dominos' alternating saturdays. A talent quest held most Saturdays produced some future famous faces including the 'bee gees' among others. Cloudland also hosted fledgling bands who went on to establish careers in the music industry. One example is the concert of 28 July 1979 featuring three talented up-and-coming bands:
XTC, Flowers (later known as
Icehouse), and
The Numbers. Australian and New Zealand bands who played at the venue include
AC/DC on their "TNT Tour" (November 30, 1975),
The Angels,
Australian Crawl,
Cold Chisel,
Dragon,
The Go Betweens,
Icehouse (as Flowers),
INXS,
Mental As Anything,
Railroad Gin,
The Riptides,
The Saints,
Skyhooks,
Split Enz and
The Sports. International bands which played at the venue include
Dr. Feelgood (July 13, 1979),
XTC (July 28, 1979),
Madness (May 2, 1981),
The Stray Cats (October 3, 1981),
Echo & The Bunnymen (November 13, 1981),
Simple Minds (November 28, 1981 and October 9, 1982),
The Clash (February 20, 1982) and
The Teardrop Explodes (March 19, 1982). Music for Cloudland functions was provided by Brisbane musicians and Australian bands from the 1950s to the early 1980s, and for much of the 1960s it was the central venue for the Sunshine group. Sunshine was headed by Brisbane businessman
Ivan Dayman (originally from
Adelaide), who leased Cloudland from Apel around 1963. Dayman's entrepreneurial style had a formula that had proved successful in Adelaide and he applied this to his Cloudland enterprise. He commissioned arrangements of the latest pop tunes (
hit parades/
top forty) adapted to the dances of the day, headhunted the best of Brisbane's musicians and performing artists and paid for rehearsals and dances were run during the week as well as on weekends. On public holidays and significant dates or long weekends during the year, midnight-to-dawn dances were run, usually with featured guest artists of national fame, for example, the
Bee Gees,
Little Pattie and
Midnight Oil. Dayman also installed a huge
mirror ball over the centre of the ballroom's floor. The dance steps comprised 40%
old time and 60% modern music. Music for the dancers was provided by resident bands and vocal performers from the time of Cloudland's reopening after the war until its closure. Resident bands included The
Billo Smith Orchestra, The Cloudland Big Band, The Rick Farbach Sextet, Jim Diamond & The Lancers, The Hi-Marks, The Sounds of Seven, and The Seasons of the Witch. The dance programs in those times covered old time (
barn dance,
gypsy tap, Canadian 3-step, Pride of Erin, old time waltz; and in a roped off area at one end of the ballroom,
jive), 'Modern' (jazz waltz,
quickstep,
foxtrot), and later the
twist and other popular dance crazes. Cloudland Ballroom was said to be the finest ballroom in Australia. ==Other functions==