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Jim Keays : ウィキペディア英語版
Jim Keays

James "Jim" Keays (9 September 194613 June 2014) was an Australian musician who fronted rock band The Masters Apprentices as singer-songwriter, guitarist and harmonica-player from 1965 to 1972, and subsequently had a solo career. He also wrote for the teen newspaper, ''Go-Set'', as its Adelaide correspondent in 1970 and its London correspondent in 1973.
The Masters Apprentices had Top 20 hits on the ''Go-Set'' National Singles Charts with "Undecided", "Living in a Child's Dream", "5:10 Man", "Think about Tomorrow Today", "Turn Up Your Radio" and "Because I Love You". The band reformed periodically, including in 1987 to 1988 and again subsequently. Keays, as a member of The Masters Apprentices, was inducted into the ARIA Hall of Fame in 1998. As a solo artist he issued albums, ''The Boy from the Stars'' (December 1974), ''Red on the Meter'' (October 1983), ''Pressure Makes Diamonds'' (1993), ''Resonator'' (2006) and ''Dirty, Dirty'' (2012).
He published his memoirs, ''His Master's Voice: The Masters Apprentices: The Bad Boys of Sixties Rock 'n' Roll'' in 1999. From 2000, he performed in Cotton Keays & Morris alongside other former 1960s artists, Darryl Cotton and Russell Morris. In July 2007, Keays was diagnosed with myeloma, which caused his kidneys to fail. By 2009 the cancer was in remission after chemotherapy and stem-cell transplants. However, he died in 2014 from pneumonia due to complications resulting from his cancer, aged 67. He is survived by his son James (from his first marriage), his second wife Karin and their two daughters.
==Early years==

Keays was born on 9 September 1946,〔 in Glasgow, Scotland, where his unwed mother put him up for adoption at six months old.〔 He was adopted by James Keays Sr. (born 7 November 1916) and Jessie Cameron (''née'' Caldwell) Keays (born 16 February 1915),〔 a childless couple from Clydebank. They migrated to Australia on RMS ''Asturias'', leaving Southampton on 5 September 1951,〔 four days before he turned five.〔 They settled in Beaumont, a suburb of Adelaide.
He attended Burnside Primary School and then Norwood High School.〔 Keays played Australian rules football up to under-17s and golf—a passion shared with his father.〔 His interest in rock music began when he heard, "Rip It Up" by Little Richard and "Great Balls of Fire" by Jerry Lee Lewis on a school friend's turntable when he was 11.〔

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