Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

BOMBAY ROCKED THE ’80S

The Gold Coast has always been known for its wild nightlife and the addition of a new venue in 1982 only enhanced that reputation

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THE Gold Coast has had a wild nightlife for decades. From the infamous pyjama parties of the 1950s to the high-end dining and eateries of today, Surfers Paradise has seen it all.

But in the 1970s and 1980s the city experience­d a glut of new and exciting nightspots including Twains, The Avenue, Melbas and The Penthouse.

At the time the Gold Coast was well known for its live music scene and these venues were no different.

Among the best loved and remembered was the Bombay Rock.

It opened on the former site of the El Rancho Steakhouse on the corner of Cavill and Ferny avenues where Circle on Cavill now sits.

While El Rancho was an icon of the 1950s and 1960s, the Bombay Rock was very much a venue of the 1980s.

El Rancho was sold in 1978 and replaced by a modern new building in 1982.

Owned by the George brothers, it became well known for its top-level entertainm­ent and wild evenings.

Among the big names who played there through the 1980s were New Order, The Divinyls and Midnight Oil.

Author Nikki McWatters wrote in her 2012 memoir about her experience­s growing

up on the Gold Coast and becoming a rock star groupie.

“It was 1982 and I’d made my rock gig debut joining throngs of fans on the dance floor as surf-rockers Australian Crawl played at Bombay Rock, a gritty club on the darker edge of Surfers Paradise,” she wrote.

“After the show, I stood with a gaggle of groupies at the backstage door, wondering how to talk my way in. In my tight, stone-washed jeans and pink-and-grey sloppy joe, I felt dressed down compared with the other girls in their minis, high heels and fringed leather jackets.”

By 1984 the Bombay Rock was doing a booming trade and there was talk of expansion.

Joseph George told the media at the time his company had bought the carpark next to the venue for $2 million in the hopes of spending $4 million revamping it.

“The council has said it would be sympatheti­c with the linking of the carpark with the upper levels of Bombay Rock,’” Mr George said.

“We’ll be negotiatin­g on joining the top level of the existing carpark to the two upper levels of Bombay Rock which are not operating at the moment.

“We will then open them up as an up-market nightclub, and people will be able to walk through to it from the carpark.

“The carpark has plenty of room for expansion and was originally going to be five or six floors higher, so we’ll be asking council engineers to have a look at the supporting piers.

“We hope there is movement on site by the end of the year.”

But it was not always free from controvers­y.

In 1985. a man threw a stubbie filled with kerosene into the nightclub after being asked to leave. It ignited but was extinguish­ed quickly by a security guard.

By 1987 the Bombay Rock was sold to the Masterview Group and there was talk of a major facelift to make it appeal more to people in the lucrative 21-35 age group. But it wasn’t to be.

By the 1990s the Bombay Rock was gone and its place as the leading live music venue in the city’s north was replaced by Fisherman’s Wharf which hosted plenty of major bands until it too closed in 1998.

 ?? Picture (bottom right): COURTESY KAREN AUTY ?? Cold Chisels frontman Jimmy Barnes belts out the final song of the night after famously stage-diving into thin air at Bombay Rock on the Gold Coast. Below, the club hosted many memorable nights through the 1980s.
Picture (bottom right): COURTESY KAREN AUTY Cold Chisels frontman Jimmy Barnes belts out the final song of the night after famously stage-diving into thin air at Bombay Rock on the Gold Coast. Below, the club hosted many memorable nights through the 1980s.
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