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Cold Chisel member reveals why the Aussie rock legends are ‘careful of each other’

Cold Chisel brought down the curtain on their wildly successful 50th anniversary tour last week. One lingering question remains unanswered.

Cold Chisel reunite for 50th anniversary tour

There was one big question on every fan’s mind after Cold Chisel brought down the curtain on their wildly successful 50th anniversary tour last week: will they keep going?

The band members appear to be divided on the future for the Australian rock institution.

Jimmy Barnes and Ian Moss are determined to keep going with Chisel until they’re 80; Don Walker fears old war wounds may be reopened if they became a “full-time band” again.

Speaking on the new LiSTNR podcast Cold Chisel, Walker shared how the bandmates, including Phil Small and Charley Drayton, were “careful of each other” to keep the show on the road over the past two months.

Chisel’s chief songwriter and pianist Don Walker says the band is better off not being “full-time.” Picture: Robert Hambling
Chisel’s chief songwriter and pianist Don Walker says the band is better off not being “full-time.” Picture: Robert Hambling

“These days we’re very careful of each other, to the best of our capacity,” Walker said. “With each of us, our top skill is not social.

“No, no, I don’t think we could be a full-time band again. No, that wouldn’t go well at all.”

They would be mad to pull the pin on their occasional reunions after selling more than 225,000 tickets for the 23 concerts on the Big Five-O victory lap.

It was the biggest tour by an Australian artist this year, with three shows in New Zealand in January to complete before Chisel contemplate any future moves.

Barnes, who said recently he was working on a new solo album for 2025, believes there’s plenty left in the tank for new music and more shows down the track.

As long as they can all do it, he wants to be singing with his beloved bandmates until “we hit 80.”

Barnes and Moss want Chisel to keep going. Picture: Supplied.
Barnes and Moss want Chisel to keep going. Picture: Supplied.

“I’m not seeing the 50th anniversary as the last tour,” he said on the podcast documentary’s final episode.

“I think it’s a good gauge of where we’re going to go next … we’re going to roll more than we rock and I think we’re going to find a whole new way of doing things. It’s going to open doors for us musically that we want to pursue.

“I see it as a gateway to what we’re going to do until we hit eighty.”

Mossy, who was nominated as best on field for his incendiary guitar playing and crystal clear vocals by almost every punter who saw the historic concerts, shares in the episode that everyone in the Chisel camp are still “too keen, too excited to say this is it’s definitely all over.”

The Cold Chisel LiSTNR exclusive podcast reveals the band’s future.
The Cold Chisel LiSTNR exclusive podcast reveals the band’s future.

He cited Eric Clapton and B.B. King among those who proved there’s no retirement age for musicians.

“As long as your hands are still working and your voice is still working, there’s no reason why (not), that’s the beauty of this,” Mossy said.

“If you’re lucky, fortunate enough to have set yourself up well enough in this business is it never has to end.”

Charley Drayton who has occupied the drum seat since the tragic death of original member Steve Prestwich in 2011, said simply “I don’t think Cold Chisel is a band that should ever say they’re breaking up.”

A documentary about the 50th anniversary tour is expected to be released in early 2025.

Cold Chisel is available exclusively on LiSTNR.

Originally published as Cold Chisel member reveals why the Aussie rock legends are ‘careful of each other’

Original URL: https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/entertainment/music/cold-chisel-member-reveals-why-the-aussie-rock-legends-are-careful-of-each-other/news-story/2af3a30c46ea1e17a501c39a7dedf21d