Colin King


Outside of Taranaki his name may not resonate with many – and certainly not in this millennium – but in the 1950s and into the 1960s dance-band leader Colin King was, well, king.

Now a lively octogenarian pianist and dance-band leader who still performs, mostly at retirement homes and for charity events, King once ran the province’s leading dances, was a music store owner and a promoter.

Sixteen-piece Taranaki dance band the Airliners, with Colin King at the piano, from the New Plymouth Photo News, 11 July 1957.
Photo credit: Charters & Guthrie
Colin King and his Harmonisers, 1950s. From left, Ronald Hugh Morrieson, Jim Leishman, Les Gibbs, Bob Crow, Lou McDonald, Piko Rangitaawa (guitar), Don McCormick, Colin King
A record bag from Colin King's music shop in Waitara, Taranaki.
Photo credit: Chauncy Ardell Collection
Colin King comperes - and leads the Airliners from the piano - at a 1957 dance at the Star Gymnasium, New Plymouth. From the New Plymouth Photo News, December 1957
Photo credit: Henry McGee
Colin King with John Dix, 2016
When Louis Armstrong visited New Zealand in 1963, Colin King and 25 other Taranaki jazz fans chartered a planed from New Plymouth to see the Auckland show. Because of King's friendship with promoter Harry M Miller, they were welcomed backstage. King's guitarist Piko Rangitaawa, on the right, carved a waka huia (treasure box) to present to Armstrong; at left are Michael Foley and Colin King.
Photo credit: NZ Herald
Colin King, playing piano for 16-piece Taranaki dance band the Airliners, from the New Plymouth Photo News, 11 July 1957.
Photo credit: Charters & Guthrie
Colin King, 2016
Colin King, the "dance band king" of Taranaki, c1970

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