To most people, Michael Gudinski was the larger-than-life character standing next to Ed Sheeran, Kylie Minogue or Bruce Springsteen as they launched their Australian tours.
He was the public face of Frontier Touring, the company he founded back in 1979. The hyper-passionate man who was just as comfortable negotiating a million dollar business deal to bringing Taylor Swift to Australia as he was chatting to the punters in the audience at the concerts he'd worked all hours to make a reality.
Dad loved to call himself a punters' pal and that he was — he was just as excited as the fans because after all he was a true music fan himself. He lived and breathed it.
He thrived on seeing the joy people got from music, the same joy that inspired him to leave school at 17 (much to the horror of his parents), start at the bottom rung of the then infant music industry and quickly work his way to the top, putting Australian music on the map and giving it the recognition it deserved.
He also created Mushroom Records — the groundbreaking music label that would sign Kylie Minogue, Paul Kelly, Jimmy Barnes, Vance Joy and the Temper Trap among countless others, and then export their music to the planet.