Rob Hirst, Midnight Oil Drummer and Co-Founder, Dead at 70
Rob Hirst, the founding drummer and rhythmic backbone of Midnight Oil, has died at age 70 following a nearly three-year battle with pancreatic cancer.
For more than five decades, Hirst helped drive one of the most important bands ever to emerge from Australia. As both drummer and songwriter, he played a central role in shaping Midnight Oil’s sound and purpose, anchoring their urgent, politically charged music with a style that was forceful, disciplined, and unmistakably his own.
Born in Camden, New South Wales, on September 3, 1955, Hirst co-founded the band in 1972 alongside guitarist Jim Moginie. With the later additions of Peter Garrett and Martin Rotsey, Midnight Oil evolved from a hard-working pub band into an international force, known as much for conviction as volume. Hirst’s drumming powered that ascent, giving the band its forward momentum while leaving room for the message to land.
He co-wrote many of the group’s defining songs, including “Beds Are Burning,” “The Dead Heart,” and “Blue Sky Mine,” tracks that carried environmental, political, and Indigenous rights issues into mainstream rock without dilution. Across thirteen studio albums, Midnight Oil built a catalog that refused neutrality, and Hirst was central to its construction.
Away from the Oils, he remained creatively restless. Hirst recorded and performed with projects including the Ghostwriters, Backsliders, the Angry Tradesmen, the Break, and his own solo work. In 2020, he released music with his daughter Jay O’Shea, a collaboration rooted in family and shared musical language. His final solo EP, A Hundred Years or More, arrived in 2025.
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