
Lady of the Dawn, you've opened up my sleeping eyes
His consistent track record of success includes production, composition and conducting on projects as diverse as Watership Down (writing and producing Art Garfunkel's 10 million selling international number one single, "Bright Eyes") Phantom of The Opera (producing, co-writing with Andrew Lloyd Webber and orchestrating the first hit) and a great deal of symphonic work, including many television and film scores. He is the only composer ever to have won the Ivor Novello Award for "Best Film Music" two years in succession, once with "Watership Down" and once with "Caravans" the epic adaptation of James Michener"s novel, starring Anthony Quinn. He has conducted many of the world's great orchestras including the London Symphony, The London Philharmonic, The Royal Philharmonic, The Sydney Symphony Orchestra, the State Orchestra of Victoria and The National Symphony Orchestra Of Ireland. He has also had successes as a stage and TV designer and director, having developed a unique system of animation design for the live theatre and television productions.
As a singer, his solo albums include "Schizophonia" and "Tarot Suite" (both with the London Symphony Orchestra). From these albums came the European hit songs "Railway Hotel", "Lady Of The Dawn", "The Winds Of Change" and "The Ride To Agadir". He achieved the number 4 position as an artist in the UK charts in 1976 with his single "Summertime City". In 1983, Mike wrote and produced three more top ten hits, "Please Don't Fall In Love" (for Cliff Richard), "A Winter's Tale" (for David Essex, with lyric co-written by Tim Rice) and "I Feel Like Buddy Holly" (for Alvin Stardust).
He produced, arranged and conducted the "Cover Shot" album by David Essex (top three in the UK albums chart) and recorded his Symphonic Suite "The Dream Stone" with the London Philharmonic Orchestra at Abbey Road Studios. He was then commissioned to write the official Anthem for the inauguration of the Channel Tunnel by the Queen. Mike composed and produced the three million-selling album with classical violinist Vanessa Mae (EMI Classics, 1995) from which the top ten single "Toccata and Fugue in D minor" was taken.
Also in 1998, Mike produced, arranged and conducted the album, "Philharmania" with the Royal Philharmonic and guest singers including Roger Daltrey, Marc Almond, Bonnie Tyler, Status Quo, Huey Lewis, Kim Wilde, Justin Hayward and many others. Also in 1998, he relaunched the Wombles pop group, with two hits, "Remember You're A Womble" (at number 13) and "The Wombling Song" (at number 22).
Smokey Blue ran away
I know, at the time, back in 1968, I loved the song and today it conjours up slightly fuzzy memories of a very happy time of my life. Dvorak would be very proud of that little dog chasing freedom, I think. So, who are (were) A New Generation?
Lay down your weary tune, lay down,
It is my opinion, no doubt hotly contested by some, that Bob Dylan’s songs are invariably performed so much better by other artists! There is no argument, though, that Dylan is a song-writing genius, and there is a list as long as your arm of wonderful songs that he has composed over the years. In addition to the melodic Byrds, think of Joan Baez, Manfred Mann, Peter Paul & Mary etc., and Bob Dylan’s songs immediately come to mind. Of all those wonderful Stateside groups of the 60’s who counteracted the British pop music invasion of the time, the Byrds stand out at the very top of the tree. The harmonies and instrumental backing is most appealing - the whole package just oozes class. Wonderful stuff.
There was a wild Colonial Boy, Jack Doolan was his name,
This song has never been officially released in the U.K. I have to thank my dear friends in Australia & Norway for enabling me to own a copy of what I believe is one of Dennis & Ray’s best performances. We all know how versatile Dr. Hook were - Country, Rock, Disco, Comedy & out-and-out Pop all came easy to Dennis, Ray & the lads. Here they try their hand at folk - and of course succeed admirably. The story (slightly truncated from the full traditional version) is sincerely told by Messrs Locorriere and Sawyer, with the former’s unique vocals taking the lead.
Time and the river will bring my love to me
One of the most interesting and difficult-to-categorize singers in '60s pop, Gene Pitney had a long run of hits, distinguished by his pained, one-of-a-kind melodramatic pitch. Pitney was a successful '60s artist, scoring 16 top forty songs in the USA from 1961 to 1968, and forty such songs in the UK all the way up to 1974.
Gene Francis Alan Pitney was born in Hartford, Connecticut in 1941, but spent most of his youth in Rockville, Connecticut. Pitney studied piano, guitar, and drums while at Rockville High School while performing with his group, "The Genials" and had written and published some songs. By the time he had dropped out of the University of Connecticut he was performing with Ginny Arnell as the male half of Jamie and Jane, then as singer/songwriter under the name Billy Brian for "Blaze Records" and under his own name for "Festival Records" in 1961. Pitney broke into the music business as a songwriter in his late teens, getting his first taste of success when Rick Nelson had a hit with "Hello Mary Lou" and "Rubber Ball" for Bobby Vee in 1961. In 1962, he wrote "He's a Rebel" for the Crystals and became friends with producer Phil Spector. He also wrote for Roy Orbison and Tommy Edwards.
In 1964 Pitney's publicist, Andrew Loog Oldham, introduced him to the Rolling Stones, whom he produced. He recorded the Jagger-Richards composition "The Girl Belongs to Yesterday". Pitney assisted in the recording of their 12 X 5 album. With Phil Spector, Pitney sat in during a 1964 Rolling Stone recording session, during which they recorded "Not Fade Away", had a brief fling with a teenage Marianne Faithfull, and recorded songs by Randy Newman and Al Kooper long before those musicians became famous.
Pitney remained a prolific recording artist, putting out many albums a year in America in the mid-Sixties. Tremendously popular in Italy too, he recorded albums of country tunes in Italian. His last chart hit in America was in 1969, but he continued to to hit the U.K. charts until 1974, and continued to tour Britain and Europe, avoiding the oldies revival shows.
In 1970, after spending nearly a decade on the road (eleven months of every year), Gene decided to drastically cut back on his touring commitments. "I had a family at home, two boys starting to grow up, and I was getting a guilt complex about not being there with them. So I decided to make a six-month commitment to touring and spend the rest of the time at home with the family." He decided to quit the long tours of the US and, without meaning to, increasingly found himself in countries other than America due to his love of exotic travel. "There is nothing more exciting to me than to get on that airplane and know I'm going to get off in a totally different country, in a different part of the world." His annual tours of Britain, Europe, and Australia became a way of life. With every tour proving a sellout, the plan was an outstanding success.
1997 was another busy year with shows in LAS VEGAS, ATLANTIC CITY, FOXWOODS RESORT, ST. LOUIS, KANSAS CITY, BOSTON, THE NEW YORK STATE FAIR, and another twenty-city concert tour of AUSTRALIA, finishing at the new MELBOURNE CASINO. 1998 saw Pitney continuing to tour as his composition, "HE'S A REBEL" received a BMI MILLIONAIRE AWARD for having surpassed one million airplays in the US. 1999 saw another sellout tour of AUSTRALIA and ended with a twenty-four-city concert tour of ENGLAND, finishing at the beautiful LONDON PALLADIUM.
I was dreaming of the past
From their earliest steps, Roxy left a massive footprint on British popular culture. They were formed in 1971 by Ferry, Mackay and Brian Eno, the axis completed with Manzanera's official arrival early next year, by which time the music press was buzzing. Their self-titled debut album in the summer of '72-declared by many then and ever since as the best first album ever-cleared the path for a saunter into the UK top five by the ravishingly stylish first single 'Virginia Plain'. Before the year ended, Roxy had completed their opening tours of both the UK and US. For once, fans in the industry and in the real world were unanimous: here was a triumph of style AND substance.
Almost everything that happened chez Roxy during the next decade, and seven more studio albums, has become part of the fabric of rock history, from rule-trashing singles like 'Pyjamarama', Street Life' and 'Love Is The Drug'to Bryan's ever-influential wardrobe and those legendary album covers. Three times they topped the album charts during their active lifetime, with 1973's 'Stranded', 1980's 'Flesh and Blood' and their last studio album 'Avalon', and it wasn't long before the compilation album 'Street Life' raced to No.1 in 1986 and stayed there five weeks. The more recent remastered reappearance of the entire Roxy catalogue, and the rapturous reviews it engendered, confirmed that the legacy had only appreciated with time. Ferry's 1999 solo album 'As Time Goes By' gained significant recognition with a Grammy 2001 nomination.
For all the imitators and admirers, no one has ever successfully cloned the unique and unknowable combination of elements that comprised Roxy Music. Three decades later take your partners: it's time, again, to do the strand.
Bryan Ferry has recently been named by the Sunday Times of London as a 'godfather' of contemporary style in a series on 'icons' of our time. Even so the role of rock'n'roll revolutionary which made Ferry famous in the first place, almost twenty-five years ago, is one he hasn't relinquished yet. You might think so, given the amount of media space he commands in which music is not so much as mentioned. Many of those who haven't heard his latest records may know what he wears, where he eats, who he loves. The Guardian newspaper describes him as "the greatest living Englishman to his acolytes". For Ferry this celebrity status is unbidden and forbidding, and he protects his privacy. What's left exposed are the brief moments entering a restaurant or leaving a club, because that's where the paparazzi gather: they give a picture of a door-to-door existence, perceived as a non-stop social whirl Yet this myth has arisen only because behind it lies the real story of a career that almost singlehandedly revamped the idioms and attitudes of popular music. Bryan Ferry truly is a godfather - of today's rock'n'roll: the figure to whom more than any other the new bands of the 80's and 90's have looked as their prime mover. His vocal style, his song-writing, his visual flair, together they represented a whole new sensibility, one that not only drew on unexplored past traditions but demanded a constant evolution and modernism. This is why Ferry still drives himself forward instead of resting on his laurels. Ignoring the miasma of misrepresentation and gossip that envelops him like a modern London fog, he goes about his daily business - his life's overriding passion - of making unique, stirring music, just as he has for more than two decades now.
You smile at me and angels sing,
Dear old Billy! Britain’s answer to Elvis? Maybe, but a wonderfully unique performer in his own right and a man who, without question, was one of the greatest British pop artists of this or any other generation. I have chosen “When Will You Say I Love You” - a hit a couple of years after “Paradise” - as it is, in my opinion, the best song that he ever recorded. It has an instantly remembered melody and Billy performs it beautifully, backed by a full orchestra. It was a massive hit back in ‘63, when life was good and the world was beginning to get to know the Beatles.
Just runnin’ scared each place we go
On my “Family History” pages, you will see a photograph of Susannah Stephens. She was my maternal grandmother and really the only one of my grand-parents I can remember. I loved her dearly and as a little 5 or 6 year-old always looked forward to the times when she came to stay in our house, crawling into her great big double bed in the morning to share confidences only grandparents and their grand-children were allowed to share! Gran died in 1965, when Alzheimers finally claimed her, but it was the precious few years prior to then that I remember quite vividly and how she patiently listened to my 45’s, despite not really liking most of that “modern music”! She loved this record though - she told me so one day after I had played the Orbison single over and over again on my Dansette. Roy Orbison died in the late 1980’s. His death robbed us of the greatest of talents, but at least we have some great recordings to conjure up visions of those dark glasses, the simple yet electric delivery and above all, the sublime vocal chords of the "Big O" - Roy Orbison. Of all the artists I was fond of back in the 60’s, Roy Orbison stirs up the most emotion in me. I can’t listen to his incredibly beautiful voice without feeling so very sad. I can’t help it, but Roy had such a tragic life in so many respects and then, when he was having massively-deserved renewed success late in the 1980’s, he died - at much too young an age.
We didn’t really appreciate Roy as much as we should have when he was with us. This gentle, softly-spoken Texan was a mighty colossus in modern American popular music. I’m glad that shortly before he died, some great contemporary musicians, including George Harrison, told him just how good he really was. His songs were pop classics and his soaring vocal range almost unsurpassed in modern times. I’m sad because he didn’t live long enough to enjoy his resurgence in the charts.
It’s a privilege to have seen Roy perform live on the several occasions that I did between 1963 and 1989. And the musical link to my mother and grandmother is a wonderful memory to have.
I never knew that I was born
Well I like you for your body, but I love you cause you're wise
I am your prisoner, you're my Lady of the Dawn.
You are the dealer in this strange, uncertain game
Take my cards and deal again
I can feel my life is changing.
Woman, now you've taught me how to learn
Teach me to earn the love you give to me
The love you give to me
Lady of the Dawn, you've opened up my sleeping eyes
I never knew that I was born
Well I like you for your body, but I love you cause you're wise
I am your prisoner, you're my Lady of the Dawn.
I was waiting in the darkness of the night
Only now I see the light, softly shining in the silence
Woman, if you really hold the key
Turn it for me and help me understand
And help me understand
Lady of the Dawn, you've opened up my sleeping eyes
I never knew that I was born
Well I like you for your body, but I love you cause you're wise
I am your prisoner, you're my Lady of the Dawn.
Mike Batt, son of 60's actress Hattie Jacques, is the unsung hero of British contemporary music - one of the major figures in our generation's music history. He may not have notched up many chart successes as a solo singer, but the list of songs that he has penned for numerous other world stars is absolutely staggering! Almost every hit from the pen of this prolific British composer is a classic - beautiful tunes, descriptive often-emotive lyrics are his trademark. "Lady of the Dawn" is a single taken from the 1979 album "Tarot Suite" and is absolutely typical of the man. It's a lovely song, beautifully sung. What is somewhat ironic is that Mike is the voice of the "Wombles"......enough said!
He began his career in popular music at the age of eighteen, as a signed artist and subsequently Head of A&R (Artist signing and Record Production) at Liberty/United Artistes Records, leaving to form his own music publishing company two years later, and simultaneously working as a recording artist. His first hits as a singer/songwriter/producer were by The Wombles, in 1974. After eight hit singles and four Gold albums with The Wombles, he moved on to work with Steeleye Span ("All Around My Hat"), the Kursall Flyers ("Little Did She Know"), Elkie Brookes ("Lilac Wine"), Barbara Dickson ("Caravan Song") and Art Garfunkel ("Bright Eyes") all of which were top five in at least the UK.
He made his concert debut as a conductor at the Barbican with the LSO in 1984, with a programme including the Carmen Suites (Bizet), The Sorcerer's Apprentice (Dukas) and other light classics, and has since conducted the LSO, LPO and RPO in various programmes and/or recordings of well-known repertoire pieces such as The Planets Suite (Holst), Scheherezade (Rimsky Korsakov) and Romeo and Juliet Fantasy Overture (Tchaikovsky). In 1990, he was Music Director of the Melbourne Summer Music Festival, with the State Orchestra of Victoria.
In 1997, Mike produced and conducted the hit album "A Night At The Movies" for David Essex and composed a special celebration piece, "Royal Gold" commissioned by the military for the Queen's 50th Wedding anniversary. This was recently performed for Her Majesty at the Royal Tournament, by the massed bands of the Scots, Welsh, Irish, Colstream and Grenadier Guards, together with 100 pipers. That year, he also composed the score for the two hour American TV documentary, "The Eye Of The Storm", about Richard Nixon, - recorded with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, including the title song co-written with Don Black. He also acted as music supervisor to the film "Richard III" starring Sir Ian McKellern.
He has recently completed the production of the "Watership Down" TV series soundtrack album (with Boyzone singer Stephen Gately, Art Garfunkel, Paul Carrack - and Cerys Matthews from Catatonia, accompanied by the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra).
Top of Page

Chasing bits of wood
Sara Jane threw again
Everything is good
Running wild, running miles
Catch me if you can
Absolutely free awhile
Smokey Blue’s away
Smokey Blue’s away
Sun went down, left the scene
Smokey hung his head
Sara came home again
Sara went to bed
Smokey lay on the floor
By the kitchen door
Saw the moon
Heard the waves
He could wait no more
Soon down on the sand he played
Smokey Blue’s away
Smokey Blue’s away
Every day Sara prayed
He’d run back again
She left a drink by his bed
Even shon his chain
Smokey lived with the sun
Drank the morning dew
It’s understood
You never should
Tie his spirit down
So every day
All I can say, is
Smokey Blue’s away
Smokey Blue’s away
I bought this lovely little song before I got "into" classical music, but when I first heard and appreciated the wonderful Dvorak Symphony No. 9 in E. Minor "From The New World", I just couldn't place that familiar tune - for quite a while. Then, I started singing "Smokey Blue ran away....." Of course, "Smokey Blues Away"!!
Well, thanks to the often maligned "internet", this is what I've found. A New Generation were Iain Sutherland (vocals, guitar) Gavin Sutherland (vocals, bass) Christopher Kemp (keyboards, vocals) & John Wright (drums). The group released 3 singles during 1969-70, before Iain & Gavin formed a duo, appropriately called Sutherland Brothers, which later merged with another group, Quiver, in 1973. As a duo, they had minor success with the superb song "Sailing", later to become famous by Rod Stewart. Their major chart success was the sublime "Arms of Mary" which made no. 5 in the British charts in 1976. Two other hits followed. "Secrets" (1976) and "Easy Come Easy Go" (1979, as just the Sutherland Brothers). After their break up with Quiver, they released another album as a duo. In the following years, Gavin has released two solo albums, as well as appearing on albums with friends such as Clive Gregson (alone and with his band, Any Trouble).
It's far from easy to write reams about the Sutherland Brothers. There's absolutely no doubt that they were a great band, writing some of the best songs of the seventies. Their music was a soundtrack to a generation of rock fans, and to hear them play live was an experience to relish. Their songwriting consisted of clever wordplays, wonderful expressions of emotion and a fusion of the folk idiom with rock music.
However, the group tended to let the music speak for them; they were not self-publicists and apart from an occasional photograph on an album cover, there was little information made available about them. Initially, Iain Sutherland (born 17.11.1948, Ellon), who had been writing songs while in his teens, had formed a group called the Mysteries in the early sixties, before he and Gavin (born 6.10.1951, Peterhead) teamed up to go off to London to seek their fortune. There, their manager decided they would be called A New Generation, much against the band's better judgement, and they were also forced into some unusual stunts to get themselves noticed. Muff Winwood, formerly of Traffic, listened to a demo and immediately gave them a recording contract. The original Sutherland Brothers Band involved Gavin and Ian who made two folk-rock albums for Island Records. Their first album gained a following for the band because of wonderful tracks such as The Pie, which perhaps struck an affinity with many of its listeners because of its subject matter.
By the time their second album was released, the Sutherlands were proving themselves to be a strong pair of songwriters with exceptionally tight vocals. Their voices harmonised beautifully and their songs had a splendid lyrical quality. If anything, their weakness was in getting together a group of musicians to perform live.So, that is the story of what has become of that fledgling band which sang a whimsical little story about a dog named Smokey Blue back in the late '60's - owing much to a much older composer's famous symphony. I am very pleased to acknowledge the talent of the Sutherlands and keep the memory of Smokey Blue alive today.
Top of Page

Lay down the song you strum,
And rest yourself 'neath the strength of strings
No voice can hope to hum.
Struck by the sounds before the sun,
I knew the night had gone.
The morning breeze like a bugle blew
Against the drums of dawn.
Lay down your weary tune, lay down,
Lay down the song you strum,
And rest yourself 'neath the strength of strings
No voice can hope to hum.
The ocean wild like an organ played,
The seaweed's wove its strands.
The crashin' waves like cymbals clashed
Against the rocks and sands.
Lay down your weary tune, lay down,
Lay down the song you strum,
And rest yourself 'neath the strength of strings
No voice can hope to hum.
The last of leaves fell from the trees
And clung to a new love's breast.
The branches bare like a banjo moaned
To the winds that listened best.
Lay down your weary tune, lay down,
Lay down the song you strum,
And rest yourself 'neath the strength of strings
No voice can hope to hum.
The Byrds, in 1965, released a simply marvellous album of Dylan compositions. There are so many great songs on that L.P., including the mega hit “Mr Tambourine Man” , but “Lay Down Your Weary Tune” is my own personal favourite. Poetic in a style so unique to Bob Dylan, I just love the gentle, sweet approach of Messrs McGuinn, Crosby, Hillman, Clarke & Clark.
Top of Page

Of poor but honest parents he was born near Castlemaine.
He was his father's only son, and his mother's pride and joy,
So dearly did his parents love their wild Colonial Boy.
Barely sixteen years of age he first began to roam,
And found Australia's sunny shores and called it his true home.
He robbed the wealthy squatters, their assets to destroy,
A terror to the rich ones was the wild Colonial Boy.
Back in Eighteen sixty-one began his wild career,
With a head that knew no danger, and a heart that held no fear.
He held the Mudgie mail-coach up , and he shot Judge MacEvoy,
A curse to every copper was the wild Colonial Boy.
Later on that very day as Jack he rolled along,
Listening to the kookaburra‘s pleasant laughing song,
He spied three mounted troopers - Kelly, Davis and FitzRoy
With a warrant for the capture of the wild Colonial Boy.
"Surrender now, Jack Doolan, for you see we’re three to one
.Surrender now, in the Queen‘s high name, or your living days are done"
Jack drew two pistols from his belt, and he waved ‘em proud and high,
"I'll fight, but not surrender," cried the wild Colonial Boy.
Jack fired once at Kelly and brought him to the ground,
Then turning round, from Davis gun received his mortal wound.
A bullet pierced his proud young heart from the pistol of FitzRoy,
And that's the way they captured him - the wild Colonial Boy
Yes, that's the way they captured him - the wild Colonial Boy
“Wild Colonial Boy” is a traditional Australian folksong, performed by many folk artists, but recorded here by Dr. Hook and released in Oz in 1983 on an album of the same name. That album was re-titled “Let Me Drink From Your Well” and released in the UK, but did not include this exclusively Australian recording.
A rare and precious addition to my collection - it fully merits its’ inclusion at no. 47. What a talented group they were!
Top of Page

If I must I'll wait forever by the river that took her to the sea
Here by the river we loved, we laughed, we cried
But with time my love, my darling
Left my arms and was gone with the tide
How long I've been lonely
Star of love, shine bright
I need her, oh, lead her
To my arms tonight
Time and the river, how swiftly they go by
But my heart will beat for no other
Till time stands still and the river runs dry
Time and the river, how swiftly they go by
But my heart will beat for no other
Till time stands still and the river runs dry
From 1961, through the decade of the 60's, Gene was the alternative face of pop. While the British groups, led by the Beatles and Stones, took on and beat the world, a clean-cut, shorthaired American lad in a sober, dark blue suit toured the UK year after year and just - well, he just sang! Boy could he sing (and still can!). Dramatic ballads were his forte and his list of hits (and almost hits) is so impressive. This song, a hit for Nat "King" Cole in the 1950's was included in the album "Gene Pitney Sings Just For You", and it showcases the remarkable range of his voice. I was a massive fan of Mr Pitney back in the 60's, and I still enjoy listening to his albums as much today. Gene is one of the greats.
Yearning for a hit of his own, in 1961 Pitney went into a small four-track studio on 7th avenue in New York, and for a cost of thirty dollars, played and overdubbed every instrument and multitracked his vocals. The result was his first hit "(I Wanna) Love My Life Away" (#39, 1961). This attracted the attention of songwriting team of Burt Bacharach and Hal David who co-wrote "Only Love Can Break a Heart," "(The Man Who Shot) Liberty Valance," and "24 Hours from Tulsa" for him. Other than Dionne Warwick, he was the best interpreter of Bacharach-David's early compositions. Another 1961 single, Goffin-King's "Every Breath I Take," was produced by Phil Spector, and is one of the very first examples of his pull-out-the-stops Wall of Sound productions. Pitney didn't really find his metier, however, until late-1961's "Town Without Pity," which became his first Top 20 entry. Pitney's label, "Musicor Records" was primarily involved in country and western music and Pitney began recording material in that vein.
Pitney withstood the initial onslaught of the British Invasion fairly well, scoring Top 10 hits in 1964 with "It Hurts to Be in Love" and "I'm Gonna Be Strong." The same year he began recording albums in foreign languages. In 1965 and 1966, Pitney recorded country albums with George Jones and Melba Montgomery, scoring country hits with "I've Got Five Dollars and It's Saturday Night" and "Louisiana Mama" with Jones and "Baby Ain't That Fine" with Montgomery. By 1966, though, his popularity was fading stateside. Ironically, by this time he was a much bigger star in Britain, making the U.K. Top 10 six times in 1965-66. He could also depend on a faithful international audience throughout Europe, and frequently recorded in Italian and Spanish for overseas markets. In 1966, he became one of the first artists to reach success with Randy Newman compositions, taking "Nobody Needs Your Love" and "Just One Smile" into the British Top 10.
In 1983, when an agent gently twisted his arm, Gene embarked on his first North American Tour in over a dozen years. It became a huge personal triumph. Gene Pitney was back "with a vengeance" even though he'd never been away. In the last few years, many exciting things have happened to Gene in both the studio and performance. In 1993, Gene played the prestigious CARNEGIE HALL in New York City the day THE WORLD TRADE CENTER was bombed. Gene Says, "New Yorkers, being New Yorkers, still gave us a sold-out show. No one stayed away!" The tour of the UK in the same year completely sold out, closing at the beautiful LONDON PALLADIUM. 1994 GENE saw tours in the UK and Australia, the latter closing at the BURSEWOOD CASINO in PERTH. In 1995, Gene worked the crowds at THE TAJ MAHAL in ATLANTIC CITY, NJ, and did a two-part, 46-day tour in the UK in May/June and Oct/Nov. During 1996, he performed at the UNIVERSAL AMPHITHEATER in Los Angeles and then moved onto a twenty-city concert tour of AUSTRALIA, followed by a quick trip to Catania, Italy.
Very sadly, Gene passed away on 5th April 2006, in Cardiff, midway through another sell-out tour of the United Kingdom. He had lived in Connecticut, not far from where he was raised, in a big rambling Dutch Colonial house set in an old apple orchard, with his wife, Lynne, whom he married in 1966. He will be very sadly missed by fans all over the world. A true legend in popular music in the 20th Century.
Top of Page

And my heart was beating fast
I began to lose control
I began to lose control
I didn't mean to hurt you
I'm sorry that I mad you cry
I didn't want to hurt you
I'm just a jealous guy
I was feeling insecure,
You night not love me any more,
I was shivering inside
I was shivering inside
I was trying to catch your eyes
Thought that you were trying to hide
I was swallowing my pain
I was swallowing my pain
Bryan Ferry & Roxy Music were the 70's "Kings of Glamour" - the classy end of the glam-rock movement which included T-Rex, Sweet & Slade at the other end of the spectrum! Bryan was suave, ever-so-slightly decadent (in the nicest possible way!) and a very fascinating individual. As a solo artist, he tried his hand at standards like "Smoke Gets In Your Eyes", and succeeded in crossing over from glam to mainstream. "Jealous Guy", a John Lennon composition, is a beautiful song which suits Bryan's vocal style well, and was his tribute to the Beatles, following his tragic death in 1980.
Top of Page

You speak my name and winter changes into spring,
But there's an emptyness that makes me feel so blue,
When will you say I love you
Oh yeah
I tried so hard to make you care,
This life of mine was meant for you alone to share,
I need you close to me in everything you do
When will you say I love you.
Oh I never thought this could ever happen to me
Three little words from you and you could end my misery.
Oh say those words I'm longing for,
Then I'll know you'll be mine until forever more,
And all this world will be just like a dream come true,
When will you say, I love you, I love you, I love you
It was so very, very sad when his always delicate health finally proved too much and he passed away at much too young an age in the early 1990’s. Billy Fury could sing a rock ballad unlike any other British singer of the period. For several years he was unsurpassed in that genre - and achieved great things in the charts. “Halfway To Paradise” was a classic - one of those heart-stopping songs which will live on for as long as there’s pop music.
Perhaps the Mersey Beat sound diminished Billy’s popularity somewhat in the years that followed, but listening now to his performance, it is so obvious that we lost someone very special when he sadly passed away.
Top of Page

So afraid that he might show
Yeah, runnin’ scared, what would I do
If he came back and wanted you
Just runnin’ scared, feelin’ low
Runnin’ scared, you love him so
Just runnin’ scared, afraid to lose
If he came back which one would you choose
Then all at once he was standing there
So sure of himself, his head in the air
My heart was breaking, which one would it be
You turned around and walked away with me.
Roy Orbison was one of the greatest ever pop singers - maybe THE best. His voice was unforgettable and instantly recognisable. Of course Gran had to listen to the other records I had by the "Big O", but it was always “Running Scared” that she liked the most. Consequently, Roy will always have a special place in my heart, and it is interesting to recall that my mother liked him too, and shortly before she passed away, saw the "Big O" with me, live on stage at the Taunton Gaumont. It was my treat for her, and she sang along to the songs together with the audience in that lovely theatre.
When God was handing out talent, he endowed so much on Roy Orbison, and that voice is still heard regularly on radio as today’s DJs’ continue to play his songs - and so they should!
The remarkable canon of work recorded by Roy Orbison is tied not to any one decade but virtually to the entire lifespan of rock 'n roll. He began his career in the '50's, a friend and contemporary of Elvis Presley; he shared billings in Britain with The Beatles in the '60's; saw his work covered by the likes of Linda Ronstadt in the '70's; watched as his classic In Dreams became a keystone of David Lynch's film Blue Velvet. His posthumous album Mystery Girl - became the biggest selling album of his illustrious career. Roy Orbison remains as one of rock's truly legendary figures: a consistent talent whose influence grows with each passing year. His is a combination of voice and songs that, harnessed together, unleash a rare power which grabs listeners by the heart and holds them forever enthralled.
Orbison's was a special talent no better acknowledged than by Bruce Springsteen when inducting Roy into the Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame in 1987."In 1975, when I went in to the studio to make Born To Run, I wanted to make a record with words like Bob Dylan that sounded like Phil Spector. But, most of all, I wanted to sing like Roy Orbison."
Born Roy Kelton Orbison on April 23rd 1936, he grew up in the heart of the Texas oil fields. He began playing and singing with local bands - his first was with The Wink Westerners.Roy moved on to The Teen Kings who - at Norman Petty's studio in Clovis, New Mexico - recorded a single which was only released locally. Acting on Johnny Cash's advice, Roy sent a copy of the song - Ooby Dooby - to Sun Records' founder Sam Phillips. Phillips liked what he heard, Roy drove to Memphis, and by June 1956 Sun had released its first Roy Orbison hit single.
Roy's time at Sun was not, however, particularly happy. Only his debut single - the recut version of Ooby Dooby - made any kind of chart impression. Other Sun cuts - Sweet and Easy To Love, Chicken Hearted and Rock House - were upbeat and went against the grain. Years later, Orbison recalled his earliest meetings with Sam Phillips who had played him some previously recorded Sun singles.
"He wasn't talking my language. I wasn't sophisticated but I was university educated. And, when he brought out the first record (Arthur Crudup's That's Alright) and the second (Mystery Train) he said, 'now sing like that.' If he'd have said 'sing with the same emotion, the same feeling in everything that you do that this man is doing' then I would have said 'I understand exactly what you mean.' But, I didn't understand what he meant, I didn't know what he was getting at. I couldn't sing like that. I had already been in the business a good while and I was patterned in my own way."
Roy left Sun in 1957 and signed to music publishers Acuff-Rose, convinced his true calling was as a songwriter. Indeed, his song Claudette - written while at Sun - was a Top Thirty hit for the Everly Brothers in 1958. A brief stint with RCA followed but neither of the Chet Atkins produced singles he recorded met with much success. Nonetheless, Roy's star was soon to be in the ascendant following a conversation between his manager Wesley Rose and a former Mercury promotion man, Fred Foster. Foster had heard a record by Warren Smith on Sun - Rock and Roll Ruby. "Fred thought I'd recorded that and so he signed me, thinking I was someone else!" said Roy.
Orbison, nonetheless, found his niche with Foster's newly formed label - Monument, beginning with the 1960 hit Up Town - one of the very first Nashville sessions to incorporate strings as opposed to fiddles. "Foster was smart enough to get out of the way at the right time. He didn't say 'sound like this' or 'play it this way.' He just knew what sounded good to him. Which is the best producer you can have. Whatever sounds beautiful to the producer is fantastic," Roy remembered.
On a songwriting level, Orbison began collaborating with fellow Texan Joe Melson. Beginning with Up Town, the pair had a long and extremely productive writing partnership. Of Roy's first 15 top 40 hits, six were penned by the Orbison/Melson team. They included the breakthrough record, Only The Lonely (Know How I Feel); a pure gold fusion of R&B and country which narrowly missed out on hitting number one in America.
In Britain, however, it didn't just top the charts but remained in the Top 40 for nearly 6 months. Only The Lonely is, of course, the song regarded by many as the starting point of Roy's classic ballad sound. Most of the hits that would follow - such as Running Scared, Crying, Dream Baby, In Dreams and It's Over - contained a vivid combination of hurtful romantic longing combined with near-operatic vocals that established Roy as a truly unique talent. But, as Orbison would stress repeatedly, his hits were by no means a catalogue of sad songs or romantic tragedy. "On balance, I'd say it was at least fifty-fifty. Dream Baby, Mean Woman Blues, Running Scared, even Pretty Woman has a happy ending!".
Eight top ten hits in the four years between 1960 and 1964 paved the way for the biggest selling record of his career, Oh, Pretty Woman. Estimated to have sold over 7 million copies in 1964 alone, it topped the American charts for three weeks, holding at bay the British invasion by bands such as The Animals and Manfred Mann. In Britain, it gave Roy his second straight Number One (It's Over had dominated the UK charts in the spring of '64) and, like its predecessor, remained on the chart for over four months.
While he was the only American vocalist to ride out the British invasion, Orbison also toured Britain regularly, initially sharing a bill with The Beatles (who, at that time, were by and large unknowns in America). "I messed up the first day I got there. I walked out in this little theatre and they had Beatles placards everywhere, life-size ones. And I said, 'what's all this? What is a Beatle anyway?' and John Lennon said, 'I'm one'. He was standing right behind me."
The Beatles, of course, were hugely influenced by Orbison and their slow-tempo version of Please Please Me was very much a tribute to him.
In 1965, Orbison signed to MGM, lured by a lucrative deal that also offered the potential of Presley-level movie stardom. Indeed, he did star in 1968's The Fastest Guitar Alive but MGM were getting in to financial trouble and Orbison's rich vein of hits began to dry up. To compound this, Roy's private life was marred when - in the midst of reconciliation with his ex-wife, Claudette, she was killed in a motor-cycle accident. Two years later in 1968, two of Roy's sons were killed in a housefire.Reduced to touring clubs, Roy returned to his country roots and recorded for Mercury and Asylum in the '70's. His reputation as an influential master, however, began to soar once again via covers of his earlier work. Linda Ronstadt set the ball rolling with Blue Bayou (1977) and three years later, Roy won a Grammy for his duet with Emmylou Harris (That Loving You Feeling Again.) A year later, Don McLean scored with Crying, but real success came Roy's way again when his re-recording of the 1963 hit In Dreams became a pivotal element of David Lynch's 1986 movie, Blue Velvet.
Signing to Virgin, and with all of his old original recordings embroiled in bankruptcy proceedings, Orbison set about re-recording his songs "just so's they would be available" and released a double-set - In Dreams. In 1987, Roy was inducted in to the Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame and within twelve months had become a member of the Traveling Wilburys alongside Tom Petty, Bob Dylan and George Harrison. With his career rejuvenated, Orbison fronted the extraordinary TV special recorded at the Cocoanut Grove in Los Angeles - Roy Orbison and Friends: Black and White Night. Roy's friends, who became his backing band, were indeed stellar - Bruce Springsteen, Tom Waits, kd lang, Elvis Costello, T-Bone Burnett, Jackson Browne, Bonnie Raitt, J.D. Souther, Jennifer Warnes and more.
In December 1988, Roy died, suddenly, from a heart attack. Among the multitude of artists he had influenced paying tribute, U2's Bono summed up many feelings when he said, "Writing for him was like writing for Elvis, who was the only comparable vocal talent. His great gift was to turn the pain and bad luck that he experienced into ground breaking songs."Bono, of course, had written She's A Mystery To Me especially for Roy - released after his death, it gave Orbison his last Top 30 hit in Britain. Paul McCartney simply said,
"He was and always will be one of the greats of rock 'n roll." Posthumously released in 1989, Roy's Mystery Girl album became the biggest selling record of his career. That success was sparked by two more top ten hits, You Got It (written by fellow Wilburys' Petty and Jeff Lynne) and I Drove All Night. In 1992, Virgin released King Of Hearts, a collection of previously unissued songs.
In 1997, Orbison Records released several significant Roy Orbison recordings. Greatest Hits - In Dreams, a special nineteen song collection was re-recorded for superior sound. The historic Cocoanut Grove performance, Black And White Night was made available on CD and VHS. And a 60's television appearance by Roy and band was captured on Combo Concert 1965 Holland. In June, 1999, The Anthology was released, along with a companion home video documenting Roy's body of work over five decades.
Additional releases from Orbison Records, featuring rare or previously unavailable performances by Roy Orbison are planned for the future. Roy Orbison's flame will continue to burn brightly for decades to come.
| Top of Page |

Early in the evenin' just about supper time,
At the turn of the 60’s decade, the Beatles were approaching break-up. It’s difficult to put this accurately into words that will be meaningful to those who were not there at the time, but for some of us, the steam was running out of the incredible British pop scene of the past six or seven years. We wanted something different - something not as serious as the heavy, pretentious rock that was in vogue at that time. There was an opportunity for simple rock with a new slant. Our attentions turned back to the States, as there were some great sounds crossing the Atlantic again.
Though generally bracketed with the post-psychedelic wave of San Franciscan groups, Creedence Clearwater Revival boasted one of the region's longest pedigrees. Formed in El Cerrito, a suburb in San Francisco Bay Area, this accomplished quartet of
began performing together in 1959 while attending Portola junior high-school. Initially known as Blue Velvets, the group started as a trio with Fogerty on guitar, Clifford on drums and Cook on piano. John's older brother Tom was added in November 1959 and the original cast of later Creedence Clearwater Revival was born.
Under the new name Tommy Fogerty & the Blue Velvets, the quartet changed into a vocal band, became a popular attraction in El Cerrito and as such completed three singles for a local independent outlet of Orchestra. The second 45RPM, "Have You Ever Been Lonely"/"Bonita", was a local hit.
In 1963, John Fogerty became a packing and shipping clerk at Berkeley located Fantasy Records. Next year the group auditioned for Fantasy as an instrumental band. Fantasy's Weiss brothers signed them but encouraged their UK style beat music rather than their instrumentals. Weiss printed the name for their debut single as the Golliwogs to make them sound British. The band disliked but accepted the name as a precondition to their recording deal. The foursome was never happy with the appellation, nor the blond wigs they were sometimes required to wear.
In 1966 John and Doug were drafted into the army. After both members back from service in 1967, they cut "Porterville" that made some inroads with the audience, but didn't make charts, althought they had developed a defined, original sound. During the year, Fantasy was bought by one of its employees, Saul Zaentz. Looking over his company's catalogue, he was impressed by the Golliwog's recordings. This resulted in discussions that led the group turning fully professional in December 1967 and in doing so became known as Creedence Clearwater Revival.
The late 60's and early 70's saw the rise of complex progressive rock, proto heavy metal and gum pop. Creedence Clearwater Revival was out of these mainstreams. They cut a series of classic three-minute songs featuring singer-songwriter John Fogerty's growling vocals. Their music was economical, straightforward rock and roll. They were the most successful and exhilarating band in the United States during that era. After adapting the new name Creedence Clearwater Revival, the Fogerty brothers, Cook, and Clifford spent weeks rehearsing their new, tougher sound. In June 1968 Fantasy launched their first album "Creedence Clearwater Revival", and a single, "Suzy Q (Parts 1 & 2)", based on a decade old rock standard by Dale Hawkins.
Creedence's second single, Screamin' Jay Hawkins' "I Put A Spell On You", made the charts briefly, and disappeared. Then came the beginning of the year 1969 and their second album, "Bayou Country," with a single "Proud Mary"/"Born On The Bayou". The album introduced the mixture of Southern US creole styles, rhythm & blues and rockabilly with tight and economical touch defining the music of Creedence Clearwater Revival during their late 60's-early 70's hey-day. The single about a Mississippi river boat was their international breakthrough, making number 2 in the US and 8 in the UK. With his writing of "Proud Mary", John Fogerty became one of rock's foremost composers and lyricists.
The achievement of "Proud Mary" was followed by three 1969 gold-record hits: "Bad Moon Rising"/"Lodi", "Green River"/"Commotion" and "Down On The Corner"/"Fortunate Son". In fall, they released their third album "Green River" and right after that the fourth one, "Willy & The Poorboys". The latter album marked an expansion of John Fogerty's themes from material with a Missisippi Delta flavor to social commentary on such topics as nuclear holocaust ("Effigy"), and political and military pressures ("Fortunate Son"). In 1969 Rolling Stone named Creedence the Best American Band and Billboard reported they were the Top Singles Artists of 1969. The band could easily fill the largest available auditoriums for concert after concert. In August, they performed on the 2nd highest bill at the Woodstock rock festival.
CCR started 1970 with another gold single, "Travelin' Band"/"Who'll Stop The Rain". In April, the next gold 45 "Up Around The Bend" came out. The spring also saw their first European tour.
After returning home, their fifth album "Cosmo's Factory" moved to stores in July 1970. The LP was an immediate success, both in artistic and commercial terms. It went to the #1 position in several countries, including USA, UK and Finland. Creedence closed out 1970 with the release of another best-selling album, albeit a critical failure, "Pendulum". By the beginning of 1971, Creedence was beginning to run out of new worlds to conquer and a certain restlessness set in among the members. Even as the single "Have You Ever Seen The Rain"/"Hey Tonight" moved toward becoming the group's eighth gold-record, rumours said that changes were impending.
After the break-up, John Fogerty ended up to legal and contractual disputes with his label, Fantasy Records. In mid-70's he managed to work out a deal allowing him a release from his contract with the label. Perhaps due to legal disputes, John Fogerty has released only five studio albums during his solo career. Tom Fogerty continued his solo career without major commercial success. He died of AIDS on September 6th, 1990.
There's a calm surrender
When staying with my dear friends in Normandy back in the mid-90’s, I was ”requested” to sit down with Aude, the then 5-year-old daughter, to watch “Le Roi Lion” - in full, and in French - time after time. When the tape finished, it was immediately rewound to the beginning and off we’d go again! It was several years before I actually watched it in English!! I bought “Border Song” when it was first released and have always admired his consummate professionalism if not some of the less easily remembered songs by this true Brit. Isn’t this just the most lovely ballad? Elton has captured the essence of a true love song and has weaved the magic of “Le Roi Lion” into the lyrics too.
Over by the courthouse they're starting to unwind.
Four kids on the corner trying to bring you up.
Willy picks a tune out and he blows it on the harp.
Down On The Corner, out in the street,
Willy and the Poorboys are playin';
Bring a nickel; tap your feet.
Rooster hits the washboard and people just got to smile,
Blinky, thumps the gut bass and solos for a while.
Poorboy twangs the rhythm out on his kalamazoo.
Willy goes into a dance and doubles on kazoo.
Down On The Corner, out in the street,
Willy and the Poorboys are playin';
Bring a nickel; tap your feet.
Down On The Corner, out in the street,
Willy and the Poorboys are playin';
Bring a nickel; tap your feet.
You don't need a penny just to hang around,
But if you've got a nickel, won't you lay your money down?
Over on the corner there's a happy noise.
People come from all around to watch the magic boy.
Down On The Corner, out in the street,
Willy and the Poorboys are playin';
Bring a nickel; tap your feet.
Any act with a name like “Creedence Clearwater Revival” had to attract attention. It was a great bonus when this group actually sounded brilliantly different from the British sound of the past few years. I fell totally for this raw, rocking, American sound, and from “Proud Mary” to “Someday Never Comes” was a complete fan. Apparently, the foursome believed that their music would always sound different from whatever else was in fashion at the time, whatever the time might be! I could have chosen any one of 10 tracks from CCR - listen to “Chronicle” - their “Best of” album of 20 tracks, and see what I mean. I have chosen “Down On The Corner” because it is typical of them - simple, joyful rock’n’roll. Thanks CCR for giving us such good-time music. They were the only group to beat the Beatles in a top British poll of groups while the Liverpool lads were still together - yes - THEY BEAT THE BEATLES (and I voted for ’em too!). Now read on for I have reproduced the full history of John, Tom, Stu & Doug from their website - it makes very interesting reading!
John Fogerty (b. 28 May 1945, Berkeley, California, USA; vocals, lead guitar),
Tom Fogerty (b. 9 November 1941, Berkeley, California, USA, d. 6 September 1990; rhythm guitar, vocals),
Stu Cook (b. 25 April 1945, Oakland, California, USA and
Doug Clifford (b. 24 April 1945, Palo Alto, California, USA; drums)The group developed its unique sounds by listening to records of such Delta bluesmen as Howlin' Wolf and Muddy Waters, plus such early rock artists as Elvis Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins, and Chuck Berry. Young John Fogerty was also inspired by Duane Eddy, Ray Charles, and Booker T & the MGs. By his mid-teens, John Fogerty could play guitar, dobro, piano, organ, tenor saxophone, harmonica, drums, and several other instruements. He also had a good voice from the start of the group and contributed original compositions throughout the band's career. Similarly, Tom taught himself to play almost as many instruments as his brother, but his main instrument remained rhythm guitar.
Tom Fogerty dominated early releases, but in late 1965 and early 1966 his younger brother decided to took over the vocals. By 1967, John Fogerty was wresting control of the group. The series of the singles released by Golliwogs included Beatles-influenced "Don't Tell Me No Lies", "Where You Been", "You Can't Be True", "Brown Eyed Girl" (biggest Golliwogs seller, selling 10,000 copies around Northern California), "Fight Fire" and "Walking On The Water". All were released between November 1964 and November 1967. The one and only album of the Golliwogs, a compilation of their A and B sides, was released a decade later in 1975. Musically, the Golliwogs recordings were heavily influenced by several British Invasion bands, particularly the Rolling Stones, the Beatles and the Kinks.
Despite criticism from various sources, most notably from Rolling Stone magazine, the album earned a gold record status by the end of the year. The pseudo psychedelic rock and roll LP has well stood the test of time, and today it's regarded as one of the most promising debut LPs in the history of rock. The single peaked on the 11th position in the US. The recordings helped bring engagements in more prestigious rock venues, for instance in the summer of 1968 at Bill Graham's Fillmore West. Extended versions of their early songs peppered their gigs on these early days.
Besides doing lead vocals and lead guitar, John Fogerty wrote all of their own songs and arranged and produced each cut before the "Mardi Gras" album. He also managed the band. Rest of the group demanded more voice in artistic and financial issues. With several gold records on their credit and a successful musical formula in his hands, Fogerty didn't believe the new division of labour would be advantageous for the band and declined. In February 1971, Tom Fogerty announced his departure from the band to work as a solo artist. The remaining group continued to work as a trio. The first single of reorganized CCR, "Sweet Hitchhiker" came out in July. The band's major tour of the U.S., Europe, Australia and Japan began in July and met with a reasonably good reception. On their seventh and last studio album, "Mardi Gras", Stu Cook and Doug Clifford wrote two thirds of the album's songs. In October 1972, Creedence Clearwater Revival was officially disbanded.
The rhythm section of the group, Stu Cook and Doug Clifford, followed pursuits independently and together in Don Harrison Band, Southern Pacific, and Sir Douglas Quintet. In 1995, they comprised a band called Creedence Clearwater Revisited. With three additional musicians, they tour the world and perform the songs of Creedence Clearwater Revival. The post-disband performances of Creedence Clearwater Revival have been extremely rare. They all gathered together in the recording sessions of the "Zephyr National" album of Tom Fogerty in 1974. They also did two on-off performances together in Tom Fogerty's wedding in 1979 and their high school party in 1983. A decade later, Creedence Clearwater Revival was nominated in the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame. However, John Fogerty didn't play with his former bandmates in the festivities. In this light, the reunion of the band in the near future seems unlikely.
Top of Page

To the rush of day
When the heat of a rolling world
Can be turned away
An enchanted moment
And it sees me through
It's enough for this restless warrior
Just to be with you
And can you feel the love tonight?
It is where we are
It's enough for this wide-eyed wanderer
That we got this far
And can you feel the love tonight
How it's laid to rest?
It's enough to make kings and vagabonds
Believe the very best
There's a time for ev'ryone
If they only learn
That the twisting kaleidoscope
Moves us all in turn
There's a rhyme and reason
To the wild outdoors
When the heart of this star-crossed voyager
Beats in time with yours
And can you feel the love tonight?
It is where we are
It's enough for this wide-eyed wanderer
That we got this far
And can you feel the love tonight
How it's laid to rest?
It's enough to make kings and vagabonds
Believe the very best
It's enough to make kings and vagabonds
Believe the very best
Anyway, this lovely animated film got into my soul and I still love the whole thing (now-a-days, it’s “A Bug’s Life” that gets the repeat treatment, by the way!) Of course, it’s this beautiful vocal performance by Elton John which somehow catches the whole mood of the film.
A tremendous recording by a national treasure.
Top of Page
40 to 31
30 to 21
20 to 11
10 to 1
![]()
Top of Page