Lulu
Lulu,
the charismatic Scottish singer, was born Marie McDonald
McLaughlin Laurie on 3 November, 1948 in Glasgow, Scotland.
In 1964, at the tender age of fifteen - but with the voice of a
middle-aged woman with a heavy smoking habit - Lulu and her
backing band The Luvvers reached No. 7 in the UK charts with her
version of The Isley Brothers' Shout
.
Originally named The Gleneagles, Lulu joined The Luvvers a year
before their chart breakthrough and they played their brand of
rowdy R&B-influenced music regularly in Glasgow's clubs.
Despite this promising debut, subsequent sales were
disappointing. Although their third release, Here Comes The
Night, preceded the hit version by Them
by several months.
Playing with Lulu in The Luvvers were Ross Nelson
(Guitar), Jim Dewer (Guitar), Alex Bell
(Guitar/keyboards), Jimmy Smith (Saxophone), Tony
Tierney (Bass) and David Miller (Drums). The group
folded in March 1966, leaving Lulu to a career as a solo pop
singer.
A cover of Neil Diamond's The
Boat That I Row saw an upsurge in her career during 1967,
which was punctuated by an acting part in the movie To
Sir With Love. The theme tune from the film gave her
a million-selling US Number 1, and in the UK it reached Number
six, despite being relegated to b-side of the inferior Let's
Pretend.

Further UK hits followed, notably Me, The Peaceful
Heart, Boy and I'm A Tiger. Having established
herself as an entertainer of wide appeal, Lulu was granted her own
television series and later represented Britain in the Eurovision
Song Contest. The painfully trite Boom-Bang-A-Bang
tied for first place and provided her highest UK chart placing at
number two.
She
married Maurice Gibb (from The Bee Gees)
in 1969 but the marriage was over by the end of 1973. Her brief
marriage was followed by another switch of labels and musical
styles when she worked with famed producer Jerry
Wexler on two albums.
A lean period of flop singles ended when David
Bowie intervened to produce and arrange her hit version of The
Man Who Sold The World.
During the 70s, she concentrated increasingly on stage work and
developed her career as an all-round entertainer, a spin-off of
which was becoming the long-standing model/endorser for the
Freeman's mail-order catalogue.
In 1974, she sang the title song for the James Bond film The
Man with the Golden Gun. Appearances in Guys And
Dolls, Song And Dance and the television program The
Secret Diary Of Adrian Mole distracted her from the
studio but a disco re-recording of Shout,
in 1986, repeated the Top 10 success of 22 years before.
In 1993, Lulu released Independence, an album of "modern
disco-pop with a flavour of classic soul and R&B".
Co-produced by Bobby Womack and London Beat, the title track
registered strongly in the UK and US charts, and was followed by
another single, I'm Back For More, on which Lulu duetted
with Womack.
She was, by then, creating some of her own material, and one of
her songs, I Don't Wanna Fight Any More, written with her
brother, Billy Laurie, was recorded by Tina
Turner.
Later in the year Lulu reached UK Number 1 as guest vocalist on
Take That's cover version of Dan
Hartman's Relight My Fire. A series of minor hits
followed over the rest of the decade as Lulu continued to work
hard to cement her reputation as a 60s survivor and keep in the
news.
She was awarded the OBE in June 2000 for her contribution to
the entertainment industry.

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