Shakin' Stevens
Shakin' Stevens was born Michael Barratt, in South Glamorgan, Wales in
1948 (the youngest of 12 children). In the late 60's, he teamed up
with a Welsh rock revival group, The Backbeats, who immediately
changed their name to Shakin' Stevens And The Sunsets.
During the early 70's, the band, with Stevens as lead singer,
recorded unsuccessful albums for Parlophone Records, CBS Records and
Dureco Records in Holland, where The Sunsets had a large following. In
1976, they recorded a cover version of the Hank Mizell hit Jungle
Rock before disbanding.
Stevens now began a solo career, and his debut single was Never,
in March 1977. He appeared on stage in Jack Good's West End musical Elvis,
which won a number of awards. He also appeared on Good's stage revival
of his pioneering television series Oh Boy!, and had further
exposure on television with the same revival, which was later known as
Let's Rock.
His recording career still did not take off, and following the
disappointing Shakin' Stevens for Track Records he signed a more
lucrative contract with Epic Records under the guidance of his new
manager Freya Miller.
Three singles followed; Roy Head's Treat Her Right, Jody
Reynolds' death song Endless Sleep, in the style of 50's UK
rocker Marty Wilde, and Spooky, produced by ex-Springfields
member Mike Hurst, but there was still no chart action.
A change of producer to Stuart Colman in 1980 brought Stevens'
first Top 20 hit, Marie Marie (first recorded by The
Blasters) and the following year Colman's infectious rockabilly
arrangement of the 1954 Rosemary Clooney number one This Ole
House topped the UK chart and became a huge international
success.
Over the next seven years, Stevens had 32 Top 40 hits in the UK,
and similar popularity followed in Europe and beyond (he was the first
artist to go double platinum in Sweden), although he made almost no
impact in the USA. Among his hits were three further chart-toppers - a
revival, of Jim Lowe's 1956 song Green Door (1981), Stevens'
own composition Oh Julie (1982), and Merry Christmas
Everyone (1985).
With an audience equally divided between young children and the
middle-aged, his other recordings included brief excursions into soul
(The Supremes' Come See About Me in 1987) and MOR ballads
(the Bing Crosby/Grace Kelly film theme True Love in 1988).
He duetted with fellow Welsh artist Bonnie Tyler on A Rockin'
Good Way (To Mess Around And Fall In Love) in 1984 - a track
first recorded in 1960 by Dinah Washington and Brook Benton.
At the dawn of the 90's, even though he was hugely popular in
Europe, there were signs that Stevens' hold over his UK audiences was
faltering. Although the Pete Hammond-produced I Might reached
the UK Top 20, his subsequent records in 1990/91 made little impact.
A promotion campaign for the compilation The Epic Years
failed to dent the UK Top 50. 1993 started badly for Stevens, as
litigation with his former band The Sunsets was resolved, it was
alleged that Dave Edmunds and Shaky had to pay out £500,000 in back
royalties.
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