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Graham Keith Gouldman (born on 10 May, 1946, in Broughton, Salford, Lancashire, in England) is an English songwriter and musician who was a long-time member of British band 10cc.
Career'60s pop career: 1963-1968Gouldman played in a number of Manchester bands from 1963, including The High Spots, The Crevattes, The Planets and Whirlwind, which became a house band at his local Jewish Lads' Brigade. The Whirlwinds – comprising Gouldman (vocals, guitar), Bernard Basso (bass), Stephen Jacobsen (guitar, bongos), Malcom Wagner, Maurice Spering and Phil Cohen – secured a recording contract with HMV, releasing a cover of the Buddy Holly song "Look At Me", backed with "Baby Not Like You", written by Lol Creme, in June 1964.
The band also began a regular warm-up spot for BBC TV’s Top of the Pops, transmitted from Manchester.[2] In 1966-67 Gouldman recorded singles with two other bands, High Society and The Manchester Mob, both of which featured singer Peter Cowap.[3] From 1965 Gouldman wrote a string of million-selling hit songs: as well as "For Your Love" he penned "Heart Full of Soul" and "Evil-Hearted You" for The Yardbirds, "Bus Stop" and "Look Through Any Window” for The Hollies', "No Milk Today" and "Listen People" for Herman's Hermits, "Pamela, Pamela" for Wayne Fontana and the Mindbenders, "Behind the Door" for Cher and "Tallyman" for Jeff Beck.
Writer for hire: 1969-1972Gouldman’s reputation as a hit songwriter attracted the attention of bubblegum pop producers Jerry Kasenetz and Jeff Katz of Super K Productions, who invited him to New York to write formula bubblegum songs.Image:Ohio express.gif "Sausalito" single cover, 1969 In December 1969 Gouldman convinced Kasenetz and Katz that the series of throwaway two-minute songs he was writing could all be performed and produced by him and three friends, Godley, Creme and former Mindbender Eric Stewart, at a fraction of the price of hiring outside session musicians. He proposed the quartet work at Strawberry Studios, a Stockport recording studio in which he and Stewart were financial partners. Kasenetz and Katz booked the studio for three months. Kevin Godley later recalled:[5]
When the three-month production deal with Kasenetz-Katz ended, Gouldman returned to New York to work as a staff songwriter for Super K Productions while the remaining three continued to dabble in the studio. In late 1970 Gouldman returned to the UK to join Stewart, Godley and Creme – who had in the interim scored an international hit single with "Neanderthal Man" under the name of Hotlegs – on an abbreviated British tour supporting The Moody Blues. 10cc: 1972-1983Image:Tencca.jpg 10cc: From left, Graham Gouldman, Kevin Godley, Eric Stewart, Lol Creme. Over the course of the next 23 years, 10cc scored three UK No.1 singles and five Top 10 albums, with Gouldman co-writing some of their biggest hits, including "The Wall Street Shuffle" (1974), "I'm Not In Love" (1975), "I’m Mandy, Fly Me" and "Art For Art’s Sake" (1976), "The Things We Do For Love" (1977) and "Dreadlock Holiday" (1978). Image:Gouldman sunburn.jpg "Sunburn" single cover, 1979 In 1979 Gouldman scored a minor hit with his single "Sunburn", written for the Farrah Fawcett/Charles Grodin film of the same name. Two years later he produced the Pleasant Dreams album for the Ramones – a record dismissed by the band’s guitarist, Johnny Ramone, as "too slick".[6] For more information, see the main entry at 10cc Wax tracks: 1984-1990From 1984 to 1990 Gouldman teamed with American singer Andrew Gold, with whom he had co-written material in 1981, to form Wax. They produced four albums. Gold explained how the partnership began:[7]
10cc again: 1992-1995After a 12-year break Gouldman and Stewart resurrected 10cc for 1992’s ...Meanwhile album, which featured performances by Godley, Creme and Gold. Three years later came the final album by the band, Mirror Mirror. By then the decades-long partnership between Gouldman and Stewart was apparently over: the pair each wrote and recorded six songs separately, in different countries, playing together on just one song – an acoustic reworking of "I’m Not In Love". The final album featured a song, "Ready to Go Home", written by Gouldman in memory of his father, poet and playwright Hyme Gouldman, who had died in 1991. In an interview[8] with the Jewish Telegraph Gouldman spoke of his father’s influence on his life and career:
Gouldman included a new version of the song on his 2000 solo album, And Another Thing.... On the liner notes of his solo album, he noted: "It reflects my feelings at the time. I suppose I was trying to put a positive slant on his passing, remembering all the things we had done together and his artistic legacy to me. The last verse of the song best reflects my feelings on this. This song has been recorded by many artists and remains one of my favourites. Very emotional." Graham Gouldman and Friends: 2004-2006Image:Gouldman friends.jpg Graham Gouldman and Friends. Left to right, Paul Burgess, Mick Wilson, Mike Stevens, Rick Fenn, Graham Gouldman. In January 2004 he reconvened with Kevin Godley to write more songs. Godley explained:
In Gouldman’s words:
In July 2006, Godley and Gouldman's website offered four downloadable tracks, "The Same Road", "Johnny Hurts", "Beautifulloser.com" and "Hooligan Crane". The songs are the initial "offering" of a group of songs they have been working on over the past two years. DiscographyAlbums
Singles
References
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