Georgie Fame
@ the Royal Albert Hall
29 October 2014
Click an image to enlarge.
Biography
Born Clive Powell on June 26, 1943 in the English industrial town
of Leigh, Lancashire, Georgie Fame’s interest in music initially
grew out of his family entertaining in the home and musical evenings
in the church hall across the street, where his father also played
in an amateur dance band. Although young Clive Powell began piano
lessons at age seven, he didn’t stick too long with the formal
training. But when rock and roll started to be broadcast on the
radio during the mid-fifties, a then-teenage Powell began to take
the piano more seriously. Fats Domino, Jerry Lee Lewis and Little
Richard were among his idols and that was the basis of his earliest
“professional” style. Upon leaving school, shortly after
his 15th birthday, he followed the family tradition and took a job
as an apprentice cotton weaver in one of the many local mills, but
his leisure time was spent playing piano in various pubs and with
a local group, ‘The Dominoes.’
In July 1959, at a summer holiday camp, Powell was spotted by
Rory Blackwell, the resident rock and roll bandleader. Blackwell
offered the young singer/pianist a full time job and the teenager
happily left his job at the weaving mill. Rory and the Blackjacks
departed for London, their hometown, when the summer season ended
prematurely and Powell went with them. The promise of lucrative
work in the music business didn’t materialise, however, and
the band broke up. The determined young man from Leigh opted to
stay on in London, but for a time it proved rough going. He tried
unsuccessfully to make his way back home, and eventually he had
the good fortune of finding ‘lodging’ at The Essex Arms
pub in London’s Dockland, where the kindly landlord provided
him a room where he could sleep.
In October of that year, the Marty Wilde Show was performing at
the Lewisham Gaumont and Rory Blackwell arranged for Powell to audition
“live” for impresario Larry Parnes. After walking on
stage, without any rehearsal, he sang Jerry Lee Lewis’ “High
School Confidential” and was promptly hired as a backing pianist
for the Parnes ‘stable’ of singers. As with all the
other young talent Parnes had taken on (such as Billy Fury and Johnny
Gentle), he renamed Clive Powell “Georgie Fame,” and
the name has stuck to this day. By the age of 16, Fame had toured
Britain extensively, playing alongside Marty Wilde, Billy Fury,
Eddie Cochran, Gene Vincent, Tony Sheridan, Freddie Canon, Jerry
Keller, Dickie Pride, Joe Brown and many more. During this time,
Billy Fury selected four musicians, including Fame, for his personal
backing group and the “Blue Flames” were born. At the
end of 1961, after a disagreement, the band and Fury parted company.
Another gloomy out-of-work period finally ended in March 1962,
when Georgie Fame and the Blue Flames took up what was to be a three-year
residency as the house band at the Flamingo Club in London’s
Soho district. According to Fame, they played “rhythm
and blues all-nighters to black American GIs, West Indians, pimps,
prostitutes and gangsters.” The band’s reputation
as “the epitome of cool” spread rapidly, and in 1963
their first album, “Rhythm and Blues at the Flamingo,”
was recorded live at the club. A string of hit records in the following
years included the No. 1 best sellers, “Yeh Yeh” (the
first recording that knocked The Beatles off the number one spot
in the charts), “Getaway” and 1967’s “The
Ballad of Bonnie and Clyde.” Due to his great popularity,
Georgie Fame and the Blue Flames were the only UK act invited to
perform with the first Motown Review when it hit London in the mid-1960s.
During this time, Fame also pursued his interest in jazz, recording
the milestone album, “Sound Venture,” with the Harry
South Big Band. This led directly to successful tours of the UK
and Europe in 1967 and 1968, which found Fame singing with the Count
Basie Orchestra.
From 1970 to 1973, Georgie Fame worked almost exclusively in a
partnership with fellow musician Alan Price (former keyboard player
for The Animals). The duo were featured in their own television
series ‘The Price of Fame,’ guested on countless others,
and produced the hit single “Rosetta.” Their partnership
came to a close several years later, but the television exposure
had made Georgie Fame a household name in Britain.
In 1974, Fame reformed the Blue Flames and they continue working
with him (in one form or another) to this day. At that time, Georgie
Fame also began to regularly step away from the keyboards to sing
with Europe’s finest orchestras and big bands, a musical tradition
he still currently pursues. During the seventies, he also wrote
‘jingles’ for several UK radio and TV commercials and
composed the music for the feature films Entertaining Mr. Sloane
and The Garnett Saga.
In 1981, Fame co-produced and performed with jazz vocalist, Annie
Ross, on the album “In Hoagland,” which featured the
music of the legendary Hoagy Carmichael. After Fame met with Hoagy
at his home in Palm Springs, California, a film based on the album
was made by Scottish television. It went on to win a gold award
at The New York Television Festival. A similar tribute to Benny
Goodman, “In Goodmanland,” recorded in Sweden with vocalist
Sylvia Vrethammar, followed in 1983. In 1988, during one of his
regular visits to Australia, Fame produced the album, “No
Worries,” with the Aussie Blue Flames. And in 1989, the album,
“A Portrait of Chet,” dedicated to jazz trumpeter Chet
Baker, was recorded in Holland.
Another project, completed in the eighties, was a musical written
with fellow composer, Steve Gray. This outstanding piece of music
remains unperformed in public with the exception of a prototype
version that was broadcast on Dutch radio with the Metropole Orchestra,
featuring Madeline Bell.
It was also in 1989 that Georgie Fame joined forces with Van Morrison,
after having been invited to play Hammond organ on Van’s “Avalon
Sunset” album the previous year. He continued to record and
tour with Morrison throughout the nineties. During that time, he
and Van co-produced and performed on the Verve albums, “How
Long Has This Been Going On,” released in 1995 and “Tell
Me Something:” “The Songs of Mose Allison,” released
in 1996.
In 1990, Georgie Fame signed with producer Ben Sidran’s
Go Jazz Records and his first album, “Cool Cat Blues,”
was released on that label in 1991. Recorded in New York City, it
featured such musical luminaries as Van Morrison, Jon Hendricks,
Boz Scaggs, Will Lee, Robben Ford, Richard Tee and Bob Malach. The
follow-up album, “The Blues and Me,” completed in 1991
and released in 1992, was recorded in similar musical company. It
also featured special guests Dr. John, Phil Woods, Stanley Turrentine
and Grady Tate. In 1992, the album, “Endangered Species,”
was recorded with the Danish Radio Big Band in Copenhagen and in
1993, the album, “City Life,” featuring Fame, Madeline
Bell and the BBC Big Band was released.
A unique album by Three Line Whip (featuring Fame’s sons,
Tristan and James), “Three Line Whip/Will Carlin,” was
released in the UK in May 1994, with close family friends and musical
associates of many years standing joining the trio in the studio.
They included Guy Barker, trumpet; Peter King, alto sax; Alan Skidmore,
tenor sax; Steve Gregory, tenor sax/flute; Anthony Kerr, vibraphone;
Brian Odgers, bass guitar and Steve Gray, digital piano. Another
Three Line Whip album, “Name Droppin',” was released
in 1997, after being recorded live in true Blue Flames style at
Ronnie Scott’s Jazz Club in London during one of their annual
residencies. A second album, “Walking Wounded,” from
the same sessions, was released the following year.
Also in 1997, bassist Bill Wyman began forming his new band The
Rhythm Kings and Georgie Fame became a founding member. Since that
time, there have been five CDs and several tours, and The Rhythm
Kings ‘reform’ periodically to tour and record to the
present day. During 1999, Fame presented several radio programs
on BBC Radio, including his own six-week series featuring The Blue
Flames plus special guests, including Madeline Bell, Bill Wyman,
Zoot Money, Peter King, Steve Gray and Claire Martin. In the year
2000, Fame’s critically-acclaimed CD, “Poet in New York,”
was voted Best Jazz Vocal Album by the Academie du Jazz in France.
In 2001, the latest Three Line Whip CD, “Relationships,”
was released, which included some of Georgie Fame’s finest
songwriting to date. In the same year, a compilation CD, “Funny
How Time Slips Away:” The Pye Anthology, was released.
Throughout his 40-year career, Georgie Fame has recorded over
20 albums and 14 hit singles. Over the years, he has inspired many
to take singing lessons from professionals such as takelessons.
Fame is equally at home in the company of jazz groups and big bands,
orchestras, rock groups and his own band, The Blue Flames. As a
sideman, he has recorded with many artists, including Gene Vincent,
Prince Buster, Muddy Waters, Eric Clapton, Joan Armatrading, Andy
Fairweather-Low, Bill Wyman and Van Morrison. Ever on the road,
Georgie Fame continues to perform his unique blend of jazz/rhythm
and blues for live audiences at clubs and music festivals throughout
Europe.
Amongst his musical influences and heroes, he names Fats Domino,
Ray Charles, Mose Allison, Duke Ellington, Count Basie, Thelonius
Monk, Betty Carter, Peggy Lee, Jimmy Smith, Booker T, Chet Baker,
Johnny Griffin, Jon Hendricks, Eddie Jefferson, King Pleasure, Lambert,
Hendricks and Ross, Sonny Rollins, Richard “Groove”
Holmes and many, many more.
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