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Topic History of: Darren Burn/Ricky Wilde/Man Alive thread started on Your Views but continued here... Max. showing the last 5 posts - (Last post first)
JK2006 |
I shall reply on a new thread J&B - this thread is very old (over the years it's had 43,000 views!). |
Jaded and Bored |
JK you said you spent very little on promotion at UK which sounds pretty cool
but if you were running a label today, would you hire a plugger and PR person
or will you keep it all inhouse? |
A1 |
We can write altogether to RPM Records to ask them release Darren Burn songs on CD. |
DR2 |
I wonder if anyone recognises the names listed below by John Pitman as they are shown in the Man Alive film from thirty-six years ago and knows what became of any or all of them. I know Eric Hall is still around and presenting on BBC Radio Essex. But what about the others?
“EMI’s big guns are ready to fire master Burn at the public. It’s an impressive line-up.
Marketing Co-ordinator UK, PAUL WATTS.
Marketing Executive, BOB MERCER.
Record Promoter ERIC HALL.
Promotion Manager RONNIE FOWLER.
Marketing Co-ordinator, US and father, COLIN BURN.
Publicity Manager MICHAEL PHILLIPS.
Press Officer DAVID SANDERSON.
Publicity Executive MIKE HARVEY
and Label Managers JOHN POPE and DAVID CROKER.
And there are more where they came from, all concentrating their efforts on one little boy.”
And not forgetting the NME’s resident and very cynical music critic ROY CARR, who obviously didn’t like the weenyboppers:
“The Jackson Five came along, who are excellent and are fine artists and performers and they showed that it could be done and then after that, it seemed that every little tyke walking along the street who had a pretty face was open game to be made into a contrived pop star. I mean the record companies have just gone into the toy business. But the records these kids are churning out are absolutely dreadful. They’re just jumping on the tail end of a bandwagon…an American bandwagon. I mean if it became the fashion to walk around in Wellington boots, with miners helmets on their heads and singing Bantu war chants, there’d be thousands of them going out. Someone comes along with something original and whoop!…they all come in, riding on the gravy train.
There’s an old saying in this business. If you throw enough crap against the wall, some of it’s bound to stick and I think that’s what they’re attempting to do. Out of all these teenybop records that are coming out at the moment, one of them may stick! But they’re not selling music. It’s just a commodity, like beans. I mean you take an eleven years old kid. You shove him in a studio. That kid doesn’t know what the hell’s happening to him. So he makes a record. It gets played on the radio. It gets bags of publicity. It doesn’t sell. The contract is dropped. That kid has got to live with that for the rest of his life. So he’s either a has-been before he’s been anything or, if he makes a record and it doesn’t do anything after that, he’s a has-been!”
Well, you can't get much more cynical than that! |
DR2 |
That is certainly an interesting coincidence, Vince W. I'm pleased that Ricky successfully made the difficult (for some) transition from child star to adult. But even in the Man Alive film, he came across as a tough, streetwise little cookie who could handle success or failure with equal ability. Darren was altogether a different person, proud; sophisticated and sensitive and he just couldn't handle the disappointment and failure of all that being treated like he really was somebody coming to nothing. It's interesting to ponder, though, how the opposite extreme would have affected him if he had indeed become a superstar.
In fact, watching the Man Alive film today, you can see the rot beginning to set in as far back as the posh reception to promote his first single, “Something’s Gotten Hold Of My Heart”, held at EMI House in London on Friday, July 20th, 1973. Darren, nibbling daintily on a tomato and with his dad Colin by his side, is introduced to Roger Greenaway, co-composer of the song and, at the suggestion of Colin, chirpily relates to Roger the scathing review of the single by music critic Roy Carr in that week’s issue of NME. “If I were songwriters Cook and Greenaway, I’d get hold of Darren by the throat. In the quest for an equivalent to Donny or Jimmy Osmond, this beautiful ballad, which represents Gene Pitney’s finest moment, has been totally savaged. Own up, how can you expect some weenybop warbler to attempt such a difficult song?” chuckled Darren. “Actually”, said Roger, “I think I sort of agree with that.” “Do you really?”, asked Colin. “Yes”, answered Roger, “I think the song is too old for him.” At that, Colin looks merely embarrassed, but Darren’s face drops as he stares incredulously at Roger and he looks very, very hurt and betrayed. It was the film’s cruelest moment and still looks potent today.
Later, Colin Burn was asked by John Pitman if he was prepared for people to say that he was exploiting Darren. “In fact, I am not exploiting him”, came the reply. “He wanted to make a record and I said well, you do what you want, you want to make a record and, as I said, if he wants to stop making records, the decision will be his. But, I think that it is always a good thing, if you have an opportunity like this, to do it. Because in later years, if you decline the offer, you could forever kick yourself.”
As for the 1988 interview in the “People” programme, I understand that this upset Darren terribly when the final cut went out on air and not only because it showed him as a down and out shuffling aimlessly around the street of south London, but by the way it was edited, that showed him in a very negative light. For instance, the scene with the waiting crowds of hundreds of fans outside the Sundown, Edmonton, on the morning of Saturday, July 28th, 1973, was edited in such a way as to make it look as though the girls being interviewed by John Pitman thought that Darren was rubbish, while in the original version of the interview in the Man Alive film, it’s clear that these girls were having a bit of fun at the expense of Pitman, pretending they’d never heard of Darren, with remarks such as “Who is he?”, “We’ve never heard of him” and “He’s rubbish”, and so on. “But that’s who you’ve come to see isn’t it?”, asked Pitman. “No!”, laughed the girls in unison.
And as for Darren’s rather derogatory remarks about his mother heard in the “People” programme, whether or not his statement was true, or just imagined in his depressive state, or just his way of getting back at his mother over what happened at EMI fifteen years earlier, it can only be surmised what affect this statement had upon his mother and his family when the programme went out on national television. But I do know that Darren rapidly went downhill in his mental health from there on and became a heroin addict for the last three years of his life. |
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