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From Gladchester Through Madchester, 50 Years of Manchester Music

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This date has been a bee in my bonnet for about the last four years. After rubbing shoulders and working alongside the home counties set in TV land, I got a bit fed up of having my home town and its impact on popular culture denigrated by some former inhabitant of a satellite town in the south east . Manchester and it’s music scenes , many and varied – have always been viewed as something of a recent fad by our ignorant south eastern cousins .Hence the fiftieth anniversary of the worldwide impact of Manchester music as featured here is not in any newspaper or magazine. Of course there are no local TV documentaries planned , both BBC North and Granada seeing it as an anniversary of no significance although they’ll be giving lots of coverage to the Manchester International Festival in the summer .So it won’t be an anniversary celebrated by our local TV ,radio stations or press. Yet the fact remains that fifty years ago exactly Manchester ruled the world of pop music. I think it’s important to commemorate it ,one day perhaps the rest of our local media will think so too , but I won’t hold my breath. For six heady weeks from 10th April  to the 15th May 1965 , Manchester bands nestled in the number one spot in the US Billboard top 100 , culminating on April 24th 1965 when Manchester Bands occupied the 1, 2, and 3 spots at the top of the US charts, and one Manchester band in particular outsold The Beatles at the so-called height of Beatlemania.

Harry Goodwin photographing Peter Noone of Herman's Hermits

Harry Goodwin photographing Peter Noone of Herman’s Hermits

American TV stalwarts Johnny Carson and Ed Sullivan introduced these lively fun filled northerners from Manchester on to the US public in the wake of Beatlemania and the American media described it as The Manchester Invasion . Back then Manchester had Herman’s Hermits , The Hollies , Freddie And The Dreamers and Wayne Fontana and The Mindbenders, The Dakotas , The Mockingbirds , John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers  -and as a City it also bragged the highest proportion of night clubs per head of population of anywhere in the world . In the sixties the world’s cotton capital had become a hotbed of music and it was the start of a tradition which thrives to this day.

When The Beatles first hit the charts , a 23 year old trainee accountant in Manchester by the name of Harvey Lisberg looked around at this growing pop scene and thought he might well get involved , initially as a way to meet girls. One night he saw a band of teenagers called the Heartbeats playing in a church hall in Davyhulme fronted by a fresh faced sixteen year old lad called Peter Noone who had recently starred briefly as Len Fairclough’s son in Coronation Street  .. Harvey decided to take the band under his wing and they shortly after changed their name to Herman’s Hermits . The first thing Lisberg did was hook Herman’s Hermits up with the bright young producer of the time, Mickey Most who’d recently scored big hits for The Animals and The Nashville teens. In mid 1964 the band were signed to Columbia records and recorded a version of Goffin and King’s ‘I’m Into Something Good’ , a song then enjoying US top forty success for Earl Jean. Herman’s Hermits version soon climbed to the number one chart spot in the UK and even hit the top 20 in the USA , outselling the Earl Jean version in the process.

.Meanwhile Harvey had met up with Danny Betesh another former Mancunian accountant  involved in pop music ,. Danny Betesh had set up an agency in Manchester called Kennedy Street Enterprises . He’d initially run a small ballroom in the late fifties but by the early sixties he’d moved into agency work , booking local  acts such as Freddie And The Dreamers and Dave Berry . In 1963 he booked his first big tour , American star Roy Orbison , supported by The Beatles. This was a 21 date tour and was a huge success and established Betesh as one of the most important promoters in the country. In less than a year he had America begging him for British beat groups to send over on tours in the wake of the beat explosion. Freddie And The Dreamers were the first group dispatched by Danny in early 1965 and after appearing on the peak time US television show Hullaballoo , their old 1963 UK chart hit , ‘I’m Telling You Now ‘ went straight to number one in the US Billboard top 100 on April 10th 1965 , the start officially of the Manchester invasion .Other hits followed including ‘You Were Made For Me , and I Understand. The Americans loved Freddie’s comic zaniness and mad dance routines . Serious American journalists looked at Freddie’s dancing and aware of such dance crazes as The Hully Gully and The Twist , wanted to know the name of the crazy dance he’d performed on Hullaballoo. ‘It’s called the Freddie’, When the subsequent publicity came out in print , on radio and on TV, The group rushed out a novelty single called ‘Do The Freddie’, which also hit the US top twenty.

The Goodwin collection 039Harvey Lisberg and Danny Betesh wondered if the bespectacled and eccentric Freddie Garrity could become a star in four weeks , what would the Americans do when they saw the sixteen year old good looking ( Mickey Most thought he looked like a young John F Kennedy) Peter Noone. Within weeks of landing in the States , Herman (Peter Noone) replaced Freddie as the flavour of the next eighteen months. In fact Herman’s Hermits were on tour of the USA with fellow Mancunians Wayne Fontana and The Mindbenders. It was The Mindbenders song ‘ Game Of Love which replaced Freddie  And The Dreamers  in the number one slot in the US top 100 on April 24th 1965 , an historic week when Herman’s Hermits went straight in at number two and Freddie and The Dreamers were number three . The top three singles in the States were from Manchester bands and more was to follow. For the next three weeks , Herman’s Hermits hugged the top spot with ‘ Mrs Brown You’ve Got A Lovely Daughter’ only losing out at the end of May to The Beatles ‘Ticket To Ride’.

American Teenagers went wild for Herman’s Hermits fresh faced lead singer and by the end of 1965 the band had sold over 10 million records in less than eight months , outselling even the mighty Beatles in the US in 1965. The band were mobbed where ever they went , eventually selling in the region of eighty million records . Between October 1964 and June 1967 they had eleven singles in the top ten in the US and fifteen singles reach the top twenty. They’d been offered and appeared in movies and were household names .In their wake came another band from Manchester , The Hollies , formed by Allan Clarke and Graham Nash in Salford in 1961. In fact only the Beatles sold more singles in the UK between 1963 and 1970 than the Hollies , who in a chart career spanning thirty years  spent a total of 318 weeks on the UK chart. including a dozen top ten US singles plus tours with The Yardbirds , Rolling Stones as well as boasting Elton John playing session piano for them on their huge 1969 hit ‘He Ain’t Heavy‘, He’s My Brother’( Elton’s first foray into the top ten) .

The lynchpins of all the Manchester bands successes in the sixties were Harvey Lisberg , Danny Betesh and Charles Silverman at Kennedy Street Enterprises. They were into every Manchester act , including the warm up band at Top Of The Pops when it came from Dickenson Road in Manchester ‘The Mockingbirds ‘. Graham Gouldman of the Mockingbirds would  write huge hit singles including ‘For Your Love’ by the Yardbirds , No Milk Today for Herman’s Hermits and the Hollies first US top ten single , ‘Bus Stop’ ( reached number 5 US in April 1966) without ever enjoying the pop Limelight as The Mockingbirds. It was Gouldman’s search for pop success in his own right that lead eventually to the formation of 10cc and of course the need  to set up Manchester’s first world class recording studios,’ Strawberry’ in Stockport . Even back then , what would become the Punk rallying cry in Manchester of ‘do it yourself’ was being heard . Having Strawberry studios on the door step , encouraged  the fledgling Factory Records to record the debut album from Joy Division there  and from then on Manchester has always been a scene unto itself. From the innocent pop of Herman’s Hermits and the unfashionable face of pop , came the birth of the cool . In the seventies we had 10cc , then the punk explosion of  Buzzcocks, Magazine, The Fall, Joy Division, V2 , The Drones, and on a more MOR tip and also sharing the same management as 10cc the Paul Young fronted ‘Sad Café’ . It has been an endless river of talent ever since and it all goes back to those fresh faced fun filled sixties Mancunian pop kids who took on the world and conquered, Now if only Oasis and the rest could sell as many records as Herman’s Hermits and The Hollies , we could be talking about them in 50 years time. Just don’t expect your local TV and radio stations to give a flying…ok that’s enough , have a look and remember , this is only a small part of the whole story.

The post From Gladchester Through Madchester, 50 Years of Manchester Music appeared first on Terry Christian.


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