Showing posts with label Robert Stigwood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Robert Stigwood. Show all posts

Robert Stigwood

London, 1955

Photo: Michael Putland/Getty Images

Robert Stigwood was born in Adelaide, Australia in 1934, the son of an electrical engineer. He began his career as a copywriter for a local advertising agency and then in 1955 moved to England.

Manager/producer Robert Colin Stigwood used his involvement with key British pop and rock stars of the '60s into a series of music-oriented movies in the '70s. At his height, his projects achieved a synergy in which recording artists he managed performed the music for and sometimes appeared in movies he produced, and the soundtracks for which were released on his own record label.

Stigwood emigrated to the U.K. in the late '50s and founded a theatrical management agency. A client of his, television actor John Leyton, earned a recording contract. Cast as a pop singer on the television series Harpers, West One, he sang Johnny Remember Me on the show, and it shot to the top of the UK charts in 1961.

Stigwood, along with Joe meek, became Britain's first independent record producers. Before the advent of mavericks such as Stigwood and Meek, it was almost unheard of for managers, agents or publishers to be directly involved in record production.

The brief partnership would change the face of the British recording industry. Robert George "Joe" Meek was a gifted recording engineer who had, by 1960, accumulated enough equipment to build a studio in his London flat and he began producing records for his own company, RGM Sound Ltd.

In late 1961 Stigwood made a record production deal with EMI but there was a major flaw in that the minuscule percentage that EMI was paying meant that Stigwood was barely able to make a profit from these recordings. Nevertheless, the system he pioneered changed the UK pop charts forever and allowed Stigwood to expand his business, becoming simultaneously agent, manager and producer, a role he evidently relished.

"He became fascinated by... the apparent ease with which money could be made ... And what made Robert Stigwood different from his predecessors is that he expanded laterally. He didn't remain simply a manager or an agent. He moved into music publishing as well, and into pop concert promotion. But his real contribution to the British music scene was independent record production."

"He was in every way the first British music business tycoon, involved in every aspect of the music scene, and setting a precedent that was to become the blueprint of success for all future pop entrepreneurs."
Simon Napier-Bell
The small percentages he received from his productions meant that he was largely dependent on agency and management commissions to maintain his cash flow. He also promoted pop concerts "as a way to make a quick buck" and top up the books during slow periods. He began to focus on music clients but became overly ambitious with the 1965 package tour headlined by Chuck Berry and financially crippled himself.

By 1966, while recovering from a period of bankruptcy, he latched onto his two main clients, Eric Clapton, then with the band Cream, and the Bee Gees, also Australian immigrants. Both became very successful in the late '60s (Stigwood took production credits on their early records). It was around this time that he stepped on the toes of Don Arden and became the subject of one of the most famous stories in British showbiz.

He kept his Robert Stigwood Agency intact and worked to rebuild his career as a manager and independent producer. In January 1967, Stigwood's organization merged with Brian Epstein’s NEMS Enterprises. Why is uncertain. Epstein is reported to have turned down more than one multi-million-dollar offer from American interests, so it is unlikely that it was simply for the money. It appears that Epstein was probably the only person in NEMS who was in favour of the merger.

Initially, Epstein had reportedly considered simply selling his managerial contract with the Beatles to Stigwood, but the group (no fans of Stigwood’s abrasive style) would have none of that.

"We told Brian, 'If you do.... we'll sing out of tune. That's a promise. So if this guy buys us, that's what he's buying.'"
Paul McCartney
Stigwood already had a reputation as a shrewd, tough operator but Epstein soon found himself at odds with his new partner and it is claimed that he subsequently decided that he didn't want Stigwood in the company.

Stigwood's future with NEMS may have been uncertain, but it was decided in dramatic fashion by Brian Epstein's untimely death in August 1967. Stigwood found himself in control of two major groups: the Beatles and the Bee Gees. Apple, NEMS (North End Music Store) and Stigwood would join together to form a large company but after negotiations Robert decided to start his own company with the Bee Gees and Cream which would result in establishing the Robert Stigwood Organization (RSO) which he ran from, 67 Brook Street, a favourable W1 address in Mayfair. Brian's brother Clive took over as Managing Director and Stigwood left NEMS to form his own company in December.

At the end of 1968 Stigwood bought the Bag O'Nails and the music management agency from Rik Gunnell and his brother John. They continued to work in association with him although Rik did so from within America.

He also established a business relationship in early 1969 with Chas Chandler, formerly of The Animals, and the pair had formed a production company called Montgrove Ltd. Chandler would find and develop new talent and Stigwood would finance the operation although Chandler had entered the partnership affluent following his payoff after the Hendrix split.


The subject of Robert Stigwood's sexuality (he is understood to be gay) and its role in his career, is one which has rarely been discussed. It certainly would not have been a disadvantage, considering how many important figures in the music industry at that time were gay.
"Historically, the gay movement has also been well represented in show business and other areas of entertainment. Since British pop music and traditional show business were inextricably linked, at least until the mid-sixties, the homosexual network during that period was particularly strong."
Johnny Rogan: Starmakers & Svengalis:
The History of British Pop Management,
1988
Some music writers have suggested that the so-called "Pink Mafia" dominated British showbiz and prevented Australian acts breaking into the UK music scene in the Sixties. For sure, The Bee Gees, owed their international success to the fact that they were managed by Stigwood who was, by the time he met them, an influential part of London's gay showbiz establishment.

By the early '70s, the Bee Gees had fallen into disfavor and Clapton was inactive due to drug use. Stigwood turned to film work, producing the 1973 movie version of Jesus Christ Superstar, and he founded RSO Records , to which he signed Clapton and the Bee Gees. He managed to resuscitate the careers of both artists. In 1975, Stigwood produced a movie version of The Who's rock opera Tommy, cast largely with rock stars.

Stigwood's next project was the most successful of his career. In the fall of 1977, he produced the film Saturday Night Fever, which turned John Travolta into a household name. The Bee Gees scored three #1 hits from the ost album, which sold an estimated 25 million copies worldwide.

Stigwood quickly followed in the summer of 1978 with Grease, a movie version of the Broadway musical starring Travolta and Australian pop singer Olivia Newton-John. It was another smash at the box office with a #1 multi-platinum soundtrack album that threw off a number of major hits, among them the title song, sung by Frankie Valli, which had been written for the film by the Bee Gees' Barry Gibb.

By the mid-1980s, RSO had shuttered and its catalog had been sold off, while Stigwood was giving his attention to television broadcasting, much less visible than he had been in the 1970s.


Stigwood with Cynthia Rhodes: 1983
Robert Stigwood remains active, primarily in the theatrical musical industry. He lives at his Barton Manor Estate on the Isle of Wight, off the south coast of England.
divider

For more on Robert Stigwood click here.

The Gunnell Brothers


Rik Gunnell: seen here with Georgie Fame

Richard
and John Gunnell were in the music promotion business. Rik & Johnny were well known on the sixties music scene and are often referred to in books and documentaries about 60's Swinging London. Rik learned his craft the hard way, from the ground up. He was heavily involved in the evolution of the Jazz scene in the 1950's, combining modern and traditional scenes and opening his own club.

Even in 1966, when Georgie Fame, his artist, was topping the charts for the second time, Gunnell could still be found outside the Flamingo, in London's Wardour Street, playing the tout, with a treble whisky-and-coke in his hand. In the club's basement, black and white people mingled to an extent unknown elsewhere in London in the 1960s. Judy Garland dropped in to the club's AllNighter, and Christine Keeler played off her lovers there.

A veritable who's who of British rock and R&B appeared at the Flamingo not to mention a breathtaking list of American artists, including Stevie Wonder, Bill Haley, Patti LaBelle, John Lee Hooker and Jerry Lee Lewis.

The original showman, Gunnell conducted business in a rough-and-ready manner. Generous and foolhardy, he lost a chance to manage the Rolling Stones, turned his back on The Kinks - and oversaw one of the most vital periods in London's musical and social history.

He worked as a book-keeper at Smithfield market, spending his nights as a bouncer at Studio 51, a jazz club where the new bebop was played. He later spent time in Paris where he had taken part in fights in order to eat. Such behaviour set the pattern for a life on the edge in which good music, good times and booze coexisted with fantasy and lost opportunities.

It was when he met Tony Harris, manager at Leicester Square's Mapleton Hotel, that Gunnell successfully harnessed the potential audience for jazz. In 1955, with American fashion and style all the rage, the venue became an All-Nighter called Club Americana. Ten shillings admittance bought jazz and a three-course meal - tomato soup, chicken'n'chips and ice cream - and Rik introduced his younger brother Johnny Gunnell as disc jockey and MC.

Sam Kruger and his son Jeff had started the Flamingo there, but Gunnell pushed them out to open extra nights as Club M. Gunnell had become a serial entrepreneur. His other ventures included the Star in Wardour Street and Club Basic in Charing Cross Road.

In 1958, Harris and Gunnell made peace with The Krugers and launched the Friday & Saturday All-Nighter, with Johnny Gunnell booking the bands. The music was a mixture, but while musicians such as Brian Auger, Jack Bruce and Ginger Baker played modern jazz, by the end of 1961 'The Twist' was in vogue. In 1962, they auditioned a young Georgie Fame, and the rest is history. The Blue Flames became the Flamingo's most popular draw.
"Georgie Fame and Zoot Money were handled by the late Rik Gunnell. Rik had the look of the gangster about him (to my 18-year-old eyes anyway!)...

....Flamingo club Friday All-Nighter sessions, in particular, were sensational. Lots of illicit booze and drugs plus interesting people like Christine Keeler and Mandy Rice-Davies."
Greg Tesser: Publicity

Meanwhile, The Gunnell Brothers formed a management and booking agency at 47 Gerrard Street in partnership with Fame's saxophonist, Mick Eve. There they handled Chris Farlowe, John Mayall, Geno Washington, Zoot Money, PJ Proby and others.
"We stupidly ducked out of a Flamingo allnighter Xmas 1966, leaving Rik Gunnell in the lurch. Those of you who remember Rik & Johnny Gunnell will know what a bad idea that was. Shortly afterwards, we were shipped off to Milan."
Tim Large, Dave Anthony’s Moods
In January 1966 the brothers opened The Ramjam Club in Brixton High Road, where Otis Redding made his British début. Both the Animals and The Who played the club as favours to the Gunnells. When the Flamingo Club closed in 1967, Rik took over the Bag O'Nails in Kingly Street. The club was to become one of the most in-demand nightspots in Swinging London, and was popular with all four Beatles.
“My dad played blues all-nighters in the early 60s, at Wardour Street’s Flamingo Club. The owners, Rik and Johnny Gunnell, paid off the police every week so they could stay open until 6am, refilling regulars’ colas with illicit whiskey from under the bar.

When Georgie Fame had a hit with ‘Yeh Yeh’, he tried to switch management. Rick took the keys to Georgie’s brand new Jaguar, and rammed its repeatedly into the pillars of an underground car park. He handed Georgie the keys back and said,
"If you leave me I’ll do the same to your fingers and you’ll never play the piano again!"
One night, some bruiser got drunk and caused trouble, so Rik threw him out of the club and gave him a hiding. At closing time, hoods grabbed Rik and bundled him, blindfold, into a car. They drove him to a deserted warehouse where 'The Krays' informed him that the drunkard was one of their lads. Sensing he was in trouble, Rik explained that the lout had been out of order. The Krays apologised and set Rik free."
Gaz Mayall: 2007
In the summer of 1968 the brothers promoted a two-day festival at Woburn Abbey, with head-liners including Jimi Hendrix, Donovan and Ten Years After. Gunnell awoke early in the morning to find the festival site ablaze. Fans, who had slept in the grounds overnight, had started the blaze to keep warm. The damage cost Gunnell nearly £20,000. At the year's end the Gunnells sold both the Bag O'Nails and their management firm to music impresario Robert Stigwood, and worked in association with him. Rik moved to New York to open an office for Stigwood there, and then later, on to Los Angeles for another.

In 1969 Gunnell's fiancée, Jean Lincoln, then one of Britain's youngest show business agents, was found dead in an apartment in Central Park, New York. At the 1970 Isle Of Wight Festival (they were the promoters), Rik was moved to tears by the sight of half a million people holding hands while The Great Awakening play a haunting rendition of Amazing Grace. Soon after he quit the business for good, spending much of the '70s off the radar.

Meanwhile, Johnny Gunnell was procuring the agency interests of a group of young hopefuls from Wolverhampton. Although the circumstances are uncertain, John Gunnell signed up Ambrose Slade and introduced them to Chas Chandler. He was therefore instrumental in adding the final ingredient neccessary to make it all work.

New Musical Express: October 18th 1969

In 1972 things fell apart, and Rik Gunnell vanished for six years. He started a new life away from the music business in Austria. John does not seem to appear anywhere after this time.

Rik died in Austria on 3rd June 2007 leaving his (third) wife, Edith and their two daughters Nina and Romy.
divider

Extracts from Rik Gunnell's obituary in The Guardian. Written by Val Wilmer


Glass Menagerie 1969

New Musical Express: April 12 1969

Glass Menagerie were a Lancashire based group comprising Bill Atkinson (drums), John Medley (bass), Alan Kendall (guitar) and Lou Stonebridge (vocals and harmonica). They moved to London hoping for a break where they signed up with John Gunnell.

The psychadelic quartet released a couple of singles for Pye Records but never made an album. The group made their début in 1968 with She's A Rainbow penned by Jagger & Richards. Two further singles followed for Pye in the same year, You Don't Have To Be So Nice and Frederick Jordan, but neither reached the charts and they transferred to Polydor Records in 1969. 
"Glass Menagerie were managed by John Gunnell and his Organisation and he asked me if I would be interested in producing the group. I saw them on a gig and liked them. They were recording in the studio and getting nowhere so I helped out. They had a good few ideas but didn't know how to put it down."
Chas Chandler 1969

Chas Chandler produced Have You Forgotten Who You Are and Do My Thing Myself at the Olympic Sound Studios ­ in London around 20th February (Jimi Hendrix is said to have attended the session) and one must assume that the advert is referring to Chas Chandler's first production of Glass Menagerie since Chandler had produced two albums for Hendrix the year before.
"We had ideas for recording. We went into the studios and set up all our equipment" explains Al KendallJohn Medley continues, "We felt highly confident until we took a look at the control panel.... We didn't know where to start. The next thing we knew, Chas wandered in..." Bill Atkinson adds, "He was tremendous, he knew exactly how to get the sound we needed, he even knew the best place to hit the cymbal. Jimi Hendrix came in to the studio while we were recording. He shook our hands before quietly disappearing."
Under Chandler the group adopted a heavier, progressive rock styled sound, which might have been better sampled on a full album release. However, despite the existence of an album acetate, Polydor chose not to release it officially. Tony Dangerfield (bass player for Screaming Lord Sutch) reportedly, joined them for a tour with John Mayall's Bluesbreakers but the group soon broke up. Kendall subsequently joined Toe Fat, while Stonebridge worked with Paladin and McGuinness Flint.
This is the earliest evidence of the Chandler, Gunnell & Stigwood association to date. I'd be interested in finding any more detail regarding their collaboration.

divider

Media supplied by Chris Selby.


Irving Martin

Wolverhampton, 1967

Irving Martin has Black Country connections, if not roots. One time A&R man for CBS, Martin was paid to headhunt talent for both Jack Baverstock at Fontana and Decca Records. He scoured the country searching for potential talent and would record demos for possible hit makers. Irving confirms he 'discovered' Finders Keepers, Montanas and the Californians. After leaving CBS he spent a lot of time in the Midlands searching and producing local talent.
"He is responsible for some of the best UK pop productions in a variety of styles; Pop-beat, Harmony Vocal and dramatic Spectorian Productions, to name just a few."
Martin Roberts 2003
In 1967 he was invited to Wolverhampton by Roger Allen to look at five groups, including The Californians, Finders Keepers and The 'N Betweens. Martin remembers Roger Allen as a typical Northern agent, loud and brusque but sincere and genuine.

He produced both the Californians and Finders Keepers on a variety of records. The Californians actually made eight records between 1967 and 1969. John O'Hara describes the experience of recording as follows:
"Irving Martin used to send me brown envelopes regularly containing demos of numbers which he felt we should consider doing."
"Going into a studio was amazing. It was like entering another world. You lost all sense of time and space. You could be in there for hours, even days, and you would have no idea when you came out if it was going to be day or night or what day it was. I loved it."
"Decca No.1 studio was as big as the Civic Hall. It could house orchestras of 40 or 50 players. I've been in there laying a backing track for a record for hours. It all had to be done live because of Musicians' Union requirements. Once you got the nod that that was a take, the musicians would leave and then you would carry on with the engineers for more hours. It was quite exhausting but also exhilarating."
"Despite all the time we took I was never properly satisfied with the records we made. In many cases I felt the records were over-produced by A&R men like John Stewart or Irving Martin."
It was in 1968 that The 'N Betweens recorded with Irving Martin, in his early twenties at the time. He remembers two studio sessions, possibly a third. 

On one occasion they were accompanied by a member of The Move, Chris 'Ace' Kefford, who had recently tried to commit suicide and still had his wrists bound. He was believed to be a friend of Noddy's. Martin recalls that he sat reading a copy of Auto Trader throughout the session. 
"I remember recording three tracks, a raucous rock number, an upbeat instrumental ('Blues In E') and another vocal track I think?"
Martin sent his productions to Jack Baverstock (a good friend at the time.) Jack told him the group was rubbish and he had no interest in signing them. He found out later that Baverstock had gone behind his back. 

Jimmy Lea explains:
"Jack Baverstock had heard our version of Journey To The Centre Of Your Mind, the Ted Nugent number, and another instrumental which we called Blues In E. Irving Martin had produced both tracks for us. Jack rang up and told us he wanted to make an album with us. We just could not believe it. Apparently it was the instrumental he rated as quite distinctive because of the stomping sound."
Unknown to Martin, Jack Baverstock contacted the group directly. This 'robbed' Martin of a 2% royalty on future productions, (he believes Baverstock got 3%). At the time Martin could not afford to sue Jack financially or professionally. He knew that he would be perceived as a troublemaker within the industry, essentially putting an end to his own career. He has always believed that, in his own words, 'the truth will out'.
"There was Jack Baverstock and this big guy (Maurice Jones). Baverstock was not a nice man but I thought he was a friend. He screwed me and he screwed Roger Allen. I spoke to Jack's wife many years later and she admitted that he took a backhander." 
Martin wasn't green to the cut-throat business, he'd worked with Carter Lewis in the mid 60's, who were signed to Robert Stigwood's agency. Irving Martin was in the building when Don Arden.  Arden turned up with his henchman and hung Stigwood from the balcony. Although he was not directly involved, he would later find himself on the receiving end of Arden's wrath.

Martin's colleague Vic Smith was considering an offer to work for Don Arden. Smith asked Martin what he thought and Martin advised caution considering Arden's reputation. Shortly after, Martin received a call from Arden, who threatened to maim him. Meeting him again some years later, Arden claimed it was nothing personal, just business. I'm told Dick Leahy (George Michael's publicist) can confirm this. 

He recalls that Noddy & Dave were both ambitious, 'by any means necessary' guys while Jim wasn't that bothered and Don was just quiet. Later when he met Jim Lea, Jim remembered him and had the good grace to be embarrassed but spoke to him. 

A couple of times he said he wasn't sure whether Chas Chandler knew about it or not but he did say "Chas was not good." Chandler may not have been aware since he wasn’t involved with the band until the Spring of 1969. When I asked why he thought Chas was not good he said, "He didn't let the band develop musically." 

Personally, I agree with the statement but it would appear that there are still a few wrinkles to iron out.



My thanks to Irving Martin for his time. More info about Irving Martin Productions