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This debut album by a stunning
vocalist and a world-class songwriter, whose names will only be
known to a discerning few, destroys the myth that there is no
undiscovered talent in the world of popular music. The freshness of
the songwriting of ALAN FRANKS, and the sympathetic vocal
performances of PATTY VETTA combine to create an album of such high
quality that it will enjoy a place in the mythology of popular music
- although whether it will sell a million copies is something else
entirely... Those who have operated small independent labels know
that working with a little known act can prejudice survival, yet
sometimes the temptation to share with a wide audience music which
is by turns interesting, catchy and lyrically impressive cannot be
resisted. This is such an occasion.
A few autobiographical words from
ALAN: "I was born and brought up in London, and first started to try
and write songs when I heard the popular music of the Fifties. One
of my favourite singers and repertoires was Marty Robbins, because I
simply loved the idea of so much narrative being crammed into such a
short space. Then I heard the songs of Cole Porter, sung by all
sorts of people, and thought there could be no higher art form than
all those sophisticated rhyme schemes in such cahoots with the
musical line. Although I could hear a lot of music in my head, I had
no way of getting it out, and so the songs were rarely more than
poems. I sang in the choir at Westminster Abbey, where I was at
school (with Andrew Lloyd Webber), and learned the guitar by slowing
down the rims of records by people like Leadbelly, Jack Elliott and Pete Seeger. I also liked Leonard
Cohen but had to speed his records up to get the same effect. While
I was a student at Oxford University (with Bill Clinton) I started
writing review songs - a three-minute Country and Western version of
the Fall of Man is all that remains from this time - and performed
at the Edinburgh Festival.
I have written a number of plays, the
last of which starred Prunella Scales at Greenwich and Guildford,
published a book called "Boychester's Bugle", which was to have been
a comic novel except that people seemed to take it rather seriously,
especially someone who thought there was a portrait of him in it. I
work at 'The Times', writing articles mainly about people in the
arts, but I have also been a diary editor and humorous columnist
there. I first started working with Patty when she recorded the
music for a play of mine, and now we have started to perform
regularly. I suppose I have written well over a hundred songs,
although I would not own up to all of them. There is a particularly
tasteless one about love and disability which I shall never play
again..."
And from PATTY VETTA:
"I was born in
Pangbourne, Berkshire, into a musical family, although I spent my
early childhood on horseback. Being at a tiny C of E school I sang
the Magnificat at 5 years old, solo, at Sulham Church, so it was
fairly likely that I would sing. I sang in pubs until I moved to
London at age 17 where I started work in a recording studio. I
thought this was the best place to be and within a couple of months
I was asked to do some voice-overs and jingles for clients too
skinflint to pay for a professional singer! Soon after I met The
Settlers, remember them? One hit wonders, and that was in 1962.
Nevertheless, they were still doing cabaret in the 1970s, so I
travelled all around the world singing 'Grow, Grow, The Lightning
Tree'. It was great fun but after two years of this, the group
split, with me and the other singer/guitarist, Steve Somers, now a
double bass player and sometime winner of 'New Faces', continuing to
work together. With him, I performed on loads of TV and albums,
doing backing vocals for Don Everly, Johnny Tillotson, Roy Clark,
Joe Brown, Tom O'Connor, Ronnie Prophet, Bert Weedon, Terry
McMillan, and Freddy Weller. I have also been the longest serving
member of the Wes McGhee Band, and have recorded with Pete Sayers,
Paul Millns, Tony Maude and Joe Giltrap, and toured with Johnny Cash
and Billie Jo Spears. I now keeps goats and train dogs and love Alan
Franks's songs to death. To sum up my life so far; I can say is that
I've loved every minute of it and I wouldn't change any of it for
the world'.
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