Tony Hazzard
Birth name Anthony Hazzard Born (1943-10-31 ) 31 October 1943 (age 81) Liverpool , EnglandGenres Pop music Occupation(s) Singer, songwriter Instrument(s) Guitar, Ukulele Years active 1960s-present Website www.tonyhazzard.com
Musical artist
Anthony "Tony" Hazzard [ 1] (born 31 October 1943, Liverpool , England) is an English singer and songwriter. He has written songs for The Hollies ("Listen to Me "),[ 2] Manfred Mann ("Ha! Ha! Said the Clown "[ 3] and "Fox on the Run "),[ 4] "Me, The Peaceful Heart" for Lulu ,[ 5] The Yardbirds ("Goodnight Sweet Josephine"),[ 6] Herman's Hermits ("You Won't Be Leaving "),[ 7] Peter Noone ("(I Think I'm Over) Getting Over You "),[ 8] The Tremeloes ("Hello World "),[ 9] Gene Pitney ("Maria Elena"),[ 10] Richard Barnes ("Take to the Mountains"),[ 11] and Andy Williams ("Getting Over You ") amongst others.[ 12]
Career
Hazzard learned the guitar and ukulele when young, but did not start his music career until he finished his education at Durham University .[ 12] With the encouragement of Tony Garnett of the BBC , Hazzard to move to London, where he signed a contract with publisher Gerry Bron .[ 12]
His song "The Sound of the Candyman's Trumpet"[ 13] was recorded by Cliff Richard and entered into the 1968 Songs for Europe preamble for the Eurovision Song Contest . Simon Dupree and the Big Sound , The Casuals , The Family Dogg , and The Swinging Blue Jeans all turned to Hazzard's pop tunes in the late 1960s.[ 14] In the midst of all this success as a writer, Hazzard released his first solo album, Tony Hazzard Sings Tony Hazzard , in 1969. It was commercially unsuccessful, but his second album, Loudwater House , fared better.[ 12] He recorded backing vocals on Elton John 's albums Tumbleweed Connection (1970) and Honky Château (1972).[ 12]
His third album, Was That Alright Then (1973), sold poorly. A two-disc set titled Go North: The Bronze Anthology was released 2005.[ 8] In 2011, he released a CD of new work, entitled Songs From The Lynher . Hazzard lives in Cornwall and continues to work as a composer.[ 12]
References
^ "Details for You Won't be Leaving, Hermans Hermits" . The Sheetmusic Warehouse. Retrieved 5 January 2013 .
^ "Hollies, The – Listen To Me (Vinyl) at Discogs" . discogs. 27 September 1968. Retrieved 5 January 2013 .
^ "Manfred Mann – Ha! Ha! Said The Clown (Vinyl) at Discogs" . discogs. 26 October 1967. Retrieved 5 January 2013 .
^ "Manfred Mann – Fox on the Run (Vinyl) at Discogs" . discogs. January 1969. Retrieved 5 January 2013 .
^ "Lulu – Me, The Peaceful Heart (Vinyl) at Discogs" . discogs. 26 October 1968. Retrieved 5 January 2013 .
^ "Yardbirds, The – Goodnight Sweet Josephine (Vinyl) at Discogs" . discogs. April 1968. Retrieved 5 January 2013 .
^ "Herman's Hermits – You Won't Be Leaving (Vinyl) at Discogs" . discogs. 11 March 1966. Retrieved 5 January 2013 .
^ a b "Go North: The Bronze Anthology – Tony Hazzard : Songs, Reviews, Credits, Awards" . AllMusic. 11 April 2005. Retrieved 5 January 2013 .
^ "Hello World – The Tremeloes : Listen, Appearances, Song Review" . AllMusic. Retrieved 5 January 2013 .
^ "Gene Pitney – Maria Elena (Vinyl) at Discogs" . discogs. April 1969. Retrieved 5 January 2013 .
^ "Richard Barnes – Take to the Mountains (Vinyl) at Discogs" . discogs. 26 October 1970. Retrieved 5 January 2013 .
^ a b c d e f Christopher, James. "Tony Hazzard – Music Biography, Credits and Discography" . AllMusic. Retrieved 5 January 2013 .
^ "Tony Hazzard – The Sound of the Candyman's Trumpet (Vinyl) at Discogs" . discogs. 26 October 1968. Retrieved 5 January 2013 .
^ [1] Archived 28 March 2008 at the Wayback Machine
External links
International National Artists