
Listen to the great soundclips at
www.alanmerrill.com
One
very important fact about Alan Merrill: He
was the lead singer and songwriter of the first and original 1975 version of
"I
Love Rock N Roll" with his band, The
Arrows. The song has become an enduring
international rock anthem, recorded by Joan
Jett, Britney Spears, and many others. Joan
Jett saw Merrill perform the song on a
British television pop show in '75, while on
tour with her band, The Runaways, and she
was deeply inspired.
Her 1982 version of the
song was #1 for 8 weeks in the USA.
Also The Arrows had hits with
"Touch
Too Much"
(top 10 UK) and
"My
Last Night With You"
(Top 30
UK).
Alan Merrill was literally born into the
world of music. Deemed Allan Sachs at birth,
his parents, Helen Merrill, and sax/clarinetist
Aaron Sachs of Earl 'Fatha' Hines Band, are
world-renowned musicians.
After starting to play music in semi-pro
bands in Greenwich Village, Alan eventually
moved to Japan in his late teens. Starting
his professional career in music with the
RCA-Victor Tokyo-based recording group, The
Lead, in 1968, Alan replaced Mark Elder as
guitarist in the band. They had one hit
single, titled "Blue
Rose". It was also then that his
management changed his name, professionally,
to Alan Merrill. It is stuck ever since.
When The Lead broke up, Merrill went solo,
recording two albums:
"Merrill
1"
and
"Alone
In Tokyo"
in 1970 -'71. He became the
biggest foreign pop star in Japan's domestic
market, hosting his own segment on the
popular TV show, "Young 720", acting in the
soap opera, "Ji Kan Desu-yo", and being
featured in commercials, including major
campaigns for Nissan cars and Jun clothing.
He was signed to the most powerful agency in
Japan, Watanabe Productions. Alan soon grew
tired of being a "teen pop idol" and left
the agency, forming the hard-edged glam rock
group Vodka Collins (as lead singer and
guitarist) in 1972, with Hiroshi Oguchi.
The charismatic Oguchi was already a
well-known drummer and media celbrity who
had been with the chart hit popular band,
The Tempters. Vodka Collins recorded one
album,
"Tokyo-New York",
for EMI Records, and it's proved their
most-enduring work. Now available on CD, it
remains a consistent seller. Vodka Collins
had three hit singles off of the album:
"Sands
Of Time",
"Automatic
Pilot", and
"Billy
Mars".
The song,
"Scratchin",
was used as the theme for a gangster TV
show. All these songs were Merrill
compositions, with Japanese lyrics added on
a couple (which then became domestic market
hits) by drummer Hiroshi Oguchi. After a
dispute with their manager in 1974, Alan
Merrill left Tokyo altogether.
Relocated to London, Alan formed his next
band, The Arrows. As lead singer/bassist of
that group, he had hits with "Touch Too Much",
"My Last Night With You",and "I Love Rock 'N
Roll". He also hosted a weekly TV series in
1976-77 called
"The
Arrows Show", on ITV/Granada
Television. A book was written about the
Arrows by Liverpool legend Bill Harry, the
former Merseybeat editor, on Everest Books.
Famed hit-maker Mickie Most produced the
Arrows on his RAK record label. There was
even an Arrows cartoon strip which ran for
over a year.
When the new wave of punk rock swept the UK
in '77, the Arrows became suddenly
unfashionable, and disbanded. Merrill then
set his sights on the USA, and formed the
band Runner with British musicians Steve
Gould (Rare Bird) on guitar, Mick Feat (Van
Morrison Band) on bass, and Dave Dowle (Whitesnake)
on drums. They recorded an album titled
"Runner" for Island Records in late 1978, which
charted in the USA. When the group broke up
in 1980 (due to the legendary musical
differences ), Merrill moved back from the
UK to New York.
In 1980-83, Merrill toured and recorded with
Rick Derringer, contributing to his
"Good
Dirty Fun" and
"Rick
Derringer and Friends" albums, writing songs, singing, and playing guitar
on these projects. This Derringer lineup
also made a concert film for Sony, The Rick
Derringer Rock Spectacular", which featured
all-star guests like Ted Nugent, Southside
Johnny, and Edgar Winter.
In 1985, Alan released a self-titled solo
album for Polydor Records, a collection of
all self-composed tracks. Some heavyweight
friends contributing to this album were
Steve Winwood, Mick Taylor, and Dallas
Taylor. The album was a critical success
with great reviews, but wasn't a chart hit.
In 1986, Alan joined Meat Loaf for the
remainder of the 1980's and recorded the
"Live
At Wembley"
and
"Prime
Cuts"
albums with the band.
In 1990, Alan Merrill got a part in the HBO
television series "Encyclopedia Brown"
playing rocker Casey Sparks. He also wrote
the theme song of the show, which was titled
"Who Done It?". This was followed in the 1990's with his
involvement as a vocalist in the Christmas
album "Holiday Heroes", with producer Jon Tiven. Two albums by the
Jon Tiven Group followed,
"Blue
Guru" and
"Yes
I Ram". Merrill did all the lead
singing on these two discs, except for one
vocal duet on each CD, with Arthur Alexander
and Jim "Basketball Diaries" Carroll,
respectively.
Meanwhile public demand in Japan for a Vodka
Collins reunion was overwhelming, and the
band reformed in '95 to record the album,
"Chemical
Reaction". The band also recorded two
more CDs, "Pink Soup" and "Boy's Life"
in 1997-98, all featuring Merrill's lead
vocals, guitar, and compositions.
In this millennium, Alan has released a new
21-song solo album, titled
"Cupid
Deranged", for sale in early 2002.
The CD is a recorded
look-back-over-the-shoulder at his career
repertoire, spanning the years, mixed in
with some newer Merrill compositions as well.
For those of you who missed this artist the
first time around, this record will fill you
in on a most interesting artist. More
recently, in winter 2002, he has released
the seasonal solo album,
"A
Merrilly Christmas". In the spring of
2003, his double-album tribute to
songwriters Arthur Alexander and Otis
Blackwell, "Double
Shot Rocks", was released to
fantastic reviews. In the year 2004 Alan
Merrill is releasing two new albums, one
solo and one band. The solo album is titled
"Aleecat" on
MEC Records, and the Vodka Collins reunion
reissue is titled "Boys
In The Band", a compilation of three
albums.
Alan Merrill currently resides in Paris,
London, Tokyo, and New York.
Some
little known facts about Alan Merrill:
As a composer, Alan Merrill has written
songs recorded by such diverse artists as
Lou Rawls, Rick Derringer, Chuck Jackson,
Britney Spears, Runner, Freddie Scott, Felix
Cavaliere, Queen Of Japan, Vodka Collins,
Joan Jett, Five, Dan Penn, The Arrows,
Spooner Oldham, and Troy Turner
Alan was elected a New York Chapter Governor
for NARAS, the Grammy Awards organization,
for two terms in the 1980's.
Alan's composition,
"When
The Night Comes"
(as recorded by R&B
great Lou Rawls in 1983), was taken into
space by the first black astronaut in
history, Gulon Bluford. It was the first LP
ever in outer space, and Alan Merrill wrote
the title track! The album "When The Night
Comes" by Rawls, also won two Beach Awards
for best album, and the recording has a
5-star rating (full marks) in Rolling Stone
magazine's albumguide.
Alan was featured in a Nissan car commercial
as a model in 1970, for the Nissan Sunny
Excellent 1200 and 1400 campaigns. It was
the biggest ad campaign ever by Nissan at
the time, and the commercial ran 200 times a
day on Japanese TV on all channels!
KP-Agency
Pooters J.
info@kp-agency.com
BTW BE
0892.789.186
Licentie nummer VG.1487/BA
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