Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Herman's Hermits

 
Artist: Herman's Hermits
See Herman's Hermits Lyrics
  • Formed: 1964, Manchester, England
  • Disbanded: 1970
  • Genres: Rock
  • Representative Albums: "Retrospective," "The Very Best of Herman's Hermits," "The Very Best of Herman's Hermits"
  • Representative Songs: "I'm into Something Good," "No Milk Today," "Mrs. Brown You've Got a Lovel"

Biography

Herman's Hermits were one of those odd 1960's groups that accumulated millions of fans, but precious little respect. Indeed, their status is remarkably similar to that of the Monkees and it's not a coincidence that both groups' music was intended to appeal to younger teenagers. The difference is that as early as 1976, the Monkees began to be considered cool by people who really knew music; it has taken 35 years for Herman's Hermits to begin receiving higher regard for their work. Of course, that lack of respect had no relevance to their success: 20 singles lofted into the Top 40 in England and America between 1964 and 1970, 16 of them in the Top 20, and most of those Top Ten as well. Artistically, they were rated far lower than the Hollies, the Searchers, or Gerry & the Pacemakers, but commercially, the Hermits were only a couple of rungs below the Beatles and the Rolling Stones.

The magnitude of their success seemed highly improbable, based on their modest beginnings. Guitarist/singer Keith Hopwood (born October 26, 1946), bassist/singer Karl Green (born July 31, 1947), guitarist/singer Derek "Lek" Leckenby (born May 14, 1945), and drummer Barry Whitwam (born July 21, 1946) were among the younger musicians on the Manchester band scene in 1963, when they started playing together as the Heartbeats. The city was home to many dozens of promising bands, most notable among them the Hollies, the Mockingbirds, and Wayne Fontana & the Mindbenders. Later that year, the Heartbeats got a new member in 16-year-old Peter Noone (born November 5, 1947), who filled in one night when their regular vocalist failed to turn up for a gig. Noone was already a veteran actor, trained at the Manchester School of Music and Drama; he had been a child star on television in the late '50s, on the television series Coronation Street, but he also had musical aspirations. As a vocalist with the Heartbeats, he initially worked under the name Peter Novak. The quintet followed the same path that any other struggling band did, playing shows at youth clubs and local dances, hoping to get noticed, and they picked up a pair of managers, Harvey Lisberg and Charlie Silverman.

Accounts vary as to the origins of the name they ultimately adopted -- some say that their managers remarked on the facial resemblance between Noone and the character of Sherman in the Jay Ward cartoon show "Mr. Peabody & Sherman"; others credit Karl Green with mentioning it. In any case, "Sherman" became "Herman" and the group, in search of a more distinct name, became Herman & His Hermits and then Herman's Hermits. They played a pleasing, melodic brand of rock & roll, mostly standards of the late '50s and early '60s, with Noone's attractive vocals at the fore. Their big break came in 1964 when producer Mickie Most was invited by Lisberg and Silverman to a show in Manchester. He was impressed with their wholesome, clean-cut image, and with Noone's singing and pleasant, non-threatening stage presence, and he agreed to produce them, arranging a recording contract for the group with the EMI-Columbia label in England; their American releases were licensed to MGM Records.

Herman's Hermits' debut single, a Carole King/Gerry Goffin song called "I'm Into Something Good," released in the summer of 1964, hit number one in England and number 13 in America. Ironically, considering the direction of many of their future releases, the group displayed anything but an English sound on "I'm Into Something Good." Instead, it had a transatlantic feel, smooth and easy-going with a kind of vaguely identifiable California sound.

Of course, that statement assumed that the group had much to do with the record -- as it turned out, they didn't. In a manner typical of the majority of the acts that Most produced, the Hermits didn't play on most of their own records; Mickie Most, as was typical of producers in the era before the Beatles' emergence, saw no reason to make a less-than-perfect record, or spend expensive studio time working with a band to perfect its sound -- as long as Peter Noone's voice was on the record and the backing wasn't something that the group absolutely couldn't reproduce on stage, everyone seemed happy, including the fans. Conversely, the group didn't have too much control over the choice of material that they recorded or released. On their singles in particular, "Herman's Hermits" were mostly Peter Noone's vocals in front of whatever session musicians Most had engaged, which included such future luminaries as Jimmy Page and John Paul Jones, with the other members relegated to background vocals, if that.

The group was grateful for the hit records that they chalked up, the revenue that those generated, and the gigs that resulted. They charted six Top 20 hits each in the years 1965 and 1966 and were a major attraction in concert, usually in a package tour situation, with the Hermits at or near the very top of whatever bill they were on. Their records were smooth, pleasant pop/rock, roughly the British invasion equivalent of easy listening, which set them apart from most of the rival acts of the period. Their cover of Sam Cooke's "Wonderful World" (which reached number four in America) and remake of the Rays' 1950s hit "Silhouettes" were good representations of the group's releases; on their EPs and early LPs, they also threw in covers of old rock & roll numbers like Frankie Ford's "Sea Cruise." They were purveyors of romantic pop/rock just at a time when the Beatles were starting to become influenced by Bob Dylan and the Rolling Stones, the Yardbirds, and the Who were redefining the British beat sound with higher volume, greater complexity, and harder sounds.

Most recognized that those acts were leaving behind a huge number of listeners who would still buy songs resembling simple, relatively innocent sounds of 1964 or even earlier. Just how far back he and the group could reach was revealed to them by accident, following the release of Introducing Herman's Hermits on MGM Records in the United States during 1965, coinciding with their first U.S. tour. An American disc jockey heard the song "Mrs. Brown You've Got a Lovely Daughter" on that album and convinced the label to issue it as a single. The song had been done almost as a joke by the group, its guitar/banjo sound and Noone's vocal performance -- Mancunian accented and laced with a vulnerable, wide-eyed innocence -- deliberately reminiscent of George Formby, the immensely popular ukelele-strumming British music hall entertainer of the 1930s and 1940s. In England, that record would never have been considered for release by an image-conscious rock & roll group; the parents and grandparents of their audience would have loved it, but it would also have destroyed their credibility. In America, however, it was considered just another piece of British Invasion pop/rock and a pleasant, innocuous, and eminently hummable one at that -- and it shot to number one on the charts, earning a gold record in the process. It seemed to slot in with Americans' image of England's past in a comfortable, cheerful way, evoking a kind of "theme park" cockney image that easily adjoined the contemporary vision of "Swinging London." In the end, "Mrs. Brown, You've Got a Lovely Daughter" sold 14 million copies around the world, making their first film appearance (in the movie When the Boys Meet the Girls), which came off of that same U.S. tour, seem almost an after-thought. In England, however, "Mrs. Brown" was never issued as a single.

After that, a formula was established. Mickie Most got the group to record more songs in the same vein, including the actual Edwardian-era music hall number "I'm Henry the Eighth, I Am," specifically for release as singles in America. The latter record reportedly made the group members cringe over what it would do to their image in England, but in America it hit number one and chalked up yet another gold record award. Amid all of this American chart action with novelty tunes and albums that easily rose into the Top 30 in the U.S.A., the group's British releases were a whole other story. The Hermits continued to issue current romantic pop/rock, which sold well and kept up their image as a respectable if somewhat soft rock group. At the same time, their British album sales were virtually negligible, only their debut LP ever charting (at number 16). This was unfortunate, as the British version of their second album, Both Sides of Herman's Hermits, was a perfectly respectable pop/rock LP with some very hard, loud sounds (and one "period" standard, "Leaning on a Lamp Post"), mostly solid Brit-beat numbers like "Little Boy Sad," "Story of My Life," and "My Reservation's Been Confirmed," as well as a stripped-down, straight-ahead version of Graham Gouldman's "Bus Stop." That album and its 1967 follow-ups, There's a Kind of Hush All Over the World and Blaze (which never even came out in England), were excellent representations of the full range of the group's sound, including hard rock, psychedelia, and pop/rock, featuring very respectable originals written by Green, Hopwood, and Leckenby.

While their record sales remained healthy in America well into 1966, their British singles gradually slackened in sales until the group recorded Graham Gouldman's "No Milk Today," which put them back in the U.K. Top 10; in America, the same song was also a hit paired off with "Dandy," a poppish cover of the Kinks song. The group made their second film appearance, this time in a starring role in the comedy Hold On! (1966), which mixed Herman's Hermits in a story about space flight. By the end of that year, however, the stage was set for the gradual decline in the group's fortunes, even in America. Producers Bert Schneider and Bob Rafelson, in conjunction with NBC and Columbia Pictures Television, had devised a television series that touched upon a formula for success very similar to what Mickie Most had found with Herman's Hermits: The Monkees -- all about a fun-loving pop/rock group created specifically for the series.

The program debuted in late 1966 and by that winter, the Monkees were selling millions of singles and LPs to the very same young teen audience that Herman's Hermits had cultivated. The presence of English actor/singer Davy Jones in their lineup, as the principal vocalist on their records and the romantic heartthrob of the group, only heightened the resemblance between the two acts. By 1967, Davy Jones and the Monkees were selling millions of copies of "Daydream Believer," a song that surely would have gone to the Hermits had it been written at any time earlier.

"There's a Kind of Hush (All Over the World)," a bright, upbeat pop number, put the Hermits back at number seven in England and number four in America; but an attempt at latching on to the folk-rock and psychedelic booms with a recording of Donovan's song "Museum" never charted in England and reached only number 37 in America before disappearing. They made the American Top 20 just once more with "Don't Go out Into the Rain," after which everyone seemed to recognize the inevitable. The group made one more feature film, entitled Mrs. Brown You've Got a Lovely Daughter -- the song, which had rocketed them to fame in America, served the group one last time, yielding a movie about dog racing that gave Noone a lead acting role and which was a decent box office success in 1968.

During this period, Noone co-produced a good LP for songwriter/singer Graham Gouldman (with whom he later went into partnership) that never sold well, despite some very interesting sounds. The Hermits, as a group, hewed closer to the pop market after "Museum" and enjoyed another two years worth of hits in England before Peter Noone decided to leave in 1970. The group soldiered on for another three years, cutting singles for RCA in America that were duly ignored and Noone returned briefly to the fold in 1973 to capitalize on the rock & roll revival boom and made an appearance hosting NBC's The Midnight Special, in an installment devoted to the sounds of the British Invasion, that became one of the most collectable shows in that program's run. Thereafter, Noone tried re-entering the rock & roll arena fronting a new band, the Tremblers, in 1980, without much success. He fared much better on stage in The Pirates of Penzance on London's West End, which was a huge hit in the mid-'80s. Both he and the latter-day Herman's Hermits have turned up on the oldies circuit at different times, usually working in the context of a revival of the British Invasion sound. Derek Leckerby passed away in 1994 at the age of 48, but drummer Barry Whitwam was leading a group of Herman's Hermits at the opening of the 21st century. Noone has resumed performing regularly and also became a star VJ on MTV's VH1 channel. In the year 2000, Repertoire Records began the long-overdue exhumation of Herman's Hermits album catalog, issuing state-of-the-art CD editions with bonus tracks that show off the full range of the group's music. Just as Rhino Records had previously done with the Monkees catalog, it seems like Herman's Hermits may finally be getting the recognition they deserved. ~ Bruce Eder, All Music Guide
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Discography: Herman's Hermits
Top

Best of Herman's Hermits [Pegasus]

Buy this CD

I'm into Something Good [Mastertone]

Buy this CD

Their Greatest Hits [ABKCO]

Buy this CD

Introducing Herman's Hermits [Bonus Tracks]

Buy this CD

Platinum Collection

Buy this CD

No Milk Today: Best of Herman's Hermits

Buy this CD

Herman's Hermits/Both Sides of Herman's Hermits

Buy this CD

Blaze [Germany Bonus Tracks]

Buy this CD

There's a Kind of Hush All Over the World [Germany Bonus Tracks]

Buy this CD

There's a Kind of Hush All Over the World [Germany Bonus Tracks]

Buy this CD
Show More Albums

A's, B's & EP's

Buy this CD

Best of the EMI Years, Vol. 1

Buy this CD

Best of Herman's Hermits [EMI]

Buy this CD

Golden Legends

Buy this CD

Blaze [Japan]

Buy this CD

Complete Hits

Buy this CD

Retrospective

Buy this CD

Best of the 60's: Herman's Hermits

Buy this CD

Into Something Good: The Mickie Most Years 1964-72

Buy this CD

Very Best of Herman's Hermits [EMI 2005]

Buy this CD

Years May Come...

Buy this CD

All the Hits Plus More

Buy this CD

Best of Herman's Hermits [Toshiba EMI]

Buy this CD

Both Sides of Herman's Hermits [LP Replica]

Buy this CD

Herman's Hermits [Japan Bonus Tracks]

Buy this CD

Live at the Hilton

Buy this CD

No Milk Today

Buy this CD

Original Gold

Buy this CD

Sunshine Girl

Buy this CD

All Best Songs

Buy this CD

That Was Then, This Is Now

Buy this CD

Both Sides of Herman's Hermits [Germany Bonus Tracks][Repertoire]

Buy this CD

Mrs. Brown, You've Got a Lovely Daughter [Germany Bonus Tracks]

Buy this CD

Hermhits

Buy this CD

Very Best of Herman's Hermits [EMI 2001]

Buy this CD

Story

Buy this CD

Original Gold [CD #2]

Buy this CD

Original Gold [CD #1]

Buy this CD

Original Hits

Buy this CD

Mrs. Brown, You've Got a Lovely Daughter [Compilation]

Buy this CD

Greatest Hits [Hollywood]

Buy this CD

Greatest Hits [Crystal]

Buy this CD

Their Greatest Hits

Buy this CD

Mrs. Brown, You've Got a Lovely Daughter [Video]

Buy this CD

Blaze

Buy this CD

There's a Kind of Hush All Over the World

Buy this CD

Both Sides of Herman's Hermits

Buy this CD

Hold On!

Buy this CD

Herman's Hermits

Buy this CD

Introducing Herman's Hermits

Buy this CD
Show Fewer Albums
Wikipedia: Herman's Hermits
Top
Herman's Hermits

Herman's Hermits Starring Peter Noone
Background information
Origin Manchester, England
Genres Pop rock
Beat
Years active 1963 - present
Labels Columbia (EMI) (UK)
MGM Records (USA/Canada)
Website Herman's Hermits.com
Former members
Peter Noone
Keith Hopwood
Karl Green
Derek Leckenby
Barry Whitwam
Alan Wrigley
Steve Titterington

Herman's Hermits were an English pop band, formed in Manchester in 1963 as Herman & The Hermits. The group's management and producer, Mickie Most (who controlled the band's output), emphasized a simple, non-threatening and clean-cut image, although the band originally played R&B numbers[1]. This helped Herman's Hermits become hugely successful in the mid-1960s but hampered the band's creativity, relegating Noone, Hopwood, Leckenby and Green's original songs to quickly recorded B-sides and album cuts.

Their first hit was "I'm Into Something Good" (written by US songwriters Gerry Goffin and Carole King), which reached No. 1 in the UK and No. 13 in the US in 1964. They never topped the British charts again, but had two US No. 1's with "Mrs. Brown, You've Got a Lovely Daughter" (originally sung by Tom Courtenay in a 1963 British TV play) and "I'm Henry the Eighth, I Am" (a British music hall song by Harry Champion dating from 1911). These songs were aimed at a US fan-base, with Peter Noone exaggerating his Manchester accent; the band was not fond of either song and they were never released as singles in Britain.

The Hermits appeared in several movies, including When The Boys Meet The Girls (1965) - and Hold On! (1966). They also starred in the film Mrs. Brown You've Got A Lovely Daughter (1968) and were one of the performers in Pop Gear (1965). They were on the MGM label, a company which often featured the musical performers they had signed to record deals in films.

Herman's Hermits had three Top 3 hits in the U.S. in 1965, with the aforementioned #1 hits, as well as "Can't You Hear My Heartbeat" (U.S. #2). They had the hits "A Must to Avoid" (U.S. #8), "Listen People" (U.S. #3), George Formby, Jr.'s "Leaning on a Lamp Post," from Me and My Girl (U.S. #7), and "Dandy" (U.S. #3) in 1966; "There's a Kind of Hush" was a Top 10 hit for them the following year. They appeared on the The Ed Sullivan Show, The Dean Martin Show and The Jackie Gleason Show. Commercial success would prove elusive after the late '60s and Peter Noone and Keith Hopwood left the band in 1971. The band reunited in 1973 to headline a hugely successful British invasion tour culminating with a standing-room-only performance at Madison Square Garden and an appearance on The Midnight Special (without Hopwood). Later a version of the band featuring Leckenby and Whitwam opened for The Monkees on a couple of reunion tours. Noone declined an offer from tour organizers to appear but later appeared with Davy Jones on a successful teen idols tour.

Contents

History

Original members were Keith Hopwood (guitar, vocals), Karl Green (guitar, vocals), Alan Wrigley (bass guitar, vocals), Steve Titterington (drums), and Peter Noone (lead vocals). Although the youngest of a remarkably young group, fifteen-year-old Noone was already a veteran actor, with experience on the British soap opera, Coronation Street. Derek "Lek" Leckenby (guitar, vocals), and Barry "Bean" Whitwam (drums) (born Jan Barry Whitwam, 21 July 1946, in Prestbury, Cheshire), joined later from another local group, The Wailers, Whitwam replacing Titterington, Karl Green switching to bass guitar to replace Wrigley, and Leckenby effectively taking Green's position. After Leckenby joined, the group obtained a deal with producer Mickie Most and signed to EMI's Columbia Graphophone label in Europe and MGM Records in the United States.

The band played on many singles including "I'm Into Something Good," "Mrs. Brown, You've Got a Lovely Daughter" (1965), and "I'm Henry VIII, I Am." The last was said at the time to be "the fastest-selling song in history." [2] Leckenby played the solo on "Henry," while Hopwood contributed the rhythm guitar on "Mrs. Brown." (Noone interview, Hopwood per. corres.)

Despite the group's competent musicianship, some of their subsequent singles employed some session musicians, including Jimmy Page and John Paul Jones, with contributions from the band, although the role of session players on Herman's Hermits records has been exaggerated in the rock media and in inaccurate liner notes on the recent ABKCO Retrospective, which fail to credit the Hermits' playing. Mickie Most did use session musicians on many of the records he produced, including on a number of Hermits singles, as was his (and, for that matter, industry) practice at the time, a practice that continues today. Even the Yardbirds were forced by Most to make do with session musicians (except for Jimmy Page) on their Most produced recordings. (see Hammer of the Gods: The Led Zepplin Saga by Stephen Davis). Continuing acrimony between former members of Herman's Hermits has increased the misinformation about the group's role on their records. Leckenby in particular was a gifted guitarist. Most commented on VH1's "My Generation: Herman's Hermits" episode that the Hermits "played on a lot of their records and some they didn't." The group did play on all their US and UK Number One hits as well as on a number of other singles including Graham Gouldman's "Listen People" and most album cuts.

For a brief time the group rivalled the Beatles on the charts, and was the top-selling pop act in the U.S. in 1965 (see Billboard charts for verification). Green once said he preferred harder rock but was grateful for the hand he was dealt. (See VH1 My Generation-Herman's Hermits) Moreover, while the band's singles were written by top songwriters of the day, Noone, Leckenby, Hopwood, and Green contributed numerous songs such as "My Reservation's Been Confirmed," "Take Love, Get Love," "Marcel's," "For Love," "Tell Me Baby," "Busy Line," Moon Shine Man," "I Know Why," "GasLite Street," and others. "I Know Why" even made limited appearance as an "A" side. (See EMI and MGM catalogs)

The group was nominated for two Grammy awards in 1965, both for "Mrs. Brown, You've Got a Lovely Daughter." According to Noone and Hopwood, the song was recorded as an afterthought in two takes, using two microphones, with Hopwood on guitar, Green on bass guitar, and Whitwam on drums. Noone and the band deliberately emphasized their English accents on the record, which was never intended to be a single. Hopwood recalls playing a Gretsch Country Gentleman guitar in the studio, with its strings muted in order to create the distinctive sound. When playing the song live, Hopwood often used a Rickenbacker guitar with a rag under the bridge to duplicate the sound-this technique can be seen clearly in old performance clips.

The 1967 album Blaze garnered critical acclaim, but barely made the Top 100 in the U.S., and was not released in the U.K. Highlights included original songs by Leckenby, Hopwood, Green, and Noone, including "Ace King Queen Jack" and the psychedelic "Moon Shine Man." Ray Davies of the Kinks wrote "Dandy," which was a #5 hit for Herman's Hermits, and appears on their greatest hits album.

Clarification of performance credits

Barry Whitwam clarified that it was only the Hermits that played I'm Into Something Good and not Jimmy Page, as Mickie Most and former member Peter Noone had attempted to claim once he lost the name to the band, and that numerous claims of session musicians were highly exaggerated.[3] Whitwam further states in regards to exagerations on what they didn't play or play on; " Everything he says is that it was Jimmy Page, and Jimmy Page probably can't remember any of the songs that he played. If you look at our top ten in America, “I'm Into Something Good”, it was us. All Hermits. There was only a piano added on. That was on a two track machine so we played at the same time. That got to number thirteen. “Can't You Hear My Heartbeat”, there were no other instruments. That got to number two. “Mrs. Brown You've Got a Lovely Daughter” got to number one. “I'm Henry the VIII”. Number one. “A Must to Avoid”. Number eight. “Listen People”. “Leaning on the Lamppost”. That's six in the top ten with Jimmy Page or anybody else not involved! Another seventy of the tracks on the albums is only the Hermits. I think I worked it out, and I think in only thirty percent of all the songs ever recorded the Hermits didn't do the backing, but the Hermits were always on the vocals doing the harmonies. So he's trying to discredit us, saying that we didn't have anything to do with anything".[4]

Post-Herman careers

Peter Noone (Herman)

Noone was born November 5, 1947. He starred in ABC's The Canterville Ghost and played Pinocchio in the Hallmark Hall of Fame version of that story. His other TV credits include Married... with Children, Quantum Leap, My Two Dads, Dave's World, Too Close for Comfort, Laverne & Shirley, and Easy Street, and he has a recurring role on As the World Turns. He also hosted VH1's My Generation. In March 2007, he appeared on the top-rated show, American Idol. Noone maintains an extensive and successful live performance schedule.

As a singer he had a hit with David Bowie's, "Oh, You Pretty Things", and scored a minor Adult Contemporary hit in America on the Casablanca label with "Meet Me On The Corner Down At Joe's Cafe" in the mid-seventies. Later, Noone recorded the album "One of the Glory Boys" for Beach Boy Bruce Johnston's label, as well as an album fronting the new wave band "The Tremblers." His song "God Knows" was also recorded by Debbie Boone. He has also released several live and studio recordings of old Herman's Hermits material taken from his post-Hermits solo performances. Noone's daughter Natalie is an accomplished singer and songwriter.

Keith Hopwood

Hopwood left as well, starting his own music company, Pluto Music, with Leckenby. As of 2008, Pluto Music is still in business, and works primarily on commercial and animation soundtracks. Hopwood has composed the scores to numerous tv and film projects. Among other soundtrack work Hopwood contributed to the hugely successful Bob the Builder series. The studio has provided services to many top acts including The Clash. Hopwood has released several rare solo and band recordings (not with Peter). The CDs Vault 69 and Waterloo Road contain original songs written during Herman's Hermits' existence. Both are available from Pluto Music.

Derek Leckenby

Derek Leckenby was extremely close to his fellow Hermits. Even after their split he spoke fondly of Peter. (Lek pers. corres.). He also tried hard to set the record straight in the rock media regarding his playing on Herman's Hermits records. "Lek" died of cancer in 1994. His final performance was just five days before his death. As part of the band "Sour Mash", Leckenby recorded an album with the former Hermits and Peter Cowap for RCA records, featuring Leckenby on dobro and guitar. The album is country-flavored rock, far from the earlier Herman's Hermits material. Leckenby's daughter Kara plays lead guitar for the band Red Vinyl Fur (for more information see www.redvinylfur.com).

Barry Whitwam

Barry Whitwam has continued touring in Europe with a band under the Herman's Hermits starring Barry Whitwam name.

Karl Green

As of 2001, Karl Green manages sound systems for the Queen Elizabeth and Festival Halls on London's South Bank.[5]

Herman's Hermits after 1971

When Noone left the group, the Hermits continued on, first with Peter Cowap. They signed to UK RCA and recorded two singles, as "The Hermits" (both recorded at Strawberry Studios), an unreleased album (under the name "Sourmash", produced by Eric Stewart). They subsequently cut singles for Buddah, Private Stock, and Roulette, with only minor success in Europe. Personnel for these singles included Leckenby, Green,and Whitwam, together with either Peter Cowap, John Gaughan, and Frank Renshaw. Hopwood contributed keyboards and backing vocals on some recordings.

Since the mid-1970s there has been significant conflict over the use of the name "Herman's Hermits". Between 1974 and 1994, Whitwam and Leckenby toured with versions of the band that at times included original member Green and newer members such as former Toggery Five guitarist, Frank Renshaw, and Peter Cowap. After a show in 1985, Leckenby confided that he missed working with Peter. Numerous "Hermits" records of dubious provenance exist, frequently sold as compilations of Hermits' hits. Moreover, several small labels have hired musicians to re-record Hermits' records. All original recordings will be released either by EMI or its subsidiaries outside the U.S. and ABKCO in America (MGM, the band's original American label, lost the America distribution rights to the group's material in the early '70s and has since been absorbed into Universal Music, although original Herman's Hermits vinyl recordings on the MGM label still turn up for sale as used records). Additionally, former band members and Noone have each separately re-recorded old Hermits material. New issues from Peter Noone will clearly indicate that the releases are new recordings. Noone continues to tour worldwide to great success and often fondly speaks of Leckenby's and Hopwood's work with the Hermits.

Discography

Filmography

References

  1. ^ according to Keith Hopwood on VH1's My Generation episode on the band
  2. ^ MacInnes, Colin (1965) "The Old English Music Hall Songs Are New." The New York Times, November 28, 1965, p. SM62: "Henry—which hit the top of the record lists and, according to one American expert, was 'the fastest-selling song in history'—was in fact an old English music hall song enjoying a new lease on life."
  3. ^ http://www.popcultureaddict.com/close/barrywhitwamhermanshermits.htm
  4. ^ http://www.popcultureaddict.com/close/barrywhitwamhermanshermits.htm
  5. ^ Radiolondon.co.uk

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Herman's Hermits" Read more