Limahl
The Neverending story
Limahl
Fonte: rockol.it
Limahl
– meglio conosciuto come il cantante del gruppo Kajagoogoo –
nasce a Wigan, in Inghilterra il 19 dicembre 1958. Inizia
la sua carriera come attore, prendendo parte in piccoli ruoli in
produzioni teatrali e televisive alla fine degli anni Settanta. Dopo
un primo tentativo
di carriera solista, incontra i Kajagoogoo in
un’audizione nel 1982. Il primo singolo del gruppo, "Too shy",
raggiunge la vetta della classifica, inglese all’inizio del 1983,
anche se i lavori successivi mancano di bissare questo consenso.
Limahl insoddisfatto per gli scarsi
risultati, lascia la band
per ricominciare una carriera da solo.
Viene
così scelto per cantare il tema principale de “La storia
infinita”, brano che lo riporta in vetta alle classifiche e che
viene prontamente aggiunto al lavoro di debutto, DON’T
SUPPOSE.
Limahl prosegue allora la sua collaborazione con Giorgio
Moroder per il successivo album, COLOUR ALL MY DAYS; nel 1992 esce
LOVE IS BLIND, stampato solo per il mercato tedesco e giapponese.
Dopo
un periodo di inattività, Limahl ritorna sulle scene musicali
con WHAT A FEELING nell’inverno del 2000. Nel 2003 avviene una
reunion dei Kajagoogoo, che si riformano nel 2007 inizialmente sotto
il nome del trio Kaja, per poi riprendere il nome originale: Limalh
si
raggiunge all’inizio del 2008 per registrare un nuovo album di
inediti previsto per il 2009. Nel frattempo i Kaja pubblicano un
altro album GONE TO THE MOON, in vendita in formato digitale sul web.
Source: limahl.com
One
might think of Limahl in the same bracket as Boy George, Phil
Oakey or Margaret Thatcher as having one of the defining bouffants of
the era! But, the original duo tone spiky mullet man was, oh, so much
more than his legendary hair, the band he fronted so much
more than
their crazy name and angular posturings. That was the spirit of the
time, the manner in which one grabbed attention, the means by which
in the wake of the New Romantic movement one expressed oneself. From
the smugness of hindsight it is all too
easy to write off bands like
Kajagoogoo, Visage and A Flock Of Seagulls as fashion victims. They
were the tribal leaders of a swathe of optimistic, even futuristic,
youth. To understand the look, the feel of that unique time in
history one has to have a mind to the can-do culture
of that moment.
The constraints of class, gender, sexuality were seen not as
proscriptive
and defining in the manner they had hitherto been, but
rather as a rich iconography to be bent and shaped to create image,
image, image!!!
Music mattered; it was liberation from one’s immediate surroundings. It was the art form of choice where colour, design, image, attitude and groove coalesced. It was a fantasy of self-transformation accessible to all for the price of a copy of Smash Hits or a 7” Single. It was
identity, it was energy, it was integral to to being young. You were
a Duranie or into Spandau Ballet, there would be many playground
debates about the relative merits of Nik Kershaw or Howard Jones.
Limahl was a real contender too, five chart hits over two
years and here’s the roll-call :-
Too Shy (no'1) - Ooh To Be Ahh (no'7) - Hang On Now (no'13) - Only For Love (no'16) - Neverending Story (no4) .
Big chart hits too possums, look, all top 20!! A five-hit wonder, but no flash in the pan. For a small time, a big star!! Instantly recognisable, obviously talented, so what happened.......
Limahl won the hearts of a global audience as lead singer of Kajagoogoo and co-writer of their million selling album 'White Feathers' spawning the deliciously catchy début single 'Too Shy' which stormed to the top of the charts all over the world, including top 5 in America.
The
band’s eye-catching image struck a chord with a whole generation
inspiring Kaja mania and a new wave of sometimes dodgy imitation
haircuts!
Mainstream popularity brought platinum sales awards and the accolade of performing at prestigious industry and public events alike. One such early career highlight was an invitation to perform at the 1983 Children's Royal Variety Show at Her Majesty's Theatre,
London in the
presence of HRH Princess Margaret. The momentum of that breakthrough
year culminated in Kajagoogoo winning the ASCAP Award (American
Society for
Composers, Authors and Publishers) for having written one
of the most played songs of the year on American radio. Limahl
felt particularly honoured by the award being presented by Hal David
better known as one half of legendary songwriting duo Baccarach and
David.
Far from being the one-hit wonders predicted by the more vociferous critics, their two follow up singles 'Ooh To Be Ah' & 'Hang On Now' charted respectfully, proving that the band were no manufactured overnight sensation. Not only could these guys play their instruments, for
an all too brief moment in pop history, they shared
an intense and professional musicality; songwriting skills that burnt
with a commercial brightness that in the pop culture climate of the
time seemed set to assure a measure of longevity.
Alas, this was not to be. Sometimes the fickle finger of fate makes fall guys of the famous as fans flood away when fashions change. Sadly for Kajagoogoo it was at the height of their popularity when the band seemed to self-destruct. Sure, one can cite the pressure of
intense
recording and touring schedules taking its toll. But the friction
that developed internally within the group - later to be described
rather unsatisfactorily to their fans and
Limahl as “musical
differences” - led to the unprecedented sacking of their
charismatic frontman. The public face and, arguably, one of the faces
of the 80’s fired, but not forgotten!!
The unexpected and violent surprise of this treacherous act was highlighted in an interview with Limahl during the January 2004 VH-1 sponsored TV special Bands Reunited when the group reformed for the first time in twenty years, he said "I was devastated, it really felt like a knife in my heart".
Although the premature dissolution of Kajagoogoo Mk.1 has left us with one of the most delicious ‘what if’ questions in the history of modern pop, what better incentive did Limahl need to embark on a solo career, a task to which he addressed himself with his customary gusto.
The self penned 'Only For Love' gave him his first solo chart hit. Significantly, it was while performing this song at the Tokyo Music Festival that Limahl met legendary songwriter/producer and three-time Academy Award winner Giorgio Moroder. Moroder was
working
on a new film soundtrack and invited him to perform a then unknown
song, The Neverending Story. After reaching no'1 in over
seventeen countries, Limahl's "velvet tones" and
"quietly flamboyant" image were now indelibly printed in
the memories of millions of music lovers.
It's a long way from his roots in Wigan, (Lancashire). “My family were miners, everyone worked in factories and things like that, any ambition I had didn't seem to have the remotest chance of being real”. But it was here where the 16 year old local lad won a singing
competition at the famous 'Northern Soul' venue The Wigan
Casino. He moved to London at 18yrs old and after two years of piano
& singing lessons, and as singer with several unsuccessful groups
(one of which featured another unknown singer Mike Nolan who later
rose to fame in Bucks Fizz) Limahl finally got his first paid
job as a singer in 'Aladdin' at The Grand Theatre , Swansea, (Wales)
after a friend had introduced him to an established London theatrical
agent Barry Stacey.
"During the next three years" says Limahl "a very solid performing apprenticeship was earned" in a veritable bouquet of theatre roles including 'Benjamin' in two different
productions of
'Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat' , the disciple 'Lamar'
in 'Godspell' and a brief flirtation with acting as 'Dennis' in
Agatha Christie's 'Murder at the vicarage'.
Crucially, "Every penny I earned, I put into writing and recording demos" . Several demos later, independent record label 'Angel Records' signed the budding singer under his real name of Chris Hamill and released 'It's Christmas'. Aimed, perhaps naively, at the Xmas
mass market,
altogether the wrong kind of chart success was achieved that year
when one magazine critic placed the song in their top 20 of 'The
Worst Christmas Songs Chart’.
The follow up single 'Angel' also made no impression on the charts and the label dropped him soon after. However, these first faltering steps into a recording career remain highly collectable footnotes of 80’s pop history.
And these minor setbacks were certainly to prove no deterrent to a young Chris Hamill who
soon enough placed a bold advert in the London
musician’s Bible, Melody Maker. Ambition tends to ‘cut to the
chase’ to coin a phrase and the small ad brazenly, brassily
perhaps,
made the simple statement "looking for a band". It
worked; the ad was spotted by unknown quartet Art Nouveau who lived
in Leighton Buzzard (Bedfordshire), a leafy commuter belt town to the
north of London. After an initial audition with the band, at the
printing factory where the drummer worked, Limahl was hired.
“I think it was a real commitment on my part to leave London which I adored and move to Leighton Buzzard to be closer to the group and concentrate on the music. I remember
ringing my agent in London and
saying "don't call me with any more auditions, I'm joining a
group and leaving London" to which he must have thought "that'll
be the last we'll hear of him", but thankfully he would have
been wrong!!
A year later, with brand new songs in hand, new demos and even new names (Art Nouveau became Kajagoogoo and Chris Hamill became Limahl - an anagram of Hamill), he moved
back to London and started the
sometimes, thankless task of approaching record companies only to
frequently hear those all too familiar words, "no thanks"
or worse, the clanging silence of abject indifference.
To help pay the bills, Limahl took a part time job at London's trendiest night spot The Embassy Club as a waiter/barman. It was here that a chance meeting took place drastically changing the course of events. Indeed, just four days after chatting enthusiastically to
Duran Duran keyboard player Nick Rhodes, EMI Records were suddenly in
the picture talking record contract language with Nick Rhodes and
Duran Duran's music producer Colin Thurston, the rest, as they say,
is history.
“I was lucky, I got to live my dream but you can’t plan that, its one third talent, one third hard-work and ultimately one-third pure luck”.
After 20 years in the business, that "performing apprenticeship" has now been well and truly earned, with countless, worldwide TV, theatre, 'live' appearances and even successful music production credits to his name...... demand for Limahl is keeping those schedules as intense today as they ever were.
The recent trend in reality TV has just seen him (Feb 2004) reach the semi final in a 'Pop Idol' type TV format in Germany/Austria/Switzerland called Comeback where fan mail from 16 year olds has started to arrive again which is ironic, as these are probably the off spring of the original Limahl fans who were there the first time round.
So what does the future have in store ? Well, in this business called 'show', who knows......however, it is now quite clear that even after his own group gave him the boot,
Limahl
not only survived but has also gone on to achieve a substantial
degree of that much sought after longevity, both as a performer and
musician, long may his varied career indeed be, neverending.
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