Tom Hooker
Looking for love
Tom Hooker
Source: Wikipedia
Tom
Hooker or Thomas Barbey (born Thomas Beecher Hooker on November
18, 1957) is an American singer and photographer. Barbey, best known
as Tom Hooker, was brought
to Europe when he was six months
old. At the age of ten, he started his musical career as a drummer.
At 13, he created his first band. At 15, he first appeared in public
at a concert as a drummer/singer. He studied languages in
Switzerland.
In
1980, he moved to Italy, where he was discovered by Italian
producers. His first hit was "Flip Over", b/w the track "We
Can Start It All Over Again". He had his first major success in
1986 with "Looking for Love". His later work
included collaborations with several other artists and producers,
including Eddy Huntington, for whom he provided several lyrics,
including those for the Europe-wide hit "USSR".
By
1988, he moved to photography and his music style changed with his
single "No More Heaven". His last single was "Run
Away", which was a commercial failure. Hooker co-wrote and sang
lead vocals on the first two Den Harrow albums, and co-wrote many
subsequent
Den Harrow songs under the name T. Beecher. When Hooker
was credited for vocals at all, it was only for background vocals, as
it was the producer's intention to have a lip-synching model to be
the public face of Stefano Zandri, the project's lead vocalist.
In
2010, Tom Hooker recorded and published on YouTube a press
conference-style video in which Hooker, flanked by Den Harrow
co-producer Miki Chierigato, states and demonstrates that he was the
vocalist on most of the Den Harrow records, and in which he
accuses
Stefano Zandri of continuing to publicly lip synch to those
recordings. He also states that Zandri made threats and insults
against Hooker and his family on Facebook for
exposing the vocal
inauthenticity of the Den Harrow recordings. Hooker asserts that
Zandri no longer has permission to publicly lip sync to Den Harrow
recordings that use Tom Hooker's voice.
In
1994, Hooker left the music scene to move to America to marry Suzanne
Berquist. He eventually moved to Los Angeles and changed his name to
Thomas Barbey, his mother's maiden name. He began a career as a
visual artist, creating surreal photographs, called photomontage. He
currently exhibits in galleries in many countries around the world.
In
October 2010, Hooker collaborated with his longtime musical colleague
and fellow composer, Miki Chieregato, to produce and release a brand
new single and video, "Change Your Mind". This
collaboration marks the return to the roots of the same production
team
that was responsible for all of the initial Den Harrow and Tom
Hooker output between 1985 and 1988. In 2011, Hooker released a
new recording and music video of the Den Harrow track "Future
Brain", which features himself.
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