Jonathan King
Now perhaps best known for his
extra-curricular activities with kiddies, former TV presenter and
newspaper columnist Jonathan King was once a one-man pop industry in
the UK.
It began in 1965 when, as a 19-year old
Cambridge undergraduate, he wrote and recorded Everyone's Gone To
The Moon, Number 4 in the UK and 17 in the US. Three months later,
he wrote and produced a similarly transatlantic hit in It's Good
News Week by Hedgehoppers Anonymous, a group of young Royal Air
Forcemen.
Two years later, after a spell of music
journalism and a minor US hit with Where The Sun Has Never Shone,
he produced The Silent Sun, the debut single from Genesis (King
had been at Charterhouse School with the group's founder members) and
hosted a music chat show on UK television.
Undeterred by critics of his music, King
returned to recording in 1970 with the UK Top 30 hit Let It All
Hang Out, and even by his own hyperactive standards, the next year
was particularly full.
In February, calling himself The
Weathermen, he reached the UK Top 20 with a cover of It's The Same
Old Song. He repeated this success in May as Sakkarin with a heavy
metal version of The Archies' Sugar Sugar - his po-faced
treatment of such a silly song was, apparently, a statement of
enormous irony. Next month, he had a hit under his own name with
Lazybones, and in July he produced that popular sing-a-long of
the day Leap Up and Down and Wave Your Knickers In The Air for
St Cecelia.
In December, King was in the British charts twice -
once as himself with Hooked On A Feeling, and also at Number 3
as the creative force behind The Piglets' Johnny Reggae, a
cod-Caribbean knees-up featuring TV actress Adrienne Posta on chirpy
cockney lead vocals. At the same time as all this, in September he
produced Keep On Dancing for unknown Scottish group The Bay
City Rollers. It got to Number 9 and was their only hit until
Rollermania struck in earnest three years later.
Although Jonathan King continued to have
deliberately daft hits under questionable pseudonyms - One Hundred Ton
& A Feather Shag, Athlete's Foot, Bubblerock, Father Abraphart and
so on - when he started his own label in 1972, UK Records, his roster
possessed considerable credibility - among others, 10cc, The Kursaal
Flyers and Kevin Johnson. 1978 found King standing as a Royalist
candidate in a British parliamentary election. He did not win, but
polled several thousand votes.
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