10cc

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
10cc
(l-r): Kevin Godley, Graham Gouldman, Lol Creme,Eric Stewart
Background information
Origin Stockport, England
Genre(s) Rock/Pop, Soft Rock,Classic Rock
Years active 19721995
Associated
acts
Hotlegs, Doctor Father,
Godley & Creme, Wax
Former members
Graham Gouldman
Eric Stewart
Kevin Godley
Lol Creme
Paul Burgess
Rick Fenn
Stuart Tosh
Duncan Mackay

10cc was a British pop band that achieved its greatest commercial success during the 1970s.

The band initially comprised four members, Graham Gouldman, Eric Stewart, Kevin Godley and Lol Creme, who had written and recorded together for about three years before taking on the name of 10cc in 1972. The lineup featured two strong songwriting teams who injected their songs with sharp wit and lyrical dexterity. The more "commercial" team of Stewart and Gouldman were generally fairly straightforward "pop" songwriters, who created some of the group's most accessible material. The experimental half of 10cc was Godley and Creme, who brought a distinctive "art school" sensibility and a more "cinematic" writing style to the group. All four members were skilled multi-instrumentalists, vocalists, writers and producers and each could perform convincingly as lead singers.[1]

The original lineup recorded four albums and a string of Top 10 singles. The band suffered a split in 1976, when Godley and Creme left to form Godley & Creme, leaving Gouldman and Stewart to continue touring and recording as 10cc with a variety of musicians including Rick Fenn, Stuart Tosh, Andrew Gold and Paul McCartney enlisted for each album.

The band experienced a nine-year hiatus from 1983, before releasing two more albums. There have been no albums since 1995, although in 2004 Gouldman began touring with several peripheral band members, billing themselves as "10cc featuring Graham Gouldman and Friends".

Contents

[edit] History

[edit] First collaborations, 1964-1971

Links between three of the band's founding members began in childhood in Manchester, where they grew up. Godley and Creme knew each other as children and Gouldman and Godley went on to attend the same secondary school. Their shared passion for music meant the three would often be playing at their local Jewish Lads' Brigade in their teens.

[edit] The Whirlwinds, The Sabres, The Mockingbirds,
The Yellow Bellow Boom Room, Frabjoy and Runcible Spoon (1964-1969)

The first collaboration on record of future 10cc members occurred in 1964, when Graham Gouldman's beat-group band The Whirlwinds recorded a Lol Creme composition, "Baby Not Like You", as the B-side of their only single. The Whirlwinds then changed both their line-up and name, becoming a quartet known as The Mockingbirds, with Gouldman on vocals and guitar and Kevin Godley – who had been in The Sabres with Lol Creme – recruited as drummer. The Mockingbirds issued five non-charting singles in 1965 and '66 before dissolving.[2]

In June 1967 Godley and Creme reunited and issued a single as The Yellow Bellow Boom Room ("Seeing Things Green" b/w "Still Life" on UK CBS).

In 1969 Gouldman took Godley and Creme to a Marmalade label recording session. Label boss Giorgio Gomelsky was sufficiently impressed by Godley's falsetto to offer him and Creme a recording deal. Godley & Creme recorded a number of basic tracks at Strawberry Studios in September 1969 with Stewart on guitar and Gouldman on bass.[3] One song, "I'm Beside Myself" b/w "Animal Song", was released as a single credited to Frabjoy and Runcible Spoon.

Gomelsky, a former manager of The Yardbirds, planned to market the team as a duo in the vein of Simon and Garfunkel.[4] Plans for an album by Frabjoy and Runcible Spoon faltered, however, when Marmalade ran out of funds.[4]

Before Marmalade went under, both Godley and Gouldman placed solo tracks on 100 Proof, a 1969 sampler album issued by the label. These solo tracks ("The Late Mr. Late" written and sung by Gouldman and "To Fly Away" written and sung by Godley and Creme) both involved Stewart and Creme.

Gouldman, meanwhile, was making a name for himself as a hit songwriter, penning "Heart Full of Soul" and "For Your Love" for The Yardbirds, "Look Through Any Window" and "Bus Stop"' for The Hollies and "No Milk Today", "East West" and "Listen People" for Herman's Hermits.

[edit] The Mindbenders (1965-1968)

Meanwhile, the fourth future member of 10cc was also tasting significant pop music success: guitarist Eric Stewart was a member of Wayne Fontana and the Mindbenders, a group that hit #1 with "The Game Of Love", and had scored a number of other mid-1960s hits. When Fontana left the band in 1965, the group became known simply as The Mindbenders, and Stewart became their lead vocalist. The first Mindbenders single was the hit "A Groovy Kind Of Love"; follow-up singles were either minor hits or did not chart, although they did maintain a high enough profile to merit an appearance in the 1967 film To Sir, With Love.

In mid-1968, Graham Gouldman had joined Stewart in The Mindbenders, playing on some tour dates and writing and playing on the band's final two singles, "Schoolgirl" (written by Gouldman) and "Uncle Joe the Ice Cream Man". Those singles did not chart and The Mindbenders broke up.

[edit] The birth of Strawberry Studios; the bubblegum era (1968-1970)

In the dying days of The Mindbenders, Stewart began recording demos of new material at Inner City Studios, a Stockport studio then owned by Peter Tattersall. In July 1968 Stewart joined Tattersall as a partner in the studio, where he could further hone his skills as a recording engineer.[5] In October 1968, the studio was relocated to bigger premises and renamed Strawberry Studios, after The Beatles' "Strawberry Fields Forever".[6]

In 1969 Gouldman, who had become much more in demand as a songwriter than as a performer, also began using Strawberry to record demos of songs he was writing for Marmalade. By the end of the year he, too, was a financial partner in the studios.[4]

By 1969, all four members of the original 10cc line-up were working together regularly at Strawberry Studios. Around the same time, noted American bubblegum pop writer-producers Jerry Kasenetz and Jeff Katz of Super K Productions came to England and commissioned Gouldman to write and produce formula bubblegum songs. Many of these songs were recorded at Strawberry Studios, and were either augmented or performed entirely by varying combinations of the future 10cc lineup.

Among the recordings from this period was "Sausalito", a #86 US hit credited to Ohio Express, and released in July 1969. In reality, the song featured Gouldman on lead vocal, and vocal and instrumental backing by the other three future 10cc members.

In December 1969 Kasenetz and Katz agreed to a proposal by Gouldman that he work solely at Strawberry, rather than moving constantly between Stockport, London and New York. Gouldman convinced the pair that these throwaway two-minute songs could all be written, performed and produced by him and his three colleagues, Stewart, Godley and Creme, at a fraction of the price of hiring outside session musicians. Kasenetz and Katz booked the studio for three months.

Kevin Godley recalled:[7]

We did a lot of tracks in a very short time – it was really like a machine. Twenty tracks in about two weeks – a lot of crap really – really shit. We used to do the voices, everything – it saved 'em money. We even did the female backing vocals.

The three-month project resulted in a number of tracks that appeared under various band names owned by Kasenetz-Katz, including "There Ain't No Umbopo" by Crazy Elephant, "When He Comes" by Fighter Squadron and "Come On Plane" by Silver Fleet (all three with lead vocals by Godley), and "Susan's Tuba" by Freddie and the Dreamers (which was a monster hit in France and featured lead vocals by Freddie Garrity, despite claims by some that it was Gouldman).[4]

Lol Creme remembered:

Singles kept coming out under strange names that had really been recorded by us. I've no idea how many there were, or what happened to them all.

[edit] Hotlegs, Doctor Father, The New Wave Band (1970-1971)

When the three-month production deal with Kasenetz-Katz ended, Gouldman returned to New York to work as a staff songwriter for Super K Productions while the remaining three continued to dabble in the studio.

"Neanderthal Man" Italian cover
"Neanderthal Man" Italian cover

With Gouldman absent, Godley, Creme and Stewart continued recording singles. The first, "Neanderthal Man", released under the name Hotlegs, began life as a test of drum layering at the new Strawberry Studios mixing desk, but when released as a single by Fontana Records in July 1970, climbed to No.2 in the UK charts and became a worldwide hit, selling more than two million copies. Around the same time, the trio released "Umbopo" under the name of Doctor Father. The song, a slower, longer and more melancholic version of the track earlier released under the name of Crazy Elephant, failed to chart.

Reverting to the successful band name Hotlegs, in early 1971 Godley, Creme and Stewart recorded the lone Hotlegs album Thinks: School Stinks, which included "Neanderthal Man". They then recalled Gouldman for a tour as Hotlegs, supporting The Moody Blues, recorded an obscure follow-up single "Lady Sadie" b/w "The Loser". Philips reworked their sole album, removed "Neantherthal Man" and added 'Today" and issued it as "Songs". Stewart, Creme and Godley released another single in February 1971 under yet another pseudonym, The New Wave Band, this time with former Herman's Hermits member Derek "Lek" Leckenby on guitar. The song, a cover version of Paul Simon's "Cecilia", was one of the few tracks the band released that they had not written. It also failed to chart.[8]

The band also continued outside production work at Strawberry, working with Dave Berry, Wayne Fontana, Peter Cowap, Herman's Hermits, and doing original compositions for various UK football (soccer) teams. In 1971 they produced and played on Space Hymns, an album by New Age musician Ramases; in 1972 and 1973 they co-produced two Neil Sedaka albums, Solitaire and The Tra La La Days Are Over, also playing on all tracks.

The experience of working on Solitaire, which became a success for Sedaka, was enough to prompt the band to seek recognition on their own merits. In an interview [9] in 1984, Gouldman – who by 1972 was back at Strawberry Studios – said:

It was Neil Sedaka's success that did it, I think. We'd just been accepting any job we were offered and were getting really frustrated. We knew that we were worth more than that, but it needed something to prod us into facing that. We were a bit choked to think that we'd done the whole of Neil's first album with him just for flat session fees when we could have been recording our own material.

Once again a four-piece, the group recorded a Stewart/Gouldman song, "Waterfall", in early 1972. Stewart offered the acetate to Apple Records. He waited months before receiving a note from the label saying the song was not commercial enough to release as a single.

[edit] 10cc: The original lineup, 1972-76

Undeterred by Apple's rejection, the group decided to plug another song which had been written as a possible B-side to "Waterfall", a Godley/Creme composition entitled "Donna". The song was a Frank Zappa-influenced '50s doo-wop parody, a sharp mix of commercial pop and irony with a chorus sung in falsetto. Stewart told Record Collector: "We knew it had something. We only knew of one person who was mad enough to release it, and that was Jonathan King." Stewart called King, a flamboyant entrepreneur, producer and recording artist, who drove to Strawberry, listened to the track and "fell about laughing", declaring: "It's fabulous, it's a hit."

10cc.
10cc.

King signed the band to his UK Records label in July 1972 and dubbed them 10cc. By his own account, King chose the name after having a dream in which he was standing in front of the Hammersmith Odeon in London where the boarding read "10cc The Best Band in the World". A widely-repeated claim, disputed by King[10] and Godley,[11] but confirmed in a 1988 interview by Creme,[12] is that the band name represented a volume of semen that was more than the average amount ejaculated by men, thus emphasising their potency or prowess.

"Donna", released as the first 10cc single, reached No.2 in the UK in September 1972.

Although their second single, a similarly '50s-influenced song called "Johnny Don't Do It", was not a major chart success, "Rubber Bullets", a catchy satirical take on the "Jailhouse Rock" concept, became a hit internationally and gave 10cc their first British No.1 single in May 1973. They consolidated their success a few months later with "The Dean And I", which peaked at No.10 in August. They released two singles, "Headline Hustler" (in the US) and the self-mocking "The Worst Band In The World" (in the UK) and launched a UK tour on August 26, 1973 before returning to Strawberry Studios in November to record the remainder of their second LP, Sheet Music (1973), which included "The Worst Band In The World" along with other hits "The Wall Street Shuffle" (No.10, 1974) and "Silly Love" (No.24, 1974).

"Sheet Music" became the band's breakthrough album, remaining on the UK charts for six months and paving the way for a US tour in February 1974.

In February 1975 the band announced they had signed with Mercury Records for US$1 million. The catalyst for the deal was one song – "I'm Not in Love". Stewart recalled:[13]

At that point in time we were still on Jonathan King's label, but struggling. We were absolutely skint, the lot of us, we were really struggling seriously, and Philips Phonogram wanted to do a deal with us. They wanted to buy Jonathan King's contract. I rang them. I said come and have a listen to what we've done, come and have a listen to this track. And they came up and they freaked, and they said "This is a masterpiece. How much money, what do you want? What sort of a contract do you want? We'll do anything, we'll sign it". On the strength of that one song, we did a five-year deal with them for five albums and they paid us a serious amount of money.

The Original Soundtrack, which was already complete, was released just weeks later. It was a both a critical and commercial success and featured distinctive cover art created by the Hipgnosis team and drawn by musician and artist Humphrey Ocean, RA[14]. It is also notable for its opening track, Godley & Creme's "Une Nuit A Paris (One Night In Paris)", an eight-minute, multi-part "mini-operetta" that is thought to have been an influence on "Bohemian Rhapsody" by Queen. Its melody can also be heard in the overture to Andrew Lloyd Webber's 1986 musical "Phantom of the Opera".

Although it bore an unlikely title (picked up from a radio talk show), the jaunty single "Life Is A Minestrone" (1975) was another UK Top 10 placing, peaking at No.7. Their biggest success came with the dreamy "I'm Not in Love", which gave the band their second UK No.1 in May 1975. The song also provided them with their first US chart success when the song reached No.2.

A collaborative effort built around a title by Stewart, "I'm Not in Love" is notable for its innovative production, especially its richly overdubbed choral backing.

10cc would also do some production work for Justin Hayward during this time on his single "Blue Guitar" for his "Blue Jays" project with John Lodge.

Their fourth LP, How Dare You! (1976), featuring another Hipgnosis cover, furnished two more UK Top Ten hits – the witty "Art For Art's Sake" (No.5 in December 1975) and "I'm Mandy, Fly Me" (No.7, April 1976). But by this time the once close personal and working relationships between the four members had begun to fray, and it was the last album with the original lineup.

10cc's success prompted the 1976 re-release of the Hotlegs album under the new title You Didn't Like It Because You Didn't Think Of It with two additional tracks. The title track was the epic B-side of "Neanderthal Man", a section of which had been reworked as "Fresh Air For My Mama" on the 10cc album.

[edit] The split, 1976

Soon after the release of How Dare You, Godley and Creme left 10cc to work on a project that eventually evolved into the triple LP set Consequences (1976), a sprawling concept album that featured contributions from satirist Peter Cook and jazz legend Sarah Vaughan.

Godley & Creme
Godley & Creme

The first of a series of albums by Godley & Creme, Consequences began as a demonstration record for the "Gizmotron", an electric guitar effect they had invented. The device, which fitted over the bridge of an electric guitar, contained six small motor-driven wheels attached to small keys (four wheels for electric basses); when the key was depressed, the Gizmotron wheels bowed the guitar strings, producing notes and chords with endless sustain. First used during the recording of the Sheet Music track "Old Wild Men", the device was designed to further cut their recording costs: by using it on an electric guitar with studio effects, they could effectively simulate strings and other sounds, enabling them to dispense with expensive orchestral overdubs.

In a 2007 interview with the ProgGnosis website, [15] Godley explained: "We left because we no longer liked what Gouldman and Stewart were writing. We left because 10cc was becoming safe and predictable and we felt trapped."

But speaking to Uncut magazine 10 years earlier, [16], he expressed regret about the band breaking up as they embarked on the Consequences project:

We'd reached a certain crossroads with 10cc and already spent three weeks on the genesis of what turned out to be Consequences ... The stuff that we were coming up with didn't have any home, we couldn't import it into 10cc. And we were kind of constrained by 10cc live ... We felt like creative people who should give ourselves the opportunity to be as creative as possible and leaving seemed to be the right thing to do at that moment.

Unfortunately, the band wasn't democratic or smart enough at that time to allow us the freedom to go ahead and do this project and we were placed in the unfortunate position of having to leave to do it. Looking back, it was a very northern work ethic being applied to the group, all for one and one for all. If we'd been a little more free in our thinking with regard to our work practices, the band as a corporate and creative entity could have realised that it could have been useful rather than detrimental for two members to spend some time developing and then bring whatever they'd learned back to the corporate party. Unfortunately, that wasn't to be.

Our contemporaries were people like Roxy Music who allowed that to happen and they gained from that ... Had we been allowed to get it out of our system and come back home, who knows what would have happened.

In a BBC Radio Wales interview [13] Stewart gave his side of the split:

I was sorry to see them go. But we certainly did fall out at the time. I thought they were crazy. They were just walking away from something so big and successful. We'd had great success around the world and I thought we were just breaking in a very, very big way. The collective dynamite of those four people, four people who could all write, who could all sing a hit song. In one band.

(Yet) I think it becomes claustrophobic, in the fact that you're trying to perfect things and you're looking at each other and eventually you maybe say this relationship is a little too tight for me now, and I need to break away. And that's what in retrospect, I found out long after because I still speak to Godley and Creme who – Lol is my brother-in-law, so I've got to see him – but for quite a while we didn't talk. I just said you're out of your minds for leaving this band. We were on such a winning curve, Graham Gouldman and I had to decide, are we going to be 5cc? Are we gonna scrap the name completely? Well, we thought we, no, we'd better carry on because we, this is 10cc, we are 10cc, this band. Two of our members are leaving us and that's not our problem, but we've got to carry it on.

Godley & Creme went on to achieve cult success as a songwriting and recording duo, scoring several hits and releasing a string of innovative LPs and singles. Having honed their skills on the equally innovative clips that they made to promote their own singles, they returned to their visual arts roots and became better-known as directors of music videos in the 1980s, creating acclaimed videos for chart-topping acts including George Harrison ("When We Was Fab"), The Police ("Every Breath You Take"), Duran Duran ("Girls On Film"), Frankie Goes to Hollywood ("Two Tribes") and Herbie Hancock ("Rockit"). The video for their 1985 single "Cry" is especially notable as one of the first mainstream uses of image morphing technology.

For further information see: Godley & Creme

[edit] The New Line Up: 1977-1983

After the departure of Godley and Creme, Stewart and Gouldman opted to continue as 10cc, recruiting drummer Paul Burgess (later of The Icicle Works) for session work on their next LP, Deceptive Bends (1977). The album, recorded at the newly-completed Strawberry South Studio in Dorking, Surrey, reached No. 3 in Britain and No. 33 in the US and also yielded two hit singles, "The Things We Do For Love" and "Good Morning Judge".

In 1977 10cc embarked on an international tour with guitarist Rick Fenn, keyboardist Tony O'Malley and drummer Stuart Tosh (ex-Pilot) and recorded a live album, Live And Let Live (1977), which mixed the hits with material from the previous three LPs.

Fenn, Tosh, Burgess and keyboardist Duncan Mackay were now full members of the band and performed on 1978's Bloody Tourists, which provided the band with another UK No. 1 single, the reggae-styled "Dreadlock Holiday".

The band suffered a major setback in 1979 when Stewart was seriously injured in a car crash. He told the BBC:[17]

It flattened me completely. I damaged my left ear, I damaged my eye very badly. I couldn't go near music. I couldn't go near anything loud and I love music and motor-racing. I had to stay away from both things for a long time, for about six months. And the momentum of this big machine that we'd had rolling slowed and slowed and slowed. And on the music scene, the punk thing had come in a big way. The Sex Pistols, The Clash, lots of things like that. So by the time I was fit again to play, I think we'd just missed the bus. It'd gone. And whatever we did after that, we got a few tickles here and there and we could continue touring forever on the strength of the past hits, but it didn't feel right again, we just didn't have that public with us.

Gouldman, too, considered the aftermath of Stewart's accident to be a turning point. In a 1995 BBC interview[18] he said:

Really, after '78 things went downhill for us. I don't know what it was. We'd been doing it for so long, maybe we should have had a break then, rather than in '83 when we did have a break, or brought new blood in or done something. And even as the things were getting bad, we thought, 'Ah, it's gonna be alright, don't worry about it, it'll be great'.

In early 1980 Gouldman and Stewart both released solo albums and also signed with Warner Bros. Records, producing a new 10cc offering entitled Look Hear?, featuring the single "One Two Five". All three albums featured musicians from 10cc's Bloody Tourists lineup, and all were released between February and April of 1980. Only Look Hear? appeared on charts in the UK or US.

Gouldman and Stewart subsequently jettisoned the rest of the band before returning to the Mercury label to record Ten Out of 10 (1981) as a duo. It failed to make a major impression with audiences. The UK and US versions of the albums differ, with the US version substituting three Gouldman/Stewart tracks for songs recorded with Andrew Gold.

Stewart then recorded a 1982 solo album with participation from Gouldman on one track. The duo's next 10cc LP, Windows in the Jungle, (1983) used session heavyweights including drummer Steve Gadd, but the album was dominated by Stewart; Gouldman performed no lead vocals on the record.

[edit] The hiatus: 1984-1992

After 1983, the band went into recess as Stewart produced recordings for Sad Café and Gouldman produced tracks for The Ramones before teaming up with American Andrew Gold to form the synth-pop group Wax. Stewart also worked on three Paul McCartney albums, co-writing Press to Play (1986), and also produced the album Eyes of a Woman (1985) by Agnetha Fältskog of ABBA.

[edit] 10cc reunited: 1992-1995

In 1992 the original four members reunited to record ...Meanwhile, an album produced by Gary Katz of Steely Dan fame. The album did not spawn any major hits, but was relatively well received in Japan and in Europe. It featured session musicians Jeff Porcaro on drums and Michael Landau on guitars, along with Dr. John (Mac Rebennack) on piano and Andrew Gold on guitar. All the album's songs were written by Stewart and Gouldman, with the exception of one track which was co-written by Stewart, Gouldman, and Paul McCartney.

The album was not a "reunion" in the strict sense of the word. Creme and Godley agreed to guest on the album to fulfill their obligation to Polydor -- both had owed Polydor one album when they split in the late '80s. Godley and Creme sang background vocals on several tracks on the album. Godley also sang the lead on one song, "The Stars Didn't Show".

Gouldman, in a 1995 interview,[18]was philosophical about the album: "When we finally did come back to record again, it was based on market research that our record company had done, that said a new 10cc album would do really, really well. And, ah, history has proved that wrong." Yet according to Stewart, both he and Gouldman had approached the album positively. "We wrote in a three-month period, 22 songs. Every day we were coming up with new ideas, and they were getting better and better, as far as we were concerned. And they sounded like 10cc songs again."

In 1995 the band released Mirror Mirror, produced by Gouldman, Stewart and Adrian Lee of Mike and the Mechanics, and without participation from Godley or Creme. Mirror Mirror included an acoustic version of "I'm Not in Love" which became a #29 UK hit, but overall the album did not fare very well and has been criticized for appearing to be two solo albums slapped together. The recording of the album appeared to suggest a fractured relationship between Stewart and Gouldman: aside from "I'm Not in Love", Stewart did not appear on any of the tracks Gouldman played or sang on, while Gouldman did not appear on any of Stewart's tracks. After the album's release Stewart and Gouldman parted ways again.

Stewart has since commented:[19] "10cc is well and truly finished as far as I am concerned, but I can't guarantee that GG won't try to squeeze the last drop of blood out of it. It was a great band for most of its life and should be left at that, where it had some real meaning to all of us, fans and musicians alike."

[edit] Later work

From 2000 forward, Graham Gouldman has kept the 10cc name alive, by occasionally appearing in concert with a backing band billed as "10cc featuring Graham Gouldman and Friends". This band has sometimes included one-time 10cc drummer Paul Burgess, but aside from Gouldman none of the other original members of 10cc (Godley, Creme, Stewart) have participated in these shows.

In 2001 Graham Gouldman released his third solo album, And Another Thing... (his first solo outing had been The Graham Gouldman Thing in 1968). Eric Stewart released a third solo album, Do Not Bend, in 2003. In between both events, in 2002, a reunion world tour featuring all four original members was suggested but negotations fell through at an early stage.

In January 2004 Godley and Gouldman reconvened to write more songs. Godley explained:

In a nutshell ...unfinished business. In all the years we’ve known each other we’ve only written three pure, Godley-Gouldman songs. That, and a desire to find out if the music muscle still worked with someone I enjoyed and didn’t have to spend weeks getting to know.[20]

By May 2007, Godley and Gouldman's website was offering five downloadable tracks, "The Same Road", "Johnny Hurts", "Beautifulloser.com", "Hooligan Crane" and "Son of Man". The songs are the initial "offering" of a group of songs they have been working on over the past two years.

In 2006 Lol Creme joined producers Trevor Horn and Stephen Lipson and musicians Chris Braide and Ash Soan to form The Producers. The band began recording its debut album in late 2006 and a single, "Barking Up The Right Tree" (backed with "Freeway") will be released in August 2007. Both tracks, along with an animated video by Lol Creme, have been released on MySpace.

A 2006 10cc compilation from Universal, Greatest Hits ... And More, attracted criticism both from fans who complained about one track, "Feel the Benefit", running at a slow speed and from Eric Stewart, who noted the inclusion of a disproportionately high number of Gouldman tracks at the expense of his post-10cc work. Stewart observed: "Anyone initially reading the track list could be forgiven for thinking that it should really have been called "A History of Graham Gouldman's Musical Associations"!"[21]

[edit] Discography

[edit] Singles

Year Title Peak Chart Position
UK US CAN
1972 "Donna" #2 - -
1972 "Johnny Don't Do It" - - -
1973 "Rubber Bullets" #1 #73 #76
1973 "The Dean and I" #10 - -
1974 "Headline Hustler" - - -
1974 "The Worst Band In The World" - - -
1974 "The Wall Street Shuffle" #10 #103 #87
1974 "Silly Love" #24 - -
1975 "Life Is A Minestrone" / "Lazy Ways" #7 #104 -
1975 "I'm Not in Love" #1 #2 #1
1975 "Art For Art's Sake" #5 #83 #69
1976 "I'm Mandy, Fly Me" #6 #60 #62
1977 "The Things We Do For Love" #6 #5 #1
1977 "Good Morning Judge" #5 #69 -
1977 "People In Love" - #40 #90
1978 "Dreadlock Holiday" #1 #44 #30
1978 "For You And I" - #85 #82
1980 "One Two Five" - - -
1980 "It Doesn't Matter At All" - - -
1981 "Les Nouveaux Riches" - - -
1981 "Don't Turn Me Away" - - #38
1981 "The Power Of Love" - - -
1982 "Run Away" #50 - -
1983 "Feel The Love" #87 - -
1983 "24 Hours" #78 - -
1995 "I'm Not in Love" (Acoustic re-recording) #29 - -

[edit] Studio albums

Year Title Peak Chart Position
UK US
1973 10cc #36 -
1974 Sheet Music #9 #81
1975 The Original Soundtrack #4 #15
1976 How Dare You! #5 #47
1977 Deceptive Bends #3 #31
1978 Bloody Tourists #3 #69
1980 Look Hear? #35 #180
1981 Ten Out of 10 - -
1983 Windows in the Jungle #70 -
1992 ...Meanwhile - -
1995 Mirror Mirror - -

[edit] Live albums

  • 1977 Live and Let Live (UK #14, US #146)
  • 1981 10cc in Concert (live in UK, 1977)
  • 1993 10cc Alive (double CD, live in Japan, 1993. Released in US in 1995 as two single albums, Live in Concert Vols 1 and 2 and again as an edited single album in US, Greatest Hits in Concert in 1996)
  • 1996 King Biscuit Flower Hour (live in US, 1975)
  • 2000 Live
  • 2002 Alive: The Classic Hits Tour

[edit] Compilation albums

  • 1975 100cc: The Greatest Hits of 10cc (UK #9)
  • 1979 Tropical and Love Songs
  • 1979 Greatest Hits 1972-1978 (UK #5)
  • 1979 The Things We Do for Love: Best of '76–'83
  • 1980 Best Of 10cc
  • 1987 Changing Faces: The Very Best of 10cc and Godley and Creme (UK #4)
  • 1987 The Collection (compilation of first two albums)
  • 1990 A Decade of Hits
  • 1990 Hits (early singles and B-sides)
  • 1993 The Early Years
  • 1993 Food For Thought (Compilation of later material)
  • 1997 The Very Best of 10cc (UK #37)
  • 1998 The Singles
  • 2000 Best of the Seventies
  • 2001 Two from Ten (first two albums re-released together)
  • 2001 Good News: An Introduction to 10cc (singles and B-sides)
  • 2002 Singles
  • 2002 Best Of The Early Years
  • 2002 Dressed To Kill (singles and B-sides compilation)
  • 2002 20th Century Masters: The Best Of 10cc
  • 2003 Ultimate Collection (three-disc best-of compilation)
  • 2003 Strawberry Bubblegum (collection of pre-10cc output at Strawberry Studios)
  • 2004 Complete UK Recordings 1972-1974
  • 2006 Greatest Hits ... And More
  • 2007 UK Records Singles Collection (Every A & B side from UK label days. Cherry Red label)

[edit] DVDs And Videos

  • 1985 Live in Concert (Video)
  • 1988 Changing Faces (Video)
  • 2006 Greatest Hits & More (DVD)

[edit] UK album sales certifications

  • Platinum (300,000 sales): Greatest Hits 1972-1978, Changing Faces
  • Gold (250,000 sales): Sheet Music, The Original Soundtrack, How Dare You, 100cc - Greatest Hits of 10cc, Deceptive Bends, Live and Let Live, Bloody Tourists
  • Silver (100,000 sales): 10cc

[edit] References

  1. ^ Interview with Graham Gouldman
  2. ^ Complete Mockingbirds discography at 10cc fan club website
  3. ^ "10cc : A Pure Injection Of Pop," chapter 4, by Dave Thompson, "Goldmine" magazine, April 11, 1997
  4. ^ a b c d Liner notes to Strawberry Bubblegum CD, written by David Wells, June 2003
  5. ^ Eric Stewart comment on his website
  6. ^ Eric Stewart comment on his website
  7. ^ "Zigzag" magazine, January 1975
  8. ^ "Manchester Beat" website
  9. ^ Graham Gouldman interview, "Record Collector", 1984
  10. ^ Snopes.com, "10cc"
  11. ^ Interview with Kevin Godley, Rock N Roll Universe online interview, April 2007
  12. ^ Godley & Creme interviewed in "Pulse" magazine, April 1988
  13. ^ a b Eric Stewart interview, Radio Wales, "I Write the Songs"
  14. ^ Humphrey Ocean biography at Royal Academy website
  15. ^ ProgGnosis website interview with Kevin Godley, June 23, 2007
  16. ^ Kevin Godley interview, "Uncut", 1997
  17. ^ Stewart's BBC Radio Wales interview
  18. ^ a b Graham Gouldman interviewed by Justin Hayward, BBC2, 1995
  19. ^ Reply to question by Eric Stewart at his website
  20. ^ Kevin Godley comment at GG06 website
  21. ^ Comments on Eric Stewart website, August 2, 2006

[edit] External links

Personal tools