SHAKY HAS ALWAYS BEEN
SINGLE-MINDED IN HIS MUSIC. FOR YEARS HE DID IT HIS WAY, PLAYING THE
ROCK 'N' ROLL HE LOVED AND WEARING HIS DENIM CLOTHES WHEN IT WAS UNFASHIONABLE.
NOW AFTER THE STUPENDOUS SUCCESS OF THIS OLE HOUSE, YOU DRIVE ME CRAZY, GREEN DOOR
AND HIS ALBUM SHAKY, FASHION HAS AT LAST CAUGHT UP WITH HIM. THIS IS THE BOOK FOR THIS
THOUSANDS OF FANS; HOW HE GREW UP AND GOT HIS BIG BREAK, SUCCESS AND WHAT IT HAS DONE
TO HIM AND HIS HOPES FOR THE FUTURE. AFTER SEEING ONE OF MY SHOWS THEY GO HOME HAPPY.
I see myself as a doctor:'says Shakin Stevens'; People leave home
miserable but after seeing one of my shows they go home happy: I act as a
kind of tonic!' Anyone who has attended one of Shaky's concerts will verify
that the singer has a winning bed-side manner and that his fans seem to
thrive on the medicine that he prescribes. But this particular doctor wears
a salmon-pink, drape jacket not a white coat and holds a microphone
instead of a stethoscope. Shakin' Stevens is a major pop star who cures
his audience by giving them massive doses of vintage rock 'n'roll. The 33
year old singer from Wales had his first hit in February last year when the
driving rocker 'Hot Dog' reached number 24 in the charts. Since then Shaky
- as he is affectionately known - has chalked up a string of huge hits,
undertaken massively successful concert tours and appeared on television
more often than Prince Charles and Lady Diana. But, like most 'Ovemight
Successes: he has worked for years to learn his trade. The real story starts
here. Michael Barratt was born in South Wales on the 4th March, 1948. The
youngest of 11 children, Shaky grew up in a house that was always full of
music. "There were lots of records played at home: 'he remembers,
from AI Jolson to Hoagy Carmichael" Just how much notice the embryonic
rock 'n'roller took of the music on the radio and television in his infancy is
debatable. But it is astonishing how many times Shakin' Stevens has
returned to the music that he grew up with.
When he was six years old Rosemary Clooney topped the British
charts with the original version of 'This Ole House! When he was an eight year old
toddling off to school Frankie Vaughan was taking 'Green Door' into the Top Ten.
When he was ten years old Jack Good launched the original 'Oh Boy!' television series
on I1V Shaky's past has a habit of catching up with him but fanciful versions of our
hero hearing 'This Ole House' as a six year old and deciding to be a pop star are
dispelled by this story: The very first time I ever heard the song was just before
Christmas 1980;' reveals Shaky. I was visiting a friend who has this collection of old
records. He pulled out 'This Ole House' by Rosemary Clooney and played it for me.
I was amazed that no-one had released a cover version since 1954 and I just knew that
I had to record the song!' Despite assuring us that he was not brainwashed into being a
singer as a toddler, Shaky admits that he always wanted to be a rock 'n' roll singer.
He won first prize in a fancy dress competition at primary school by dressing up as a
rock 'n' roller and, even then, his attention to detail was considerable - his teacher
made him remove his chewing gum. I never wanted to be anything but a rock 'n'roll
singer:' he admits. "My dad went down the pits at the age of 15 and got out as fast
as he could. No way was I going to become a miner. I only wish my father was alive to see
my success. In the early days - while I wasn't even making records, he used to carry my
picture around with him. 'That's my boy;' he'd tell his mates, 'He's a singer you know.
'All my family are quite chuffed because they know that it's been an upward climb for me.
When I was last in Cardiff doing a concert, 96 of the family turned up. Now you know why
I'm getting number one records! Throughout his early years Shaky enjoyed life with his
large family; absorbed a myriad of musical influences and nurtured the ambition to become
an entertainer. He watched and listened, learned and waited. His music teacher was im
pressed with his determination but took a dim view of our hero's penchant for rock 'n' roll.
'1 hate your voice: said my teacher encouragingly; 'but keep up the singing. Someone else
might be fool enough to like it! The history of popular music is littered with Famous Last
Words like these.
...'I HATE YOUR VOICE' SAID MY TEACHER ENCOURAGINGLY.
An American critic once wrote, Elvis Presley is a 21 year old sex maniac
with greasy hair, dirty songs and no future:' John Lennon's Aunt Mimi once took him to one
side and told him: The guitar's all right as a hobby but it'll never earn you a living:'
Shaky's music teacher may have known about crotchets and quavers, but obviously did not
recognize talent. With the advice of the teacher still ringing in his ears, Mike Barratt
left school and looked for a job to tide him over until he could become a professional
musician. It took him just four years to put the factory floor behind him forever.
'When I left school at fifteen I became an upholsterer by day and a singer
by night:' Shaky recalls, "A few of us formed this group and I was picked as a front man.
That was the bit I liked. The band didn't last long but I had the taste so when the rest dropped
out I carried on: So Shaky turned out armchairs by day and pulled in the crowds by night. He
learned his trade the hard way - by playing all sorts of venues in all sorts of places. Like
many of his contemporaries, Shaky ate so many meals in motorway cafes that he almost became
addicted to grease.
In 1969 he supported the Rolling Stones at a concert in London at The
Saville Theatre. It looked as if fame was just around the comer but Shaky had to wait
another eight years for his big break. But the hard work on the road was helping to build
up a following. In 1970 he celebrated his nineteenth birthday by turning professional and
recording his first album, 'Legend,' which was produced by fellow Welshman Dave Edmunds.
Shakin'Stevens and the Sunsets hit the road with a vengeance and toured almost continuously
from 1970 to 1977 when Shaky was offered a part in the West-End musical, 'Elvis: "
Before 'Elvis' I was paying my dues; he explains.
I played universities and clubs up and down the motorways, taking
the rough with the smooth. It was landing the part in the musical that made me - that
was the turning point. In the old days we'd leave Cardiff at 6 a.m. and go straight
to Aberdeen, hurriedly change in a cramped room, play our music and then
worry about finding a place to sleep. Most nights we'd just sleep in the van, we
certainly couldn't afford hotels. My first fee as a singer was £6 for 6 hours work
and it had to be divided between 6 of us!
But throughout all of the hard times Shakin'Stevens performed
vintage rock 'n'roll music and so he, understandably; resents the critics who say
that he is cashing in on the post-punk boom in simple rock music. In his opinion -
he is not keeping up with the times, the times have simply caught up with him. The
rockabilly boom, spearheaded by artists such as The Stray Cats and Matchbox, is just
one example of the need to return to basics which has become evident in the wake of
the punk and new wave explosions. Shakin' Stevens' success may be part of the same
movement but he has been playing the same music for fifteen years and so he can
hardly be accused of jumping onto the bandwagon. I suppose I have to thank punk
music for getting back to basics: 'he admits. It did pave the way for rock 'n' roll
again!' But, as he is quick to point out, Shakin' Stevens and The Sunsets stuck to
Rock 'N' Roll throughout the lean years - even when the music was distinctly
unfashionable. 'We always stuck to our guns. We rehearsed in back sheds, then began
playing seedy clubs and church halls. We spent our lives driving up and down motorways,
sleeping in vans and often having to wait for the A.A. to rescue us. At a few places
the audience would hiss and boo, tell us we were old hat or throw the odd beer can, but
mostly we attracted a loyal following of genuine rock 'n'rollers!'
Even when the rest of the country seemed to be joining the
hippy revolution the band kept performing good-time rock 'n' roll music.
Psychedelia, flower power, drugs, alternative religions, political stances,
sophisticated contemporary pop music from The Beatles, folk rock from Bob Dylan - nothing
tempted them from the straight and narrow confines of their chosen calling. A chap came
round once to show me his jeans:' remembers Shaky. "He'd frayed the bottoms and
put patches all over the place. He said he was freaking out and that this was
the scene to get into. I told him he'd ruined a perfectly good pair of jeans! It wasn't
my scene anyway. So I carried on wearing the clothes that I liked and carried on playing
the music that I liked. It was always rock 'n' roll. Even when we used to do gigs with
the freaks sitting cross-legged on the floor saying that they'd seen God. Mind you,
by the end of the show they were on their feet dancing!;
But while the band was building up a following and polishing
their stage act, chart success eluded them. Seeing that law suits are still
flying around relating to this period of his career, Shaky is understandably
reticent on the subject. It would appear, however, that one-off deals and limited
pressings were the order of the day: I didn't receive a penny from the stuff I did
with The Sunsets:' says Shaky. You need involvement from a record company and good
management if you're going to make it. I feel that I've got the right set-up now.
I've got a good manager, more say in what I record and more copies are being pressed.
Noway can you make the charts with only a few hundred copies being made:' But back
to 1977. All Shaky had to show for the years of hard work was lots of experience and
a knowledge of Britain's road system that would shame many a long distance lorry driver.
Like other artists treading the long and winding road that leads from Obscurity to Stardom
he found that talent and experience were not enough. He needed some luck and he needed a
helping hand. It was at this point that rock entrepreneur Jack Good entered stage left
waving a magic wand and doing a rather fine impression of a fairy godmother.
Jack Good is one of popular music's mavericks. He is an
intellectual who loves rock 'n' roll and can recite Shakespeare's sonnets as well
as he can recite Chuck Berry's lyrics. He is, in short, a character. Wearing
black spectacles and a permanent, enthuasistic smile, he came into Shaky's life and
began to make things happen. Educated at Balliol College, oxford, Good had been the
enfant -terrible of British Television in the Fifties. He had produced the
legendary '6.5 Special' for the B.B.C. and then joined! TV to launch 'Oh Boy! As
well as producing two of the most innovative! pop shows on television, he found time
to create images! for Cliff Richard and Adam Faith before departing for America.
During his time in the States Good made the television series 'Shindig: put together
stage musicals! promoted tours and produced television spectaculars for Andy Williams
and The Monkees. 1977 found him back in London organising the stage musical 'Elvis!
Good looked around for somebody to play Presley between the time that he met 'Colonel'
Parker and the time he enlisted in the United States' Army. He gave
Shakin' Stevens the part and the rest! as they say; is history.
'Elvis' was voted 'The Best Musical of The Year' and played to
about eight thousand people a week for nineteen months. By anybody's standards the
show at the Astoria Theatre was a critical and commercial success. Jack Good was
so impressed that he asked Shaky to star in two television series a revamped 'Oh Boy!'
and 'Let's Rock.' Shakin' Stevens was on his way to the top. But like many people who
find success after years of effort, the singer suddenly came under fire from the c
ritics. He was subjected to a torrent of vicious criticism and he was accused
of being a Presley ;imitator, a second rate Elvis. The memory of that criticism
still rankles. Shakin' Stevens is Shakin' Stevens:' he says defiantly. I don't
look like Elvis and I haven't moulded myself on him. I think about the Elvis tag a
lot but Jack Good was not looking for an impersonator, he wanted someone who
could put across the feel. To be honest, I was never much of an Elvis fan myself.
I respected him a lot and, let's face it, he was the launching pad for everything
that's happened in pop music. I look upon Elvis as a great enter-tainer and I
respect him for what he did for music. That is why I turned down the part at first.
It was only when I became convinced that the, musical was going to be a tribute
not a send-up that I agreed to appear in it. Shaky not only dislikes comparisons
with Elvis, he also hates to hear people say that he is selling nostalgia or that
he is part of a rock 'n' roll revival.
;...I'm a 1980's artist, doing 1980's Rock 'n' Roll.;
;Revival? I don't like the word at all:' he confesses, It's stupid. I'm a 1980's
artist doing 1980's rock 'n' roll. You have to look forwards not backwards.
You can't revive rock 'n' roll it's never gone away. Jack Good agrees. Rock
'n' roll is no more nostalgic than Verdi's 'Requiem: It's classic material. Not so
much 'Do you remember?' as 'How can you forget? After the success of
'Elvis: Shaky quietly consolidated his success and things really began to take
off after he signed a management deal in December 1979 with a dynamic
lady named Freya Miller.
Just two months later Shakin' Stevens made the charts for the first time with
'Hot Dog'. By August he was in the top twenty with 'Marie Marie' and in March
1981 he topped the charts with 'This Ole House! The Overnight Success had
arrived at last - after just 11 years of hard slog. But why did things just slot
into place after all those years of near misses? There was no strategy; says
Shaky's manager Freya Miller. It was just a matter of working together and
putting out the right thing at the right time. The talent's always been there.
It was just a matter of getting the right format which we evidently did!'
Nowadays Shakin'Stevens does not have to sleep in the van anymore. During
the last year his records have sold well all over the world and the financial
rewards have been considerable. He now lives in his own luxurious home in
Surrey, has a veritable mountain of gold and silver dics and drives a Cadillac
Deville. If you visit his dressing room these days you'll find him shipping dry
white wine which his contracts stipulate has to be provided by the mana-
gement. He is a star at last.
His international success is staggering. He has had number one hits in
Australia, Belgium, Israel and South Africa and he has also charted in Germany;
France and Holland. The success of the 'Let's Rock' television series in
America might even have paved the way for success over there too. If Shaky
does eventually make it in the States it will be an irony that his father might
have appreciated. A Welsh miner's son selling coals to Newcastle by exporting
rock 'n' roll to America. And what about that other ironical situation? Why does
an ex-upholsterer drive around in a luxuriously upholstered Cadillac? "I
thought about a Rolls Royce:' says Shaky with a grin, "But a Cadillac is more
like a rock 'n' roll car so I decided on that!' Watching Shakin' Stevens perform
his chart-topping hits on 'Top of the Pops' it is easy to see why he has been so
success-ful. The apprenticeship that he served has stood him in good stead -
he is now a trained crafts-man, a true professional. The years on the road and
the months on the stage in the West End have equipped him with an armoury
of skills. He flashes that mean and moody look, shakes that famous right leg,
moves every muscle of his.six foot one frame. He involves the studio
audience, captivates and mesmerises. On a show where clever but clinical
promotional videos have become all powerful he is like a breath of fresh air.
He is not an anachronism, he is not selling nostalgia - he is selling enter-
tainment. He is, as he put it him-self, "a 1980's artist doing 1980's rock
'n' roll!' But, while Shakin' Stevens is tremendously effective on television,
you have to see him on stage to appreciate just how much he controls and
dominates his fans. His concerts sell out and the scenes in front of the stage
bring to mind flashes of different eras.
Young girls scream as if they were at a Beatles' concert, people jive in
the aisles as if Bill Haley and his Comets were playing 'Rock Around the Clock'
again. Everybody has a good time, especially the tour promotors and the
owners of the theatres. In Liverpool they had to get police dogs out to control
the crowds backstage," says Shaky. "The manager of the Empire told us that
we were the first act to fill the place for nineteen months. At the moment
nobody's doing any business except us.
We're not leaving places half empty, we're getting, 'Why don't
you play here again tomorrow?' People come along to my concerts in family groups, they're
looking for a good time:' And everybody does enjoy themselves at Shakin'
Stevens concerts. Rock 'n' roll always was one big technicolour movie. Pink
socks, blue chevrolets, white shoes, green dollar bills and greasy; black hair.
The music was the soundtrack and Shaky's concerts take you back to the time
when rock 'n' roll was about cruising down the highway listening to the radio,
dating the girl next door, having fights with your parents and dreaming of
being a star.
... I DON'T SET OUT TO BE SEXY.
And yet, curiously, the music is not being revived as such.
How can it be nostalgic when so many of the audience are teenyboppers who don't even
remember The Beatles let alone Elvis, Gene Vincent or Eddie Coachran?
Back to the technicolour movie. Shaky is wearing a pink jacket, black
trousers and white, crepe-soled shoes. He is juggling whith the micro-
phone stand, shaking his legs like a drunk at a bus stop and grinding his
pelvis as if he had never heard of Mary Whitehouse. I don't set out to be
sexy. He maintains, but when the beat gets going my legs and pelvis go
wild. I don't get up there to be a sex symbol. That's the way that the music
takes me. It's my way of putting over a song.
The star of the movie sings his hits - 'Hot Dog,' 'Marie Marie:
'This Ole House'- they are all greeted with cheers and screams by the audience.
Policemen in blue uniforms, ladies with blue rinses, ten year olds with white socks and
thirty year olds with green jackets and pink ties. The colours are amazing.
Shaky plays his part in the movie with great skill and the fact that he does act
out his role is demonstrated by the difference between Shakin'Stevens on
stage and Mike Barratt behind the scenes. The mask slips in private. The
brash, confident performer becomes an engagingly shy 30 year old from
Wales. Away from the spotlight he seems like the sort of bloke who would
be too self-conscious to make a speech at a wedding let alone shake his
pelvic structure in front of thousands of people. That's how good a per-
former he is.
But who does he think he's performing for?
Rock 'n' roll is for everybody. It's not something to " be kept in a box
in the front room. It's for all ages. My audience is right across the board.
From youngsters to married couples to pensioners. I've met an 18 month old baby
whose dad tells me that the child likes banging his little toy hammer on the
furniture when my songs are playing, and I've met grandmothers who have bought
all of my records. I don't think rock 'n' roll is just all that teddy boy stuff.
I don't think you have to dress like a rock 'n' roller to like it. Anyway,
rock 'n' roll is just a term that includes swing, jazz, country; rhythm and blues.
It doesn't just mean 'Long Tall Sally' and 'Blue Suede Shoes!
In the halcyon days of the Sixties, pop columnists used to judge success by
such strange criteria as fan mail and fans' detennination to reach their idols.
Shaky is doing well in both areas. He gets thousands of fan letters every
week and one from Holland arrived safely even though it was just marked
'Shakin' Stevens, England.' Then there was the girl on a recent tour who tried
to bribe a hotel porter with £50 to find out Shaky's room number. Another
interesting pointer is what other stars think of your success. How did
veteran entertainer Frankie Vaughan take to this young whippersnapper
having a hit with 'Green Door,' for example?
It proves you can't keep a good song down;' says Frankie, I'm also
thrilled because his version is similar to mine. When I met Shaky he told me
that he always listened to my records when he was young. I hope he stays
in the hit parade as long as I did." Frankie Vaughan, Jack Good, girls with
£50 to spare, 18 month old babies with toy hammers, married couples, old
aged pensioners, teddy boys - the list of Shaky's admirers is long and
impressive.But enough of the past and the present - what of the future?
More hits and more standing room only concerts are assured but what about
the music? Will there be more versions of old hits from the fifties? Probably.
Shaky loves the fifties but his musical tastes are a lot broader than one might
suppose. "I like music from the thirties and forties as well and I also like
what's happening today. But fifties' songs have the ability to make people
happy. It was a very optimistic era!'
And perhaps the inherent optimism that is evident in all of
Shaky's work is one of the reasons for his success. Just as paperback sales have soared
during the recession, which indicates that people need escapism when
times are bad, so the sight of Shaky clicking his fingers and stomping his feet
on the television represents a valuable escape valve in these troubled times.
But will Shakin' Stevens continue to perform his good-time brand of rock 'n'
roll music or will even he be forced eventually to change with the times? It is
highly unlikely that he will change the music that he has been
.. I HOPE ONE OF MY SONGS, WILL LIVE ON AFTER I'M GONE.
playing for over fifteen years, but we might well expect to find
more new songs in his repertoire in the future. And those songs could well be written
by the man himself. Fans who have bought the album 'This Ole House' will have noticed
that the tracks 'Baby If We Touch' and 'Make It Right Tonight' were composed by Shaky
and this is an area of his career that he wants to expand in the future. Yes, I'm writing
more of my own songs now;" he says. "Like any other writer I hope that one of my
songs will live on after I'm gone!'
Looking back on his career, what were some of the most memorable
moments? "Landing the part of Elvis:' he cites as one of the highlights.
"That meant that the days of living with my Mum were over."But it was
while Shaky was working on a Madrid television show that a telephone call
brought him the best news that he had ever heard. "Guess what, 'This Ole
House' has reached number one:' said a voice and Shaky knew that he had
really made the big time. "1 was speechless:' he recalls, "It was the best
moment of my life!' But stardom brings its problems. Travelling between
concerts and on European tours can be a problem because Shaky is petrified
of aeroplanes. "I hate flying," he admits, "I get so frightened that I
break out in a cold sweat." Apart from a fear of flying Shaky seems to have
everything under control these days. Even his coverage in the media is rigidly regulated
and, for an artist of his stature, he gives relatively few press interviews. His
privacy is jealously guarded by manager Freya Miller who has been known to interrupt
journalists in the middle of an interview and deflect personal questions. Her policy
of shielding Shaky and his private life from the media has been so successful that even
the singer's marriage was a closely guarded secret until recently:
Freya - who models herself on Elvis Presley's manager 'Colonel'
Tom Parker - ran a cover-up campaign with military-style efficiency: Shaky's wife Carole
had kept in the background before their marriage was made public and only
close mends and I confidantes were aware that the rock 'n'roll singer is also
a family man with three children (Jason, aged 8, Paula, aged 6, and baby-
Dean). Many pop stars have kept their private lives private but Shaky went to
the lengths, of listing himself as Clark Kent on the electoral register. Married
or not, he is likely to remain a Superman to his thousands of fans. Freya
makes it very clear that she feels sales statistics are far more important than
private likes and dislikes or Shaky's marital status. "He is the first ever CBS
artist with three singles concurrently in the German Top 30," she says proudly
and obviously believes that this piece of information is infinitely more
interesting than what Shaky eats for breakfast. The singer's slight distrust of
the press goes back to the scathing criticism that he experienced after
playing Presley in the musical 'Elvis! He not only rations interviews carefully
but admits that he has his own system which affects how many he does in the
future. "We have two boxes, "he reveals, "A red box and a black box.
The ones with the bad interviews go in the black box and we don't do
interviews with that person ever again - or even with the paper. Shaky's whole attitude
is admirably positive. He stuck to his kind of music throughout all of the hard times and,
now that he is successful, he is still as determined and ambitious as he was in the beginning.
He is happy to take criticism which he believes is constructive but has little time for
the knockers and the trendy critics in music papers who sneer at his popularity. His record
sales and the range of people who attend his concerts indicate just how
popular he is. Now that he has finally made it to the top he intends to stay
there for a long time. And so we come to the end of our story. Mike Barratt -
the miner's son from Wales is now a big star called Shakin' Stevens who lives
in Surrey. "My way of relaxing is just to get out and walk in the fresh, country
air, "he says and you believe him. He has an unmistakeable air of integrity
and he says so little about his private life and his personal preferences that
what he does reveal has the ring of truth about it. Shaky likes walking in the
country and hates keeping his white boots clean. His favourite breakfast is
scrambled eggs, his favourite drink is dry, white wine. His favourite perfonner
is Bruce Springsteen.
I SEE MYSELF AS A KIND OF A DOCTOR.
I see myself as a kind of doctor:' says Shaky and that is as good
a description as any. Most of his patients seem to be thriving and, thanks to Shaky
and one or two others, rock 'n' roll itself is alive and well in the space- age
1980's. The doctor in the salmon-pink, drape jacket is still on the case. He
enjoys his work and looks like having busy surgeries for many years to come.
Shaky Dates:
1948:
Born on the 4th March.
1954:
Rosemary Clooney tops the Brithish charts with the original version of
'This ole house.' Shaky is six years old and only interested in eating sweets and
ice cream.
1956:
Frankie Vaughan has a bit hit with his cover version of the American
success - 'Green door.' Shaky is eight years old and is still only interested in
eating sweets and ice cream.
1958:
Jack Good launches the original 'Oh Boy!' pop shows on ITV. Shaky is now
ten years old and his right leg is beginning to twitch ominously every time he hears
rock 'n' roll records. (He spills a lot of sweets and ice cream)
1966:
Shaky is now 18 years old and leaves school to start work as an upholsterer.
1969:
Supports the Rolling Stones at London's Saville Theatre
1970:
Celebrates his 22nd birthday by turning professional. Shakin'Stevens
and The Sunsets hit the road and Dave Edmunds produces Shaky's first
album - 'Legend.'
1977:
Jack Good gives him his chance in the show 'Elvis' in the West End.
Between 1977 and 1980 Jack Good also features Shaky in the revamped 'Oh Boy!'
and the 'Let's Rock' television series.
1978:
First single for Epic Records - 'Treat Her Right.'
1980:
First hit - 'Hot Dog.'
1981:
First number one hit - 'This Ole House' which tops the charts for three weeks.
1981:
'You Drive Me Crazy' makes the number two slot and 'Green Door' becomes
Shaky's second number one hit. His album 'Shaky' is released in September and a
major tour is planned for November.