Hermans Hermits
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Hermans Hermits Biography
Herman's Hermits were one of those odd 1960's groups that
accumulated millions of fans, but precious little respect. Indeed,
their status is remarkably similar to that of the Monkees and it's not
a coincidence that both groups' music was intended to appeal to younger
teenagers. The difference is that as early as 1976, the Monkees began
to be considered cool by people who really knew music; it has taken 35
years for Herman's Hermits to begin receiving higher regard for their
work. Of course, that lack of respect had no relevance to their
success: 20 singles lofted into the Top 40 in England and America
between 1964 and 1970, 16 of them in the Top 20, and most of those Top
Ten as well. Artistically, they were rated far lower than the Hollies,
the Searchers, or Gerry & the Pacemakers, but commercially, the
Hermits were only a couple of rungs below the Beatles and the Rolling
Stones.
The magnitude of their success seemed highly improbable, based on their
modest beginnings. Guitarist/singer Keith Hopwood (born October 26,
1946), bassist/singer Karl Green (born July 31, 1947), guitarist/singer
Derek Lek Leckenby (born May 14, 1945), and drummer Barry Whitwam
(born July 21, 1946) were among the younger musicians on the Manchester
band scene in 1963, when they started playing together as the
Heartbeats. The city was home to many dozens of promising bands, most
notable among them the Hollies, the Mockingbirds, and Wayne Fontana
& the Mindbenders. Later that year, the Heartbeats got a new member
in 16-year-old Peter Noone (born November 5, 1947), who filled in one
night when their regular vocalist failed to turn up for a gig. Noone
was already a veteran actor, trained at the Manchester School of Music
and Drama; he had been a child star on television in the late '50s, on
the television series Coronation Street, but he also had musical
aspirations. As a vocalist with the Heartbeats, he initially worked
under the name Peter Novak. The quintet followed the same path that any
other struggling band did, playing shows at youth clubs and local
dances, hoping to get noticed, and they picked up a pair of managers,
Harvey Lisberg and Charlie Silverman.
Accounts vary as to the origins of the name they ultimately adopted --
some say that their managers remarked on the facial resemblance between
Noone and the character of Sherman in the Jay Ward cartoon show Mr.
Peabody & Sherman ; others credit Karl Green with mentioning it. In
any case, Sherman became Herman and the group, in search of a more
distinct name, became Herman & His Hermits and then Herman's
Hermits. They played a pleasing, melodic brand of rock & roll,
mostly standards of the late '50s and early '60s, with Noone's
attractive vocals at the fore. Their big break came in 1964 when
producer Mickie Most was invited by Lisberg and Silverman to a show in
Manchester. He was impressed with their wholesome, clean-cut image, and
with Noone's singing and pleasant, non-threatening stage presence, and
he agreed to produce them, arranging a recording contract for the group
with the EMI-Columbia label in England; their American releases were
licensed to MGM Records.
Herman's Hermits' debut single, a Carole King/Gerry Goffin song called
I'm Into Something Good, released in the summer of 1964, hit number
one in England and number 13 in America. Ironically, considering the
direction of many of their future releases, the group displayed
anything but an English sound on I'm Into Something Good. Instead, it
had a transatlantic feel, smooth and easy-going with a kind of vaguely
identifiable California sound.
Of course, that statement assumed that the group had much to do with
the record -- as it turned out, they didn't. In a manner typical of the
majority of the acts that Most produced, the Hermits didn't play on
most of their own records; Mickie Most, as was typical of producers in
the era before the Beatles' emergence, saw no reason to make a
less-than-perfect record, or spend expensive studio time working with a
band to perfect its sound -- as long as Peter Noone's voice was on the
record and the backing wasn't something that the group absolutely
couldn't reproduce on stage, everyone seemed happy, including the fans.
Conversely, the group didn't have too much control over the choice of
material that they recorded or released. On their singles in
particular, Herman's Hermits were mostly Peter Noone's vocals in
front of whatever session musicians Most had engaged, which included
such future luminaries as Jimmy Page and John Paul Jones, with the
other members relegated to background vocals, if that.
The group was grateful for the hit records that they chalked up, the
revenue that those generated, and the gigs that resulted. They charted
six Top 20 hits each in the years 1965 and 1966 and were a major
attraction in concert, usually in a package tour situation, with the
Hermits at or near the very top of whatever bill they were on. Their
records were smooth, pleasant pop/rock, roughly the British invasion
equivalent of easy listening, which set them apart from most of the
rival acts of the period. Their cover of Sam Cooke's Wonderful World
(which reached number four in America) and remake of the Rays' 1950s
hit Silhouettes were good representations of the group's releases; on
their EPs and early LPs, they also threw in covers of old rock &
roll numbers like Frankie Ford's Sea Cruise. They were purveyors of
romantic pop/rock just at a time when the Beatles were starting to
become influenced by Bob Dylan and the Rolling Stones, the Yardbirds,
and the Who were redefining the British beat sound with higher volume,
greater complexity, and harder sounds.
Most recognized that those acts were leaving behind a huge number of
listeners who would still buy songs resembling simple, relatively
innocent sounds of 1964 or even earlier. Just how far back he and the
group could reach was revealed to them by accident, following the
release of Introducing Herman's Hermits on MGM Records in the United
States during 1965, coinciding with their first U.S. tour. An American
disc jockey heard the song Mrs. Brown You've Got a Lovely Daughter on
that album and convinced the label to issue it as a single. The song
had been done almost as a joke by the group, its guitar/banjo sound and
Noone's vocal performance -- Mancunian accented and laced with a
vulnerable, wide-eyed innocence -- deliberately reminiscent of George
Formby, the immensely popular ukelele-strumming British music hall
entertainer of the 1930s and 1940s. In England, that record would never
have been considered for release by an image-conscious rock & roll
group; the parents and grandparents of their audience would have loved
it, but it would also have destroyed their credibility. In America,
however, it was considered just another piece of British Invasion
pop/rock and a pleasant, innocuous, and eminently hummable one at that
-- and it shot to number one on the charts, earning a gold record in
the process. It seemed to slot in with Americans' image of England's
past in a comfortable, cheerful way, evoking a kind of theme park
cockney image that easily adjoined the contemporary vision of Swinging
London. In the end, Mrs. Brown, You've Got a Lovely Daughter sold 14
million copies around the world, making their first film appearance (in
the movie When the Boys Meet the Girls), which came off of that same
U.S. tour, seem almost an after-thought. In England, however, Mrs.
Brown was never issued as a single.
After that, a formula was established. Mickie Most got the group to
record more songs in the same vein, including the actual Edwardian-era
music hall number I'm Henry the Eighth, I Am, specifically for
release as singles in America. The latter record reportedly made the
group members cringe over what it would do to their image in England,
but in America it hit number one and chalked up yet another gold record
award. Amid all of this American chart action with novelty tunes and
albums that easily rose into the Top 30 in the U.S.A., the group's
British releases were a whole other story. The Hermits continued to
issue current romantic pop/rock, which sold well and kept up their
image as a respectable if somewhat soft rock group. At the same time,
their British album sales were virtually negligible, only their debut
LP ever charting (at number 16). This was unfortunate, as the British
version of their second album, Both Sides of Herman's Hermits, was a
perfectly respectable pop/rock LP with some very hard, loud sounds (and
one period standard, Leaning on a Lamp Post ), mostly solid
Brit-beat numbers like Little Boy Sad, Story of My Life, and My
Reservation's Been Confirmed, as well as a stripped-down,
straight-ahead version of Graham Gouldman's Bus Stop. That album and
its 1967 follow-ups, There's a Kind of Hush All Over the World and
Blaze (which never even came out in England), were excellent
representations of the full range of the group's sound, including hard
rock, psychedelia, and pop/rock, featuring very respectable originals
written by Green, Hopwood, and Leckenby.
While their record sales remained healthy in America well into 1966,
their British singles gradually slackened in sales until the group
recorded Graham Gouldman's No Milk Today, which put them back in the
U.K. Top 10; in America, the same song was also a hit paired off with
Dandy, a poppish cover of the Kinks song. The group made their second
film appearance, this time in a starring role in the comedy Hold On!
(1966), which mixed Herman's Hermits in a story about space flight. By
the end of that year, however, the stage was set for the gradual
decline in the group's fortunes, even in America. Producers Bert
Schneider and Bob Rafelson, in conjunction with NBC and Columbia
Pictures Television, had devised a television series that touched upon
a formula for success very similar to what Mickie Most had found with
Herman's Hermits: The Monkees -- all about a fun-loving pop/rock group
created specifically for the series.
The program debuted in late 1966 and by that winter, the Monkees were
selling millions of singles and LPs to the very same young teen
audience that Herman's Hermits had cultivated. The presence of English
actor/singer Davy Jones in their lineup, as the principal vocalist on
their records and the romantic heartthrob of the group, only heightened
the resemblance between the two acts. By 1967, Davy Jones and the
Monkees were selling millions of copies of Daydream Believer, a song
that surely would have gone to the Hermits had it been written at any
time earlier.
There's a Kind of Hush (All Over the World), a bright, upbeat pop
number, put the Hermits back at number seven in England and number four
in America; but an attempt at latching on to the folk-rock and
psychedelic booms with a recording of Donovan's song Museum never
charted in England and reached only number 37 in America before
disappearing. They made the American Top 20 just once more with Don't
Go out Into the Rain, after which everyone seemed to recognize the
inevitable. The group made one more feature film, entitled Mrs. Brown
You've Got a Lovely Daughter -- the song, which had rocketed them to
fame in America, served the group one last time, yielding a movie about
dog racing that gave Noone a lead acting role and which was a decent
box office success in 1968.
During this period, Noone co-produced a good LP for songwriter/singer
Graham Gouldman (with whom he later went into partnership) that never
sold well, despite some very interesting sounds. The Hermits, as a
group, hewed closer to the pop market after Museum and enjoyed
another two years worth of hits in England before Peter Noone decided
to leave in 1970. The group soldiered on for another three years,
cutting singles for RCA in America that were duly ignored and Noone
returned briefly to the fold in 1973 to capitalize on the rock &
roll revival boom and made an appearance hosting NBC's The Midnight
Special, in an installment devoted to the sounds of the British
Invasion, that became one of the most collectable shows in that
program's run. Thereafter, Noone tried re-entering the rock & roll
arena fronting a new band, the Tremblers, in 1980, without much
success. He fared much better on stage in The Pirates of Penzance on
London's West End, which was a huge hit in the mid-'80s. Both he and
the latter-day Herman's Hermits have turned up on the oldies circuit at
different times, usually working in the context of a revival of the
British Invasion sound. Derek Leckerby passed away in 1994 at the age
of 48, but drummer Barry Whitwam was leading a group of Herman's
Hermits at the opening of the 21st century. Noone has resumed
performing regularly and also became a star VJ on MTV's VH1 channel. In
the year 2000, Repertoire Records began the long-overdue exhumation of
Herman's Hermits album catalog, issuing state-of-the-art CD editions
with bonus tracks that show off the full range of the group's music.
Just as Rhino Records had previously done with the Monkees catalog, it
seems like Herman's Hermits may finally be getting the recognition they
deserved. ~ Bruce Eder, All Music Guide
Written by Bruce Eder