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  • CDEMI70039
  • 0.3
(EMI) 89 Titel, originale Klassiker und Raritäten aus den EMI Archiven mit 8 Seiten Booklet.... mehr

Helen Shapiro: The Ultimate - 50th Anniversary (3-CD)

(EMI) 89 Titel, originale Klassiker und Raritäten aus den EMI Archiven mit 8 Seiten Booklet. Essential!
'Auf vollen drei CDs widmet sich diese schön aufgemachte Zusammenstellung der langen und erfolgreichen Karriere von Helen Shapiro.' (Good Times, 04.05.2011)

Artikeleigenschaften von Helen Shapiro: The Ultimate - 50th Anniversary (3-CD)

  • Interpret: Helen Shapiro

  • Albumtitel: The Ultimate - 50th Anniversary (3-CD)

  • Label EMI

  • Genre Pop

  • Artikelart CD

  • EAN: 5099907003929

  • Gewicht in Kg: 0.3
Shapiro, Helen - The Ultimate - 50th Anniversary (3-CD) CD 1
01 Don't Treat Me Like A Child Helen Shapiro
02 You Don't Know Helen Shapiro
03 Walkin' Back To Happiness Helen Shapiro
04 Tell Me What He Said Helen Shapiro
05 Let's Talk about Love Helen Shapiro
06 Little Miss Lonely Helen Shapiro
07 Keep Away From Other Girls Helen Shapiro
08 Queen For Tonight Helen Shapiro
09 Woe Is Me Helen Shapiro
10 Not Responsible Helen Shapiro
11 Look Who Is It Helen Shapiro
12 Fever Helen Shapiro
13 Look Over Your Shoulder Helen Shapiro
14 Shop Around Helen Shapiro
15 I Wish I'd Never Loved You Helen Shapiro
16 Tomorrow Is Another Day Helen Shapiro
17 Here In Your Arms Helen Shapiro
18 Something Wonderful Helen Shapiro
19 Forget About The Bad Things Helen Shapiro
20 In My Calendar Helen Shapiro
21 Make Me Belong To You Helen Shapiro
22 She Needs Company Helen Shapiro
23 When I'm With You Helen Shapiro
24 Marvellous Lie Helen Shapiro
25 Kiss 'N' Run Helen Shapiro
26 I Apologise Helen Shapiro
27 I Don't Care Helen Shapiro
28 Ole Father Time Helen Shapiro
29 Sometime Yesterday Helen Shapiro
30 An Empty House Helen Shapiro
31 I Was Only Kidding Helen Shapiro
Shapiro, Helen - The Ultimate - 50th Anniversary (3-CD) CD 2
01 Tip Toe Through The Tulips Helen Shapiro
02 After You've Gone Helen Shapiro
03 Goody Goody Helen Shapiro
04 Birth Of The Blues Helen Shapiro
05 I Want To Be Happy Helen Shapiro
06 Little Devil Helen Shapiro
07 Will You Love Me Tomorrow Helen Shapiro
08 Because They're Young Helen Shapiro
09 The Day The Rains Came Helen Shapiro
10 Are You Lonesome Tonight Helen Shapiro
11 A Teenager In Love Helen Shapiro
12 Lipstick On Your Collar Helen Shapiro
13 Beyond The Sea (La Mer) Helen Shapiro
14 Sweet Nothin's Helen Shapiro
15 You Mean Ev'rything To Me Helen Shapiro
16 I Love You Helen Shapiro
17 You Got What It Takes Helen Shapiro
18 My Guy Helen Shapiro
19 All Alone Am I Helen Shapiro
20 He's A Rebel Helen Shapiro
21 Move Over Darling Helen Shapiro
22 Keep Your Hands Off My Baby Helen Shapiro
23 Remember Me Helen Shapiro
24 Walk On By Helen Shapiro
25 The End Of The World Helen Shapiro
26 It Might As Well Rain Until September Helen Shapiro
27 Baby It's You Helen Shapiro
28 Please Mr. Postman Helen Shapiro
29 It's In His Kiss Helen Shapiro
30 Stay Helen Shapiro
Shapiro, Helen - The Ultimate - 50th Anniversary (3-CD) CD 3
01 It's My Party Helen Shapiro
02 I Cried Myself To Sleep Last Night Helen Shapiro
03 Young Stranger Helen Shapiro
04 Here Today & Gone Tomorrow Helen Shapiro
05 No Trespassing Helen Shapiro
06 I'm Tickled Pink Helen Shapiro
07 I Walked Right In (With My Eyes Wide Open) Helen Shapiro
08 Sweeter Than Sweet Helen Shapiro
09 You'd Think He Didn't Know Me Helen Shapiro
10 when You Hurt Me I Cry Helen Shapiro
11 St. Louis Blues Helen Shapiro
12 Blues In The Night Helen Shapiro
13 A Teenager Sings The Blues Helen Shapiro
14 Without Your Love Helen Shapiro
15 Who Is She? Helen Shapiro
16 Time And Time Again Helen Shapiro
17 Every One But The Right One Helen Shapiro
18 It's Alright With Me Helen Shapiro
19 Basin Street Blues Helen Shapiro
20 I Believe In Love Helen Shapiro
21 I Can't Say No To Your Kiss Helen Shapiro
22 A Dozen Other Boys Helen Shapiro
23 You're My Remedy Helen Shapiro
24 I'm Going Out (The Same Way I Came In) Helen Shapiro
25 Just A Line Helen Shapiro
26 It's So Funny I Could Cry Helen Shapiro
27 Frag' Mich Night Warum Helen Shapiro
28 Parlons D'Amour Helen Shapiro
29 Stop And You'll Become Aware Helen Shapiro
Helen Shapiro She was born Helen Kate Shapiro on 28th September 1946 in Bethnal Green,... mehr
"Helen Shapiro"

Helen Shapiro


She was born Helen Kate Shapiro on 28th September 1946 in Bethnal Green, London, the granddaughter of Russian Jewish immigrants. Her parents were pieceworkers in the garments industry and she had a fairly straightforward - if underprivileged - working class upbringing, spending her early childhood in council house in Clapton. She attended Northwold Primary School followed by Clapton Park Comprehensive, where she picked up the nickname 'Foghorn', for the extraordinarily deep timbre of her voice..
By now it was apparent to everyone who saw and heard Helen that she was an exceptional prospect and at the age of thirteen she began taking lessons at The Maurice Burman School Of Modern Pop Singing, in London's Baker Street, where Alma Cogan had famously learned her trade. Once there she proved a fast learner, to the extent that after just six months, Burman was eager to show her off.


He approached EMI Records' Norrie Paramor and invited him to come and listen to seven of his students, with a view to perhaps giving them some advice. Paramor sent his assistant, John Schroeder, who duly assessed all seven but was transfixed by Helen - as he recalled, many years later: "...the door opened and she confidently walked in, gave the sheet music to the pianist, and launched into 'The Birth Of The Blues'. I say launched, because the performance was truly amazing. There was a touch of Jazz and Soul about her phrasing, as though she had been singing for years. She sounded so professional, and she was blessed with a voice that wos totally incomparable, so deep and rich in tone, and so full of emotion. The most astounding thing of all was that she was only thirteen-and-a-half years old!..."


The first thing Schroeder had to do was find out whether Helen sounded as good on record as she had at her 'audition', to which end he invited her along to Abbey Road's No.3 studio, to cut a demo. And when that demo turned out to be every bit as good as he'd hoped, the next step was to persuade his boss, Norrie Paramor: "You had to catch Norrie at the right moment. I put the acetate on his machine and watched his every expression. When it finished, there was an awful pregnant pause... then Norrie said, quite slowly and emphatically, while looking straight at me:1*mm, he is very good, isn't he?' I smiled to myself and answered, emphatically and very slowly indeed:'He is a she, and she is thirteen-and a half years Helen's family were hurriedly invited along to EMI, a contract was drawn up, and she was duly signed to the Columbia label, home of artists like Cliff, The Shadows, Shirley Bassey, Acker Bilk. Russ Conway. etc. As an interesting aside. Paramor wanted her to change 'Shapiro' to a less Jewish-sounding stage name, but Helen and her family demurred.

Meanwhile, as Schroeder soon discovered, it's all very well discovering raw talent, the difficulty comes in making something of it: "As time went on, Norrie and I found ourselves with a big problem. We could not find a song strong enough or suitable enough for Helen's debut single. The word had gone out to all the music publishers, and we were soon inundated with songs... but lyrical content was the problem..."


After six months they still hadn't found 'the right song' and were in grave danger of being in breach of contract, at which point Paramor suggested to Schroeder that he try writing one, as he was closer to Helen, musically, than anybody. A classically-trained pianist, John had never written a Pop song before but he rose to the challenge, approaching his friend Mike Hawker, a journalist who was good with words, to write the lyrics. The resultant 'Don't Treat Me Like A Child' was a revelation. Lyrically, it was spot-on. the perfect song to kick-start Helen's career - although, as she later recalled: "When EMI sent me a white label copy of 'Don't Treat Me Like A Child' I couldn't wait to hear it, but we didn't have a record player. We had to go around to a neighbour and listen to it on hers!"
Released in February 1961, the disc was cautiously well-received, although reviewers were clearly baffled by Helen's voice. It crept into the charts at the end of March and began climbing slowly, but once Helen had mimed to it on Thank Your Lucky Stars, it took off, eventually peaking at No.3, selling around 300,000 copies, winning her a silver disc. It also very quickly rolled out to become a significant international hit, with sales eventually reaching around 750.000 copies.


For a follow-up Schroeder decided on a change of style, and composed a much slower number, which Hawker wrote as 'You Don't Know'. Released in late June, it leaped into the charts and reached No.1 the first week in August, where it stayed for three weeks. UK sales very quickly passed 250,000 - her second silver disc - while international sales soon took it over the magic million copies, winning Helen her first gold disc.

 
By now, a mild dose of Helenmania had broken out in the UK and everybody seemed fascinated with her, Unlike most Pop stars she seemed unbelievably 'normal', coming across as unspoiled and level-headed in interviews - although her schooling, coupled with the UK's laws about working minors, severely restricted live appearances and would ultimately lead to her leaving school as soon as she was legally able, in December 1961  (she would headline her first-ever UK tour just weeks later, in January '62).

With this as a backdrop, an unique promotional opportunity unexpectedly presented itself, as Schroeder recalls: "Norrie was approached by Rank Films with regard to their 'Look At Life'series... Each programme took the format of a ten-minute feature film, which was shown at every Rank cinema across the country in conjunction with the current 'A' film. In this instance, Rank wanted to portray the making of a hit record - namely Helen's next single -from the time the song was initially conceived to it being recorded, released and promoted, and finally being bought by the public." (N B: this effectively became the template for that famous scene in Smashing Time, with Lynn Redgrave and Rita Tushingham).

So, let's recap: Rank wanted to film Helen actually in the process of recording her next 'hit record'. No pressure there, then!

Norrie and John shared a recent, rather painful first-hand experience of how perilous following a No. I record can be. The previous year they'd produced Ricky Valance's chart-topper 'Tell Laura I Love Her', and hadn't been able to get him remotely near the Top 50 since. But there was already something of a `softener' in place with regard to Helen's next 45; advance orders were around 100,000 copies (they would reach 300,000) so they were guaranteed a hit, whatever she recorded!

That said, they were painfully aware that the next one had to be a real blockbuster, to which end Schroeder took the decision to go uptempo and melodic, with strong singalong qualities, and Hawker came up with an excellent feel-good title in 'Walkin' Back To Happiness'. The song was almost unfeasibly commercial, perhaps made all the more so by the "Oop bah, oh yea yea" element in the chorus (which wasn't originally intended to be part of the lyric, but a musical riff, to be played by the brass section). Helen, ironically, preferred the flip, 'Kiss'n'Run', but she was soundly outvoted.

With such massive advance orders it was a guaranteed No.1 and sure enough it spent the month of October at the top of the charts, with worldwide sales topping the million shortly after the turn of the year. It became Helen's signature song, her-biggest hit, and the nearest she ever came to achieving a breakthrough in the United States, spending one week on the Billboard Hot 100 at No. I00!
Her first EP, Helen, followed in early November and spent 9-weeks at No.1 on the EP chart, as well as making a brief appearance in the NME's regular Top 30. Something of an incongruous release, it couldn't have been any more different to her singles as it featured Helen singing four Jazz-styled standards, including 'The Birth Of The Blues'. It appeared to be aimed squarely at the parents of the teenagers who'd been buying her singles (although presumably, this was the type of material she'd have preferred to be singing), and its success surprised both fans and critics alike.


However, by now 'the team' had suffered a major departure. Having been Norrie Paramor's assistant at Columbia for four hugely successful years it was perhaps inevitable that at some point John Schroeder would be poached by another record company, and the effect this had on Helen's career was devastating. Not only had his songs been of crucial importance in launching her, it was John who'd passionately believed in her, and who had thus far made many of the crucial A&R decisions.
Initially, it seemed that his defection might not be a problem as Helen's fourth single, 'Tell Me What He Said' (a Brill Building song, written by Jeff Barry, originally recorded by Ginny Arnell), reached No.2 while her first album, Tops With Me, was also concurrently occupying the No.2 spot on the LP chart. Around this time Helen also made cameo appearances in a couple of UK Pop films, Play It Cool and It's Trod, Dad! and for the time being, things were still looking rosy.
But her next release, Paramor's disastrously weak 'Let's Talk About Love', failed to reach the Top 20 and although another Schroeder/Hawker ballad, 'Little Miss Lonely', briefly restored Helen to the Top 10 in August '62, it would prove to be her last major UK chart record. By now her recording career had lost impetus and her next 45, 'Keep Away From Other Girls' (penned by the eternally-overrated Burt Bacharach) turned out to be a copper-bottomed dud, and struggled to reach No.40.
Unfortunately, it was about to get a whole lot worse. In February '63, exactly two years into her career, Helen famously set out on a one-nighters' package tour, headlining over Danny Williams, Kenny Lynch, The Kestrels, The Red Price Combo and The Honeys. But halfway through the tour, the hitherto-unknown opening act - The Beatles, of course -went to No. I with 'Please Please Me'. They were moved up the bill to close the first house, and although Helen remained the show-closer, it was readily evident that the balance of UK Pop was about to undergo a seismic shift. As is widely documented, early on in the tour messrs Lennon & McCartney offered Helen 'Misery', which at that point they hadn't recorded themselves; but Norrie Paramor, in his infinite wisdom, gave it the thumbs-down...

Meanwhile, it wasn't quite "game over", as Helen retained a massive international fanbase and continued racking up huge sellers overseas until the late 60s - for example, 'Queen For Tonight' sold very nearly a million copies in 1963, despite only reaching No.33 in the UK, whilst 'Not Responsible' went to No.1 in Australia and worldwide sales topped 500,000. Helen subsequently went on to enjoy a long, full career, later singing in cabaret, appearing in stage musicals, enjoying a couple of decades as a respected Jazz singer, and eventually turning to Gospel, after becoming a Messianic Jew.
Roger Dopson
Big Thanks to John Schroeder, whose superb autobiography, Sex And Violins (Pen Press, 2009), I have plundered, shamelessly.
Thanks also to Gary James, Betty Ford, Lucky Parker and Bernie Keith.

Helen Shapiro You Don't Know - All The Hits 1961-1962 (CD)

Read more at: https://www.bear-family.de/shapiro-helen-you-don-t-know-all-the-hits-1961-1962-cd.html
Copyright © Bear Family Records

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Tracklist
Shapiro, Helen - The Ultimate - 50th Anniversary (3-CD) CD 1
01 Don't Treat Me Like A Child
02 You Don't Know
03 Walkin' Back To Happiness
04 Tell Me What He Said
05 Let's Talk about Love
06 Little Miss Lonely
07 Keep Away From Other Girls
08 Queen For Tonight
09 Woe Is Me
10 Not Responsible
11 Look Who Is It
12 Fever
13 Look Over Your Shoulder
14 Shop Around
15 I Wish I'd Never Loved You
16 Tomorrow Is Another Day
17 Here In Your Arms
18 Something Wonderful
19 Forget About The Bad Things
20 In My Calendar
21 Make Me Belong To You
22 She Needs Company
23 When I'm With You
24 Marvellous Lie
25 Kiss 'N' Run
26 I Apologise
27 I Don't Care
28 Ole Father Time
29 Sometime Yesterday
30 An Empty House
31 I Was Only Kidding
Shapiro, Helen - The Ultimate - 50th Anniversary (3-CD) CD 2
01 Tip Toe Through The Tulips
02 After You've Gone
03 Goody Goody
04 Birth Of The Blues
05 I Want To Be Happy
06 Little Devil
07 Will You Love Me Tomorrow
08 Because They're Young
09 The Day The Rains Came
10 Are You Lonesome Tonight
11 A Teenager In Love
12 Lipstick On Your Collar
13 Beyond The Sea (La Mer)
14 Sweet Nothin's
15 You Mean Ev'rything To Me
16 I Love You
17 You Got What It Takes
18 My Guy
19 All Alone Am I
20 He's A Rebel
21 Move Over Darling
22 Keep Your Hands Off My Baby
23 Remember Me
24 Walk On By
25 The End Of The World
26 It Might As Well Rain Until September
27 Baby It's You
28 Please Mr. Postman
29 It's In His Kiss
30 Stay
Shapiro, Helen - The Ultimate - 50th Anniversary (3-CD) CD 3
01 It's My Party
02 I Cried Myself To Sleep Last Night
03 Young Stranger
04 Here Today & Gone Tomorrow
05 No Trespassing
06 I'm Tickled Pink
07 I Walked Right In (With My Eyes Wide Open)
08 Sweeter Than Sweet
09 You'd Think He Didn't Know Me
10 when You Hurt Me I Cry
11 St. Louis Blues
12 Blues In The Night
13 A Teenager Sings The Blues
14 Without Your Love
15 Who Is She?
16 Time And Time Again
17 Every One But The Right One
18 It's Alright With Me
19 Basin Street Blues
20 I Believe In Love
21 I Can't Say No To Your Kiss
22 A Dozen Other Boys
23 You're My Remedy
24 I'm Going Out (The Same Way I Came In)
25 Just A Line
26 It's So Funny I Could Cry
27 Frag' Mich Night Warum
28 Parlons D'Amour
29 Stop And You'll Become Aware