Kenny Lynch, OBE (born 18 March 1938, Stepney, London,
England) is an English singer, songwriter, entertainer and actor from London.
Lynch appeared in many variety shows in the 1960s. He was one of the relatively
few black singers on the British pop scene in the early 1960s.
Lynch grew up in Stepney, east London as one of 13 children
and his sister, Gladys (stage name Maxine Daniels) was a jazz singer of some
note. After leaving school at 15 and various jobs, he did National Service in
the Royal Army Service Corps and was the regimental featherweight boxing
champion. He was also a semi-professional singer.
He had several UK hit singles in the early 1960s, including
the two Top Ten hits, "Up on the Roof" in December 1962, and
"You Can Never Stop Me Loving You" in June 1963. Lynch is most famous
for a flop single he issued the same year.
That was "Misery", the
first cover version of a Beatles song to be released. In early 1963, Lynch had
been on the same bill as The Beatles on the group's first British tour; John
Lennon and Paul McCartney wrote "Misery" in January 1963, in the
hopes that the artist on top of the bill, Helen Shapiro, would record it.
Shapiro's record producer turned it down, but Lynch took the composition and
gave it a much more pop oriented arrangement than The Beatles would use when
they recorded "Misery" themselves on their debut album, Please Please
Me.
Whilst on a coach with The Beatles (on tour with Helen
Shapiro), Lynch reportedly offered to help them write a song, but quickly
became frustrated and criticised their ability to compose music - at the time
Lennon and McCartney were writing "From Me to You". Years later he
appeared on the album cover of Wings' 1973 album, Band on the Run, along with
other celebrities.
Lynch wrote a fairly high percentage of his own material,
but also did some covers of songs originating from the Brill Building writers. In addition, he has written songs for others — notably the
Small Faces' #3 UK hit, "Sha-La-La-La-Lee", with the American
songwriter, Mort Shuman. Lynch also wrote a couple of other songs from the
Small Faces' 1966 debut album, "You'd Better Believe It" (co-written
with Jerry Ragavoy) and "Sorry She's Mine".
Lynch took part in the A Song For Europe contest in 1962
with the song "There's Never Been A Girl", but failed to win through
to represent the UK in the Eurovision Song Contest. He returned to the contest
in 1978, this time as a writer, penning "Don't Bother To Knock" for
the group 'Midnight'. This song was placed second.
His numerous TV appearances include the 1970s programme Get This which he co-presented with Harry Fowler, as well as roles in Celebrity Squares, Mooncat & Co., Room at the Bottom and Curry & Chips, as well as minor parts in Z-Cars, The Sweeney, Til Death Us Do Part and Treasure Hunt.
Known for charity work, Lynch has often played in charity
football matches and Michael Parkinson's 'Celebrity Cricket' fundraisers. He is
a fan of the London football club West Ham United. Nowadays he owns a restaurant in North London and has appeared
in the film The Riddle (2007).
For Kenny Lynch – “We Like Kenny” go here
ReplyDeletehttp://www.sendspace.com/file/oyrbcr
1-It would take a miracle
2-Monument
3-For lovin'you baby
4-That's what little girls are made for
5-so much to love you for
6-You can never stop me loving you
7-What am i to you
8-for you
9-Puff
10-Up on the roof
11-The one thing that makes me happy
12-They're jalous of me
13-Steady kind
14-I'll stay by you
15-Stand by me
16-Crazy crazes
17-She's got everything
18-A tiger at the door
19-Don't make the same mistake
20-The truth
21-There's never been a girl like you before
22-Why do you treat me this way
23-You make love so well
24-Hey girl
25-Individuality
A BIG thank you to Loadsamusics forum member Dusty for the link.
Can this be reupped?
DeleteVR
Kenneth Lynch, OBE (18 March 1938 – 18 December 2019)
ReplyDeleteThank you for this download.
It was only two or three years ago that there was an apparently official Kenny Lynch web site offering a whole bunch of CDs that can no longer be found today. I cherish the one I bought and wish I'd bought more.
Did it have Make it easy on yourself? I can't seem to find it by him on CD.
DeleteBtw, the link is dead, can you reup it please?
VR
Hello VR, here's the new link
ReplyDeletehttps://krakenfiles.com/view/lYN1j98qIr/file.html
Regarding the track "Make It easy on yourself" It doesn't appear to be digitized yet. But is available on his 2 vinyl LPs "Up On The Roof" & "Singin' And Swingin". There is a YouTube mp3 of the single available but of poor quality.
Regards, Bob
Cheers Bob.
ReplyDeleteVR
Many Thanks.
ReplyDeleteMJ.