Crispian St. Peters (5 April 1939 – 8 June 2010) was an
English
pop singer-songwriter, best known for his work in the 1960s.
pop singer-songwriter, best known for his work in the 1960s.
Popular music has spawned many one-hit wonders. Crispian St
Peters, had the distinction of being a two-hit wonder, remembered for You Were
On My Mind and The Pied Piper, both Top 10 hits in 1966, as well as for his
extravagant stage name. His real name was the more prosaic Robin Peter Smith.
His parents, Phyllis and Gerald, had a plant nursery in Swanley, then a rural
Kentish village. The Smiths were a musical family and he was surrounded in
childhood by relatives who played the banjo, piano and accordion.
After leaving school at 15, he worked as a cinema
projectionist and in a paper mill. Then, like so many of his generation, he was
inspired to make music by Lonnie Donegan, whose surprise 1956 hit Rock Island
Line ushered in the skiffle era. As a teenager St Peters led the Hard
Travellers skiffle group, which played local venues such as Chislehurst Caves
and even ventured to the Skiffle Cellar in Soho, central London.
This first phase of his career came to an end when he was
called up for national service. While in the army, he was so impressed by a
concert by the American rock'n'roll star Gene Vincent that he started to write
his own songs. On demob, Smith formed a group, Beat Formula Three. In 1963 the
group was spotted by David Nicolson of EMI. Nicolson saw potential in Smith's
pleasant tenor voice and organised a contract with Decca, as well as a change
of name. He suggested Crispin Blacke, which Smith amended to Crispian St
Peters.
His first two singles for Decca, the self-penned At This
Moment and No No No, were flops. Then Nicolson was sent a copy of an American
hit, You Were On My Mind, a wistful ballad composed by Sylvia Fricker of the
folk duo Ian and Sylvia. When St Peters demurred at recording the song,
Nicolson successfully appealed to his mother to persuade him. The track was
arranged by organist Harry Stoneham and among the accompanists was Jimmy Page,
future guitarist with the Yardbirds and Led Zeppelin.
You Were On My Mind was issued at the end of 1965 and early
the following year it reached No 2 in the British charts. St Peters gave an
interview to the New Musical Express in which he opined that his songs were
better than those of the Beatles and that his stage show made Elvis Presley
seems like the Statue of Liberty. He later claimed that it was all tongue in
cheek, and the mild furore helped the sales of his next record, The Pied Piper,
which was co-written by Artie Kornfield, later an organiser of Woodstock. The
record was promoted by pirate radio stations, which helped it to reach No 5 in
the British charts. The Pied Piper was also a big hit in Canada, Australia and
America, where St Peters toured.
By now he was a fully paid-up denizen of swinging London,
later recalling that people "called me the Cassius Clay of pop because me
and PJ Proby were always arguing". But his period in the spotlight was
coming to an end. The next record, a version of the Phil Ochs song Changes,
sold poorly in 1966 and by the end of the decade he was back to playing the
Kent clubs.
Later in 1970, he was signed to Square Records. Under this
new record deal, St. Peters released a second LP, Simply, that year, predominantly
of country and western songs. Later still they released his first cassette, The
Gospel Tape, in 1986, and a second cassette, New Tracks on Old Lines in 1990.
His third cassette, Night Sessions, Vol. 1 was released in 1993.
Several CDs also came from this record deal, including
Follow Me in 1991, The Anthology in 1996, Night Sessions, Vol. 1 in 1998, The
Gospel Tape in 1999, and, finally, Songs From The Attic in 2000. He also
performed on various Sixties nostalgia tours, and continued to write and
arrange for others until his later ill health which included emphysema.
On 1 January 1995, at the age of 55, he suffered a stroke. His
music career was severely weakened by this, and in 2001, he announced his
retirement from the music industry. He was hospitalised several times with
pneumonia after 2003. St. Peters died on 8 June 2010, after a long illness, at
the age of 71. (Info mainly The
Guardian)
For Crispian St. Peters – “Follow Me” go here:
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1 Your Love Has Gone
2 Jilly Honey
3 When We Meet
4 My Little Brown Eyes
5 It's a Funny Feeling
6 So Long
7 Your Were on My Mind
8 But She's Untrue
9 Goodbye to You
10 Willingly
11 Without You
12 That's the Way I Feel
13 That Little Chain
14 The Pied Piper
15 At This Moment
16 You'll Forget Me, Goodbye
17 No No No
18 Three Goodbyes
19 What I'm Gonna Be
20 Sweet Dawn, My True Love
21 Changes
22 Your Ever Changing Mind
23 Almost Persuaded
24 You Have Gone
25 Free Spirit
26 I'm Always Crying
27 The Silent Times
28 Carolina
29 That's Why We Are Through
Thank you very much Bob this album has all my favourites of Crispian's
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