Matt Monro (1 December 1930, Shoreditch, London – 7 February
1985, Ealing) was an English ballad singer of the 1960s and one of the
international post-World War II entertainers. Throughout his 30-year career, he
filled cabarets, nightclubs, music halls and stadiums, from Australia, Japan,
the Philippines, and Hong Kong to Africa, the Middle East, Europe, and the
Americas. He sold more than 100 million records during his lifetime.
Matt was born Terry Parsons in north London in 1930, to
Alice and Frederick. He had three brothers, Arthur, Reg and Harry and a sister,
Alice. It was a tough childhood, his father died when he was three and after
his mother became ill, he was fostered out for two years. Leaving school at 14,
he tried a succession of jobs without sticking at any of them for very long,
before National Service beckoned at age 18 and Matt became a tank driving
instructor in the army and was posted to Hong Kong.
He had sung in public from an early age, notably at the
local Tufnell Park Palais, and in Hong Kong he took to entering local talent
contests, winning several. In fact, he became so successful he was eventually
barred from competing. Instead they gave him his own radio show, Terry Parsons
Sings. After de-mob, he returned to London, to try and make a career out of
singing. Initially he had little success and was obliged to take on a driving
job to supplement his meagre income from the occasional singing engagement. He
also hung around the music publishers offices in Denmark Street and
occasionally made demos of new songs for their ever-optimistic song-pluggers to
hawk around.
Before too long, however, pianist Winifred Atwell heard his
voice and recommended him to her own recording company, Decca, who signed him.
She also helped choose his new name, Matt Monro. Matt coming from Matt White, a
journalist friend, and Monro was Atwell’s father’s first name. Although the
recording session went well, sales were only moderate. He got some radio
exposure on Radio Luxembourg and also on the BBC with Cyril Stapleton's 'BBC
Showband' show and a TV spot on The Winifred Atwell Show. But his lucky break
came when EMI producer George Martin asked him to make a demo disc for Peter
Sellers to use as a guide to copying the voice and style of Frank Sinatra for
his forthcoming album, "Songs for Swinging Sellers".
It was such a good guide that Sellers realised he couldn’t
improve on it himself and the recording was included on the LP under the name
of Fred Flange. When word got out who the singer really was and what a fine
voice he had, George Martin knew he was onto a winner and signed him for the
Parlophone label. Almost immediately the combination of Monro, Martin and
arranger/conductor Johnnie Spence had UK hit parade success with Portrait of My
Love.
This was swiftly followed by further hits of the calibre of My Kind Of Girl, Gonna Build a Mountain, Softly As I Leave You, From Russia with Love and Walk Away. The latter became the first hit for his manager and friend, Don Black, whom he had met during his Denmark Street days when Don was working for Toff Music. He also made the American
This was swiftly followed by further hits of the calibre of My Kind Of Girl, Gonna Build a Mountain, Softly As I Leave You, From Russia with Love and Walk Away. The latter became the first hit for his manager and friend, Don Black, whom he had met during his Denmark Street days when Don was working for Toff Music. He also made the American
charts at a time when this
was still quite a rare occurrence, with My Kind of Girl & Walk Away.
Another success came when he became the first artist to cover
"Yesterday", taking it into the top ten in England.
Between March 1960 and January 1966, Parlophone issued
nineteen Matt Monro singles, as well as eight EPs and four LPs. However, a
label switch came in 1966, following the death of Nat King Cole. Capitol
Records wanted a replacement and Matt was seen as the perfect choice. This was
also the beginning of a trend towards LPs rather than singles and he was backed
by the likes of Sid Feller and Billy May on albums which included "This Is
the Life", "The Late, Late Show", "Invitation to the
Movies" and "Invitation to Broadway". His Capitol singles were
not particularly successful, with the exception of the very first, the
memorable Born Free, with music by John Barry and lyrics by Don Black in only
their second collaboration. The new recording contract necessitated a move to
the US and he became popular on TV and in cabaret there for a few years.
Back in England he stayed with George Martin but changed
labels within EMI to Columbia before that label itself vanished and was
incorporated into the new EMI label. During this period Matt twice recorded
singles with both sides Barry / Black compositions: This Way Mary / Wish Now
Was Then and Curiouser and Curiouser / The Me I Never Knew. He also recorded
We're Gonna Change The World - originally music used in a TV commercial for
Kellogg’s Cornflakes!
He continued touring, working at the very best nightclubs
like 'The Talk Of The Town', and was a regular on TV. Unfortunately there was a
side to Matt Monro that was more-or-less unknown to the public. He had a drink
problem. He simply loved drinking (he was also a heavy smoker) and the best
entreaties of manager Black could not contain it. His performances appeared
completely unaffected by the effects of alcohol, but eventually and almost
inevitably, his health suffered.
He was diagnosed with cancer of the liver but continued
working. Doctors suggested a liver transplant as a last resort to save him, but
during the operation at Addenbrookes Hospital in Cambridge surgeons discovered
the cancer had spread widely and a transplant would have been pointless. Matt
discharged himself and went back to singing, knowing he had little time left.
His last performance was at London's recently opened Barbican Centre and he
died shortly afterwards at the Cromwell hospital in London, 7th February 1985,
at the age of only 54.
His voice lives on,
thankfully, through a series of re-issued CD compilations and constant radio
play. He was arguably England’s greatest singer of popular ballads and achieved
success and acclaim in America before The Beatles and long before Elton John.
Thirty years after his death he is still much-missed by his
family, friends and many fans. (Info from mattmonro.org.uk/bio)
For “Matt Monro - Born Free – His Greatest Hits” go here:
ReplyDeletehttp://www17.zippyshare.com/v/RFlnTCST/file.html
01 Walk Away
02 My Kind Of Girl
03 From Russia With Love
04 For All We Know
05 Softly, As I Leave You
06 Portrait Of My Love
07 And You Smiled
08 My Love And Devotion
09 Love Is A Many Splendoured Thing
10 For Mama
11 Without You
12 Gonna Build A Mountain
13 When Love Comes Along
14 Why Not Now
15 Didn't We
16 Unchained Melody
17 Yesterday
18 Born Free
A big thank you to Jake @ foreverletsdance.blog for link.
It seems Prostopleer is now playing up. can anyone help me with a free mp3 embeddable player that's not too big?