Monday 3 January 2022

Robert John born 3 January 1946


Robert John (born January 3, 1946) is an American singer-songwriter with a terrific falsetto voice perhaps best known for his 1979 hit single, "Sad Eyes", which reached number 1 on the US Billboard Hot 100. 

Born Robert John pedrick Jr.in Brooklyn, New York City, United States and at a young age started vocalizing in street corner doo-wop groups. By the age of 10 he sang at the Carnegie Hall. He had his first charted hit in 1958 at the age of 12, while recording under the name of Bobby Pedrick with White Bucks and Saddle Shoes which was written by the Hall of Fame writer Doc Pomus and Mort Shuman. They succeeded in getting Robert a place on Dick Clark’s American Bandstand. It would be Roberts first of three American Bandstand appearances. 

When his father died he quit school and went to work as production manager for trade magazines. By 1963 he was the lead singer on "My Jelly Bean," a regional New York hit by Bobby and the Consoles. He recorded for the Big Top and Verve labels, but national success eluded him. By 1965, he had changed his name and signed with MGM Records for two ill-fated singles. 

In 1967 he began to write songs with a partner, Mike Gately, and they were signed to a publishing company owned by Stan Catron and Lou Stallman. A Columbia Records staff producer, Dave Robinson, liked their writing and John's voice on demos, and recorded "If You Don't Want My Love" (number 49 in June, 1968). An album followed, and the John-Gately team had their songs recorded by Lou Rawls, Bobby Vinton and Blood, Sweat and Tears. 

John met producer George Tobin, who was a fan of "If You Don't Want My Love. He recorded ‘Raindrops, Love and Sunshine’ in 1970, featuring his powerful (nearly ear-shattering) falsetto. They collaborated on some singles for A&M that weren't hits and parted ways. In 1971 John recorded a cover of the Tokens' number one single "The Lion Sleeps Tonight," produced by original Token Hank Medress. John was not enthusiastic about recording the song, but he couldn't afford to be too picky. Released on Atlantic Records, the song spent three weeks at number three in March, 1972. "Even after 'Lion... the company didn't have enough faith to let me do an album. I decided that if that's what happens after a number one song, then I just wasn't going to sing anymore," John told Steve Pond in Rolling Stone. 


                             

In 1978, Tobin called John from California. "I had him come out and he lived in my house," Tobin recalls. "He was actually a labourer in New Jersey at the time, carrying bricks on a construction job. I was looking for material for him and I heard a song called 'My Angel Baby' (by Toby Beau) and said, 'That's the kind of song Robert should be doing.' So we used that as a frame of reference. Robert wrote 'Sad Eyes' and rewrote it for about three months. Every time he'd write it I'd go, 'Nah, change this and change that.' We recorded another song first and it was bought by Ariola. Then we got dropped.”

But as luck would have it ,the president of EMI heard one of the Ariola records on a juke box in Florida and contacted Tobin to see about Robert's availability resulting in the No. 1 single “Sad Eyes” in 1979 . In 1980, John remade the song "Hey There Lonely Girl," a number two hit for Eddie Holman. It entered the Billboard Hot 100 on August 23 and peaked at number thirty-one. During that decade we find  John recording for Arista Records with collaborator and guitarist Bobby Mancari and keyboardist Steve Butera.  A newly recorded version of "The Lion Sleeps Tonight" was released on his 1992 greatest hits album. 

John, who had not performed often in concerts during the last few decades, received a chance to appear in his hometown of New York as part of a "70s Reunion Concert" produced by radio station WPLJ-FM on March 24, 1995. Among the acts who took the stage at the sold-out concert were Three Dog Night, Rupert Holmes, Looking Glass featuring Elliot Lurie, Andrew Gold, Alan O'Day, Ian Lloyd (lead singer of Stories), Sonny Geraci (lead singer of the Outsiders and Climax) and John. 

Since then he has seemed to have stayed out of the public eye. It was in a recent article by DJ Big Joe Henry for Radio New Jersey 101.5 that it was reported that recently John has been suffering with undisclosed medical conditions that require special care. 

Though the commercial returns on Robert John’s career as a singer could best be defined as sporadic at best, it’s worth pointing out that a relative few artists have the distinction of having scored U.S. Top 100 hits across four separate decades, and even fewer reach the summit of the charts along the way.

 (Edited from Super Seventies, Wikipedia)

6 comments:

boppinbob said...

For “Robert John ‎– Classic Masters Plus” go here:

https://krakenfiles.com/view/JlNSNBVAXO/file.html

01) Woman, Woman
02) The Lion Sleeps Tonight
03) That's What Keeps Us Together
04) Love Of A Woman
05) Lonely Eyes
06) Am I Ever Gonna Hold You Again
07) Dance The Night Away
08) Give A Little More
09) Sad Eyes
10) Takin' My Love For Granted
11) (So Long) Since I Felt This Way
11) Only Time
11) Stay A Little Longer
12) Hey There Lonely Girl
13) On My Own
14) Give Up Your Love
15) Sherry
16) Winner Take All
17) Hurtin' Doesn't Go Away
18) Back On The Street Again
19) You Could Have Told Me
20) Bread and Butter

Well Music Lovers this homemade compilation comprises of Robert John’s self titled album from 1979 and Back On The Street from 1980 plus a couple of bonus singles, which is much better than the 12 track digital download available as Classic Masters don’t cha think? I shall definitely be on the lookout for more of Mr. John’s recordings. In fact I have ordered the CD Bobby Pedrick Jr - From The Beginnings which I’ll post as soon as it arrives.

Aussie said...

nice one thank you

George Glass said...

I enjoy your write-ups in your posts. I already own the CD you mentioned, but just wanted to comment about your posts. :)

boppinbob said...

For “Bobby Pedrick, Jr. From The Beginning (Cat King Cole 2009)” go here:

https://www.upload.ee/files/13768417/Bobby_Pedick_Jr.rar.html

1 Bobby Pedrick Jr.– White Bucks And Saddle Shoes 2:08
2 Bobby Pedrick Jr.– Stranded 2:13
3 Bobby Pedrick Jr.– Betty Blue Eyes 1:56
4 Bobby Pedrick Jr.– Pajama Party 2:30
5 Bobby Pedrick Jr.– My Private Joy 1:51
6 Bobby Pedrick Jr.– Summer Nights 2:15
7 Bobby Pedrick Jr.– I Found Out About Love 2:54
8 Bobby Pedrick Jr.– The Game Of Love 2:13
9 Bobby Pedrick Jr.– School Crush 1:55
10 Bobby Pedrick Jr.– Come Out, Come Out 2:11
11 Bobby Pedrick Jr.– I'm Scared 1:43
12 Bobby Pedrick Jr.– That Girl Is You 2:11
13 Bobby Pedrick Jr.– Faded Blue 2:50
14 Bobby Pedrick Jr.– Rock Boppin' Baby 2:37
15 Bobby Pedrick Jr.– If Mary Only Knew 2:30
16 Bobby Pedrick Jr.– If I Had My Life To Live Over 2:32
17 Bobby Pedrick Jr.– Two Ton Tessie 2:43
18 Bobby Pedrick Jr.– Dining And Dancing 2:46
19 Bobby Pedrick Jr.– (I Have To) Teach Myself How To Cry 2:29
20 Bobby Pedrick Jr.– Don't Try To Change My Ways 2:15
21 Bobby Pedrick Jr.– Karine 2:16
22 Bobby Pedrick Jr.– Maybe 2:40
23 Bobby & The Consoles– My Jelly Bean 2:08
24 Bobby & The Consoles– Nita, I Need You So 2:07
25 The Inferno – The Hurt Doesn't Go Away 2:26
26 The Inferno – Your Heart Is Too Big For Your Head 2:25
27 Robert John– Hushabye 3:04

Unfortunately the CD I ordered is currently out of stock but I managed to find all but 4 tracks @ 320 bit rate after searching the wonderful web. Tracks 7,8,13 & 14 (all previously unreleased) were kindly donated by BH @ Radio Vickers @ 128bit rate.

Bob said...

Hello Bob,
Missed this ...“Bobby Pedrick, Jr. From The Beginning (Cat King Cole 2009)”
Is a repost possible.
Thanks

boppinbob said...

Hello Bob, Here's Bobby.....
https://www.imagenetz.de/kHPCU