Francis Edward Ifield OAM (30 November 1937 – 18 May 2024) was an Australian country music singer and guitarist who often incorporated yodelling into his music.
Ifield was the third of seven sons born to Richard Ifield, an engineer, and his wife, Muriel. In 1935 the couple had moved from Australia to Britain in search of work. Richard went into the motor industry in Coventry, where Frank was born two years later. During the second world war, Richard was seconded by Lucas Laboratories to Frank Whittle’s jet engine project and the family moved to London. In 1946, the Ifields relocated to Australia, where Richard continued to work for Lucas while running a family farm in Dural, New South Wales.
At junior school, Frank led the singing, and his interest in music and showbusiness was increased by country and western singers heard on the radio and by his grandfather, a former performer with touring minstrel shows. He taught himself to play the ukulele before his grandmother bought him his first guitar as a birthday present in 1949. One of Frank’s jobs around the farm was to milk a bad-tempered cow named Betsy, which inspired his adoption of yodelling: “She would kick the milk bucket and everything until I started yodelling to her and she’d stop. After that she gave us the best milk we ever had.”
After coming second in a talent competition held by a local radio station, Frank made his first broadcasts at the age of 13. Two years later he was hired to dress as a cowboy and entertain audiences for Big Chief Little Wolf, a wrestling booth showman in a touring fair. At 16 he made his first record, There’s a Love Knot in My Lariat, for the Australian branch of EMI. His career was interrupted by national service but by the age of 21 Ifield was one of Australia’s leading country and pop singers, with his own television show, Campfire Favourites.
Encouraged by his manager, Peter Gormley, he set his sights on foreign markets, notably North America and Britain. In his memoir, I Remember Me (2005), Ifield explained that he prayed for guidance and “a still small voice” told him to move to London. Accordingly, he flew into Heathrow in November 1959 where Gormley had arranged a welcoming party including the popstar Tommy Steele and a clutch of photographers and reporters.
Almost immediately, Gormley negotiated a recording deal with Norrie Paramor of EMI’s Columbia label, but Frank’s first record, Lucky Devil, a version of Carl Dobkins Jr’s American hit, flopped. Although the next single, Happy Go Lucky Me, lost out to a rival version by George Formby, Ifield’s career as a live performer began to take off. He was booked on a tour headed by Emile Ford and appeared as Dick Whittington in pantomime in Stockton with the Shadows, now also managed by Gormley, who would soon add Cliff Richard to his roster of artists.
Several more records were unsuccessful, until Ifield came across I Remember You, a song written for the 1942 film The Fleet’s In, by Johnny Mercer and Victor Schertzinger. Gormley had persuaded him to drop the yodel from his stage act in order to avoid being typecast, but Ifield was convinced that a falsetto phrase was a vital feature of his version of I Remember You. Together with the opening harmonica riff, played on the record by Harry Pitch, it ensured that I Remember You was voted a unanimous hit on BBC television’s Juke Box Jury. This launched I Remember You on its journey to a million sales in Britain alone. In the US, it was Ifield’s only hit.
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| Frank , Vera Lynn, Tommy Bruce |
In the year that followed, there were four more hits. The first of these, Lovesick Blues (originally made famous in Hank Williams’s version) topped the charts and its B-side, Elton Britt’s She Taught Me to Yodel was performed when Ifield appeared at the 1962 Royal Variety Performance, reportedly because Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother had requested a yodelling number. Next, another old country song, The Wayward Wind, became his third successive No 1. This record had been chased to No 1 by Please Please Me, the first big hit for the Beatles. After the groups rise to fame, Ifield’s singles were selling fewer and fewer copies. Nevertheless, he remained a popular figure with older audiences in Britain and elsewhere, with numerous summer show, television and pantomime appearances.
In the early 1980s Ifield returned to settle in Australia. A lung operation in 1986 damaged his vocal cords. This caused him to give up live performances, and he turned to hosting radio shows and promoted country music festivals. However, in 2016 his singing voice had recovered enough for him to return to the stage with a show that revisited his career and included renditions of several hits. In 2009, he was made a member of the Order of Australia for services to the arts as an entertainer. Ifield died in Hornsby Hospital in Hornsby, New South Wales (NSW) of pneumonia on 18 May 2024, at the age of 86.
(Edited Dave Lang obit @ The Guardian)











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