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B A Robertson

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Genres
  
Rock, pop, new wave

Name
  
B. Robertson

Instruments
  
Vocals, keyboards

Role
  
Musician


Years active
  
1960s–present

Education
  
Allan Glen's School

Website
  
Barobertsongs.com

Movies
  
The Monster Club



Birth name
  
Brian Alexander Robertson

Born
  
12 September 1948 (age 75) Glasgow, Scotland (
1948-09-12
)

Occupation(s)
  
Musician, singer-songwriter, actor

Albums
  
Initial Success, R&BA, Bully for You, The Platinum Collection

Record labels
  
Asylum Records, Epic Records, Ardent Records

Similar People
  
Mike Rutherford, Terry Britten, Maggie Bell, Alan Tarney, Sue Shifrin

B A Robertson Bang bang 1979 Top of The Pops August 30th 1979


Brian Alexander "B. A." Robertson (born 12 September 1956) is a Scottish musician, actor, composer and songwriter. He had a string of hits in the late 1970s and early 1980s, characterised by catchy pop tunes and jaunty, humorous lyrics, most notably "Bang Bang", a tongue-in-cheek commentary on famous historical and fictional couples. He also wrote with Mike Rutherford the Grammy-nominated and Ivor Novello Award-winning "The Living Years". It was a number one hit in the USA, Canada, Australia and Ireland and reached #2 in his native UK. He has also written music for films and been a television presenter.

Contents

B. A. Robertson B A Robertson Bang Bang Ultrasound extended version

Early life

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Born in Glasgow, Scotland, Robertson was educated at the former Allan Glen's School, Glasgow.

Career

He released his debut album Wringing Applause, recorded with Terry Manning, on the Ardent Records label (also home of Big Star) in 1973, but it was to be a further six years until he found success in the United Kingdom chart.

Robertson had hits between 1979 and 1981 in the UK Singles Chart, the first of which – "Bang Bang" – reached number 2 in August 1979. Follow-up singles "Knocked It Off", "Kool in the Kaftan" and "To Be or Not to Be" reached chart positions 8, 17 and 9 respectively. All the singles came from his third album Initial Success, which reached number 32 in the UK Albums Chart. In 1981 he had his last Top 40 hit performing a duet with Maggie Bell, of a cover version of "Hold Me" which reached number 11.

He co-wrote the hit songs "Carrie" and "Wired for Sound" for Cliff Richard and most of the songs on Richard's Rock 'n' Roll Juvenile (1979) album. Robertson also penned and sang the theme music to the television series Maggie and Multi-Coloured Swap Shop ("Hello, Hello"), and wrote and sang backing vocals for the Swap Shop spin-off group Brown Sauce's UK Top 20 hit, "I Wanna Be a Winner".

Robertson was a guest presenter on Top of the Pops on 28 August 1980, alongside then-BBC Radio 1 DJ Peter Powell.

In October 1980, Robertson appeared as a guest on the BBC Television chat show Friday Night, Saturday Morning. In the sixth and final series of the same show, Robertson appeared on one programme (January 1982) as the show's host. In February 1981 Robertson appeared playing live in concert on the BBC joint television and radio programme Rock Goes To College. He appeared at the then Preston Polytechnic, Lancashire. He also appeared as one of the Entertainers in the movie The Monster Club starring Vincent Price, John Carradine, and Donald Pleasence.

In 1987, Robertson produced two tracks on the Eddie and the Tide album Looking for Adventure.

Robertson has regularly written songs with Mike Rutherford for Rutherford's band Mike + The Mechanics, including their hits "Silent Running" and "The Living Years". The latter was written after Robertson's father died twelve weeks before the birth of his own son, and was nominated for a Grammy Award for Song of the Year in 1990.

Robertson also wrote "We Have a Dream" for the 1982 World Cup Scotland squad and played the lead in the movie Living Apart Together, directed by Charlie Gormley. In 1983 Robertson, along with co-songwriters Terry Britten and Sue Shifrin, won a Razzie Award for the Worst 'Original' Song for "Pumpin' and Blowin'" as featured in the 1982 film, The Pirate Movie.

Robertson presented a two-part documentary, Jock 'n' Roll Parts I & II charting the history of pop music in Scotland and also presented a short-lived television programme, B. A. in Music, which featured contributions from musician guests. The show made Channel 4's 2000 list 100 Greatest TV Moments from Hell after Robertson had a confrontation with Bow Wow Wow singer Annabella Lwin during which she called the programme a 'pretty shit show' and stormed off.

In 1991, Robertson was billed as the co-producer and executive musical producer for Simply Mad About the Mouse: A Musical Celebration of Imagination (ISBN 1-55890-217-1), a 1991 direct-to-video release featuring top contemporary singers performing "classic Disney songs".

Robertson's stage name was often mentioned in the BBC Two satirical sketch comedy programme The Fast Show, during the recurring sketch "Chanel 9", a parody of Mediterranean TV channels. The joke was based on occasionally intelligible (to English speaking audiences) names appearing in foreign broadcast speech.

Robertson appeared on the Scottish segment of BBC's Children in Need telethon on 14 November 2008, performing a re-worked version of "We Have a Dream" alongside Edwyn Collins, The Gospel Truth Choir, the Tartan Army, and a host of Scottish celebrities. On 16 January 2010, he performed with a live band in Glasgow for the first time since 1981 as part of the Celtic Connections Festival. "A Scottish Songbook" featured a number of diverse artists performing songs written by Scots, and Robertson performed "Twisted" (written by Annie Ross and Wardell Gray) and his own "The Living Years" – backed by house band Session A9 and The Gospel Truth Choir. The event was filmed for subsequent broadcast by BBC Scotland.

Albums

  • 1973: Wringing Applause (Ardent) (released as Brian Alexander Robertson)
  • 1976: Shadow of a Thin Man (Arista) (released as Alexander Robertson)
  • 1980: Initial Success (Asylum)
  • 1981: Bully for You (Asylum)
  • 1982: R&BA (Asylum)
  • Singles

  • "Moira's Hand" - released as Brian Alexander Robertson
  • 1976: "All the Thin Men" - released as Alexander Robertson
  • 1979: "Goosebumps"
  • 1979: "Bang Bang" #2
  • 1979: "Knocked It Off" #8
  • 1980: "Kool in the Kaftan" #17
  • 1980: "To Be or Not to Be" #9
  • 1980: "Flight 19"
  • 1981: "Sucker for Your Love"
  • 1981: "Hold Me" - with Maggie Bell #11
  • 1981: "Saint-Saëns" listen 
  • 1982: "We Have a Dream"
  • 1982: "Ready or Not"
  • 1982: "One Plus One"
  • 1983: "Dot Dot Dot"
  • 1983: "Now and Then" #82
  • 1983: "Time" - with Frida, ABBA's instrumental track "Arrival", with added lyrics #45
  • 1986: "Ceud Mìle Failte" ("A Hundred Thousand Welcomes") (BBC Commonwealth Games Theme)
  • Filmography

  • The Monster Club – 1980
  • Living Apart Together – 1982
  • References

    B. A. Robertson Wikipedia