| JOE
COCKER (ARTIST BIOGRAPHY)
Joe Cocker OBE (born 20 May 1944) is an english
rock/blues singer who came to popularity in the 1960s, and is most
known for his gritty voice, reminiscent of Eric Burdon, and his
cover versions of popular songs, particularly those of The Beatles.
Joe Cocker was born in Sheffield, England, the youngest son of a
civil servant. In 1961 Joe by day, worked as an apprentice gas
fitter and by night, in dark suit and bow tie, became Vance Arnold
singing with The Avengers in rough Sheffield pubs. The set included
songs by mentor Ray Charles “What’d I Say” and “Georgia On My Mind.”
Vance Arnold and the Avengers biggest moment came in 1963 when they
supported The Rolling Stones at Sheffield City Hall, and brought the
house down.
The following year Joe left the Gas Board and released his first
single, a cover of The Beatles “I’ll Cry Instead.” His band, Joe
Cocker Big Blues, built up a large following in the north of England
and ventured to France for a two month stint, playing on American
airbases.
The servicemen, many from America’s deep south, loved Joe. The
French called him “Le Petit Ray Charles”. Unfortunately when he
returned home to England the bottom had fallen out of the local
scene. Joe Cocker Big Blues folded.
For an entire year Joe never did a gig. Then along came the man Joe
has called the greatest musician in the world, Chris Stainton. With
Chris The Grease Band was formed.
Songs were written. Soon a demo found its way to Denny Cordell, the
producer of The Moody Blues, Georgie Fame, and Procul Harum. Cordell
liked what he heard of Joe, and soon set him up in London with a
residency at The Marquee.
America loved Joe Cocker from his first television appearance on the
Ed Sullivan show in 1969. The Press seized upon him. Life Magazine
called Joe “The voice of all those blind criers and crazy beggars
and maimed men who summon up a strength we’ll never know to bawl out
their souls in the streets.”
However, Joe wasn’t singing in the streets. He was singing at all
the major rock festivals of that summer, culminating in the filmed
triumph of Woodstock before half a million people (a phenomenal
rip-roaring testimony to Joe Cocker in his absolute prime).
Of the ensuing “Mad Dogs and Englishmen,” Joe has said: “my thoughts
were off to Venus, heading for outer space.” Along with Leon Russell
and a menagerie of musicians, managers, roadies, wives, girlfriends,
hangers on, children, a spotted dog plus a film crew, Joe played
forty-eight cities in fifty-six days, to rapturous receptions
everywhere.
The tour left Joe battered, exhausted, and far from Venus. He ended
up, per his own words, “in a heap in Los Angeles, very disillusioned
with the rock business.”
In 1970, Joe sold $3 million worth of records in America alone. His
first three albums went platinum and Playboy voted him number one
vocalist in their annual jazz and rock poll.
Joe continued making albums and songs like “Guilty,” “The Moons A
Harsh Mistress” and “You Are So Beautiful.” Songs that have become
Cocker classics, all dating from the darkest days, back in the mid
1970’s.
As the 80’s dawned Joe was invited by The Crusaders to join them on
a song they had written exclusively for him - “I’m So Glad I’m
Standing Here Today.” The lyrics said it all and Joe received a
standing ovation when he sang the song at the Grammy Awards in
February of 1982. His duet with Jennifer Warnes on “Up Where We
Belong”, the theme from “An Officer And A Gentleman,” brought an
appearance at the Oscars ceremony in February 1983 and a hit
worldwide, including Joe’s first American number one.
From that point on, Joe has gone from strength to strength, aided
undoubtedly by the love and support of his wife, Pam, who he married
in 1987. His Capitol albums from “Civilized Man” onwards have been
tremendously successful. “Cocker,” “Unchain My Heart” and “One Night
Of Sin” all turned platinum, (the latter also delivering Joe’s most
recent US top ten song “When The Night Comes,” written by Bryan
Adams). Joe’s album “Night Calls,” the title single penned by Jeff
Lynne, turned gold and headed towards platinum all across Europe
within weeks of its release in autumn ‘91.
Joe Cocker has sung theme songs for movies “9 1/2 Weeks,” “Harry and
The Hendersons,” “Bull Durham,” and “An Innocent Man.” In 1991 Joe
recorded “Sorry Seems To Be The Hardest Word” on the Elton John/Bernie
Taupin tribute “Two Rooms,” which has sold over 3 Million copies
worldwide.
Joe has toured extensively and to great acclaim, not the least in
Europe where he enjoys a massive following. There have been awards
and accolades galore.Among many prestigious shows, he has played for
British royalty at a “Princes Trust Gala,” “Nelson Mandela’s
Birthday Concert,” the “Konzert for Berlin” that celebrated the
breaching of the Wall and, in his adopted homeland of America, the
inauguration ceremony for President George Bush.
Joe Cocker is a survivor, a star and a rock legend. He has had hit
records in the 1960’s, 70s, 80, and 90s. Success has brought with it
a grueling schedule of recording and touring but, after more than
twenty-five years on the road he has no plans to take it easy. The
future? “As long as being on stage is fun,” says Joe, “as long as I
enjoy that part and still get a buzz out of performing. Then I’ll
keep going out there.” |