Mike Leander

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Mike Leander (30 June 194118 April 1996) was an arranger and record producer for Decca Records in the 1960s and Bell Records in the 1970s and worked with such artists as Marianne Faithful, Billy Fury, Marc Bolan, Joe Cocker, The Small Faces, Van Morrison, Alan Price, Peter Frampton, Keith Richards, Shirley Bassey, Lulu, Jimmy Page, Roy Orbison, and Gene Pitney. He is perhaps best known as co-writer and producer for Gary Glitter throughout the 1970s.

Leander also worked as a producer/arranger with Ben E. King and The Drifters on the Atlantic record label and was the arranger on The Beatles' "She's Leaving Home" from the Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band album.

He was executive producer of the Andrew Lloyd Webber/Tim Rice concept album Jesus Christ Superstar and in the late 1960s wrote scores for several films, including Privilege with Paul Jones and Jean Shrimpton, Run a Crooked Mile with Mary Tyler Moore and Louis Jourdan and The Adding Machine with Billie Whitelaw and Milo O'Shea.

Leander first worked with singer Paul Raven in the 1960s and produced various singles for him on MCA Records (now Universal Music Group) and this lead to Raven's part on Jesus Christ Superstar. Raven later became Gary Glitter and the two began an on/off working relationship (as well as a friendship) that would last until Leander's death. The partnership produced a string of glam rock hits beginning in 1972 with "Rock and Roll (Parts 1 and 2)", which reached #2 in the UK, #1 in France and also the top 10 in many other countries including the USA. This was followed by ten more Top 10 UK singles, including three chart-toppers, "I'm the Leader of the Gang (I Am)" (1973), "I Love You Love Me Love" (1973) and "Always Yours" (1974).

In the 1980s he wrote the musical Matador, which gave Tom Jones a hit album and single A Boy From Nowhere.

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