Daniel Boone | |
---|---|
Birth name | Peter Charles Green |
Also known as | Peter Lee Stirling |
Born | 31 July 1942 |
Origin | Birmingham, England |
Genres | pop music |
Occupations | singer, songwriter, session musician |
Instruments | piano, guitar |
Years active | 1960s - present |
Daniel Boone (also known as Peter Lee Stirling,[1] born Peter Charles Green,[2] 31 July 1942, Birmingham, England) is an English pop musician who became a one-hit wonder in the U.S. with the single "Beautiful Sunday" in 1972.[3] The song was written by Boone and Rod McQueen and racked up millions in singles sales worldwide.[4] It peaked at No. 15 on The Billboard Hot 100 singles chart in the summer of 1972, having already reached No. 21 on the UK Singles Chart earlier that same year.[4] In 1972, Boone was the recipient of the "Most Likeable Singer" award from Rolling Stone magazine.
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In 1971 Peter Green joined Larry Page’s Penny Farthing record label (Penny Farthing Records) as a singer/songwriter and changed his stage name from Peter Lee Stirling to Daniel Boone, after the American folk-hero. His first release for the label was a ballad called ‘Daddy Don’t You Walk So Fast’, written by Geoff Stephens and Peter Callander and it rewarded him with his first, and only, top-twenty hit in the UK, peaking at number 17. Boone then collaborated with Rod McQueen, another songwriter working for Penny Farthing, to produce a suitable follow up. The result was ‘Mamma’, which although it exploited a theme similar to that of ‘DDYWSF’, failed to make any impact on the charts.
What happened next is explained by Terry Noon who, at that time, was the Managing Director of the Penny Farthing Publishing Company:
“The two writers, Daniel Boone and Rod McQueen, had been signed to us for some time, and one morning they came into my office saying, "we've written this great song." And I said, "sure, fine sit down and have a cup of tea." And they said, "no, really, we've got to play you this song."
So I buzzed Larry Page and he said, "I'm coming up." Now we used to have a little room with a piano in it, and it really was little. The four of us went into this room and it was crowded. And Daniel Boone sat down at the piano and started thumping out this tune and they both sang, although some of the lyrics weren't finished, and Larry was just standing there and when it was finished he said, "that's a hit, I'm going to record that next week."
And he turned to me, and I said, "yeah, I think it's a smash." And I really did. It was the excitement of the whole thing. We were in a tiny confined space; Daniel was really banging away at the piano. They were singing out really loud. You could tell it, you could feel it, the little hairs on the back of your neck were standing out.
And there was the speed of the whole thing. We'd heard it one week and it was recorded the following week. Then Larry decided to rush it out.”.[5]
The record was, of course, ‘Beautiful Sunday’. It was released in March 1972 and rose to number 21 in the UK charts. It fared rather better in the U.S. peaking at No. 15 on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart. It also made the charts in: Australia and New Zealand (Gold Disc), Argentina, Belgium, France, Italy, Mexico, South Africa, Scandinavia, Holland and Germany. .[6] Boone became particularly popular in Germany and released versions of ‘Beautiful Sunday’ and the follow up, ‘Annabelle’, in German. ‘Beautiful Sunday’ held the number one position in Germany from Late May to late June 1972. See Number-one hits of 1972 (Germany).
The song was also popular in the Southeast Asia region, particularly Hong Kong, Singapore, Malaysia and Taiwan. and has been covered by various singers and bands there in 3 different language versions. Among them, Frances Yip (葉麗儀), Choi Lai Ching (蔡麗貞), Juliana Luok (陸小雅) of Hong Kong and Ervinna, The October Cherries of Singapore recorded it in the original English version. Three different Cantonese versions appeared. The first one was with title name of 美好的星期天 and recorded by Chen He Mei (陳和美) of Taiwan. The second one was 花開滿園, recorded by Choi Lai Ching (蔡麗貞) of Hong Kong, Guo Bing Jian (郭炳堅), Lisa Wong (麗莎) of Singapore. The third one was 好彩又到Sunday, recorded by Sandra Lang (仙杜拉) of Hong Kong. 美麗的星期天 and 美好的星期天 were the two title names given to the Mandarin Chinese version part, recorded by Paula Tsui (徐小鳳), Yick Yue (憶如) of Hong Kong, Kang Hong (康弘), Lin Chong (林沖), Chen Shu Hua (陳淑樺), Long Piau Piau (龍飄飄) of Taiwan and Zhang Xiao Ying (張小英), Huang Xiao Jin (黃曉君) of Singapore.
"Beautiful Sunday" remains the biggest selling single by an international artist on the Japanese Oricon chart (coming in 19th on the all-time singles sales list with almost 2 million copies sold). The song was translated into Russian and covered by Russian pop group Чиж и Ко, becoming a hit on the Russian Music Charts in 1996.[7]
It has also become a popular song among fans of Scottish football club Dundee United. Boone is known to be a lifelong Dundee United fan and has tried to invest in the club on several occasions. Boone and McQueen also wrote Blue Is The Colour the football anthem for Chelsea F. C. in West London.
Peter Green (later to become Peter Lee Stirling) started his career as the guitar/vocalist with a band called the Beachcombers that played gigs in the Birmingham (England) area during the period 1958–1962. Their fortunes changed when they encountered Tommy Bruce, the gravel-voiced London singer, who had a No.3 hit in 1960 with "Ain’t Misbehavin". This and some subsequent releases had been attributed to ‘Tommy Bruce and the Bruisers’, despite the fact that the instrumental backings were provided by session musicians at EMI. Bruce’s account of the meeting was as follows:
“I met them up in Birmingham. They were working at the Plaza club. I was gigging there. They were great. Vocal backing, the lot. Especially Pete (Peter Green) on lead guitar. He was magnificent. I said ‘how would you like to become The Bruisers?’ They jumped in and loved it. Peter “Mac” McGinty was bass, Donald McGinty was drums, Bobby Coral was vocal backing with Pete.”[8]
So the Bruisers started their recording career at EMI with Tommy Bruce and his manager Barry Mason, who later became a famous songwriter.[9] Peter Green released an unsuccessful solo recording of a song called “My Heart Commands Me” under the name ‘Lee Stirling’ in March 1963.[10] Mason and (the now renamed) Stirling then collaborated on, what was for both of them, their first serious song-writing effort. Mason recalls this as follows:
“The first person I wrote with was Peter Lee Stirling, who later became Daniel Boone and was originally Peter Green. He was with a group called The Beachcombers, who became The Bruisers, who backed Tommy Bruce! And my first chart thing ever was a thing called "Blue Girl" for The Bruisers, which I wrote with Peter.”[11]
"Blue Girl" was released on 11 July 1963[12] and entered the UK charts on 8 August, eventually reaching number 31.[13] On the strength of this hit the band appeared on the Thank Your Lucky Stars (TV series) on 26 October performing the follow up "I Could If I Wanted To". This was probably the only TV appearance of the Bruisers as a group although Peter Lee Stirling appeared solo on later editions of the programme and also on Ready Steady Go! "I Could if I Wanted To" and the subsequent releases, "Your Turn To Cry" and "I Believe" were unsuccessful. The first use of the full name ‘Peter Lee Stirling’ was in 1964 on “Sad, Lonely and Blue”, but all eight records issued under this title (1964–1970) failed to enter the charts.[14] However Stirling went on to write, or co-write, “I Think of You” and “Don’t Turn Around”, both of which were hits for the Merseybeats,[15] and co-wrote “I Belong” for Kathy Kirby,[16] which came second in the Eurovision Song Contest in 1965.[17]
The Bruisers broke up in 1967 and Stirling became the co-owner, with Bernard Mattimore,[18] of a recording studio in London’s Whitechapel Road, which specialised in covering contemporary chart material.[19] He subsequently joined the studio band ‘Hungry Wolf’ for one album[20] and when they became 'Rumpelstiltskin' he worked with them for a further two albums,.[21] He also wrote the musical scores for the films Groupie Girl and Goodbye Gemini.[22]
In 1971 Stirling joined Penny Farthing Records owned by Larry Page and changed his name to Daniel Boone, whereupon he finally achieved chart success as a solo artist.