Harvey Andrews

Harvey Andrews in the Dutch television program Popzien, 8 June 1973

Harvey John Andrews (born 7 May 1943 in Stechford, Birmingham) is an English singer-songwriter and poet.

Career

From 1964, Andrews supported his nascent career as a singer/songwriter by working as a schoolteacher, before becoming a full-time professional musician in 1966.

Harvey Andrews has produced 16 albums singing his own songs, many of which have also been recorded by other artists.

He collaborated on a successful musical depicting life growing up in Birmingham in the forties and fifties. "Go Play Up Your Own End" has been well received across the Midlands, especially in its production in 2006 featuring Jasper Carrot in a major role, but has yet to make the transfer to London. The musical has played at the Birmingham Repertory Theatre, the Birmingham Hippodrome and the Alexandra Theatre, thus setting a record of having been staged at every one of the second city's major theatres.

In 2007 he published a musical memoir "Gold star to the Ozarks". Harvey retired from full-time concert performances in October 2012 with a series of concerts at The Guild Hall, Lichfield.

Appearances

He has appeared at many festivals around the world.

Television appearances include The Old Grey Whistle Test, Rhythm on Two and over 50 other shows. He has made two television specials featuring his songs, The Camera and The Song, and The Same Old Smile. Two further specials were produced in the Netherlands and Ireland. He sang "Riding Free", the theme song from the cult British horror movie Psychomania in 1973, and wrote and sang the theme songs for two Australian TV series, Golden Pennies (1985) and The Haunted School (1986). He has hosted BBC Radio Two's Folk on Two and a Radio Four Kaleidoscope special was devoted to his work.

Personal life

He is father of the author Scott K. Andrews. In the 1970s Andrews' then wife managed Wolverhampton Wanderers club shop.

Awards

In 1996, he was voted International Artiste of the Year in the Canadian Porcupine Awards for Folk music.

Discography

References and notes

  1. "Hey Sandy". Christy Moore – The Official Website. pointblank.ie. Archived from the original on 17 November 2007. "CHRISTY'S COMMENT: I'm including both sets of lyrics: Christy's version and the original version. The author, Harvey Andrews, wrote and sent on the original.
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