Goodhand-Tait was writing songs on a steady basis by then, and got four originals onto their debut release, an EP issued by EMI Odeon in France. The record never charted, but the results of his four-way hat-trick were good enough to get Goodhand-Tait a contract as a songwriter with Dick James, the publisher. Even as the group struggled along, working from gig to gig and never quite advancing, he was able to hone his songwriting. And by 1967, as the public taste began to move away from the soul-flavored material that the group favored, Goodhand-Tait was finding success through his compositions -- the Shakers were rechristened Circus for a time, to try their hand at psychedelic pop before calling it quits. Meanwhile, one of his songs, Gone Are the Songs of Yesteryear, was put onto the B-side of the single Everlasting Love and recorded by Love Affair, which became a huge hit in England. And even as the B-side, the song generated the same royalties from sales as the "play" side -- Goodhand-Tait took this sudden bout of good fortune as his cue to pursue composition more thoroughly and he was rewarded with a hit in his own right, through Love Affair's version of his Bringing on Back the Good Times. He emerged at the start of the '70s from the orbit of Dick James Music as a recording artist as well, on their DJM Records imprint, with a string of albums: I Think I'll Write a Song, Rehearsal, and Songfall. 20th Century Records picked up his contract for one release, a self-titled album wherein they tried -- in Goodhand-Tait's own words -- "to turn me into the next Elton John" (who was, with no small irony, a labelmate of his at DJM).
He moved on to Chrysalis Records in the second half of the decade, but his most notable musical achievements came working for other artists, writing songs that were recorded by Roger Daltrey (Oceans Away, Parade, Leon), Gene Pitney (You Are, Oceans Away), and playing on Chris De Burgh's Spanish Train and Other Stories. Starting in the '80s, he moved into production, both in music and video, and he produced live albums by Magnum, Venom, the Climax Blues Band, Kid Creole the Coconuts, and the Lords of the New Church. In more recent years, he also revived the Stormsville Shakers with the surviving original members, and is still involved in music and video production, as well as recording in his own right, in the 21st century. ~ Bruce Eder, Rovi
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Oceans Away |
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Number One |
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Silverwing |