Born on April 16, 1952 in Stanmore, Middlesex, Chaz Jankel was drawn to music by Lonnie Donegan, the king of Britain's skiffle craze of the 1960s. He picked up the guitar as a child, then learned piano. While he was at boarding school, he fell in love with soul and funk, but his first major band was a folk-rock group called Byzantium, which he played in while attending Saint Martin's School of Art in the early 1970s.
After leaving Byzantium, Jankel joined Jonathan Kelly's Outside, appearing on their 1974 LP Waiting on You, then he went on to Kilburn and the High Roads during their final days in the mid-'70s. Jankel hit it off with Kilburn leader Ian Dury, so once the High Roads split, the pair formed the Blockheads, a punk band that supported Dury on his 1977 solo debut, New Boots and Panties!! The Blockheads swiftly steered toward funk and disco on 1970's Do It Yourself, a shift in direction that accentuated Jankel's musical interests.
Do It Yourself turned into a huge hit for Dury, providing momentum for Jankel to launch a solo career in 1980; he'd continue to write with Dury, notably collaborating on "Spasticus Autisticus" from 1981's Lord Upminster. Signing with AM, he released his eponymous solo debut. Chasanova followed in 1981 (in the U.S. it was called Questionnaire), making inroads in the U.S. thanks to the single "Glad to Know You," which became a number one hit on Billboard's Hot Dance Club Play chart, staying there for seven weeks. That same year, Quincy Jones covered "Ai No Corrida," the lead track from Chaz Jankel. Jones' version became an international hit, turning the song into something of a new wave disco standard. Chazablanca arrived in 1983 and Looking at You came out in 1985 -- its lead single "Number One" appeared on the soundtrack to the Val Kilmer comedy Real Genius that year -- then Jerry Moss of AM rejected a subsequent fifth album, leading to the label dropping Jankel.
Jankel relocated to the United States in the late 1980s, where he started to work as a film composer beginning with Susan Seidelman's 1987 comedy Making Mr. Right and the Dennis Quaid-starring remake of the 1949 film noir D.O.A.; the latter was co-directed by Chaz's sister Annabel. He eventually returned to the United Kingdom in the mid-'90s, leading to a reunion with Dury and the Blockheads. Jankel and Dury collaborated on the singer's final two albums, 1998's Mr. Love Pants and 2000's Ten More Turnips from the Tip. After Dury's death in 2000, Jankel led the Blockheads through a number of tours and records, all the while continuing to work on a solo career of his own. Throughout the 2000s, he regularly released albums on CJ Records, culminating with 2010's The Submarine Has Surfaced. During the 2010s, his recording projects involved the Blockheads, who released Same Horse Different Jockey in 2013 and Beyond the Call of Dury in 2017.
Cherry Red Records released Glad to Know You: The Anthology 1980-1986, a five-disc compilation of Jankel's AM recordings, in 2020. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Rovi