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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Rick Astley

94 replies

homecomingcabbie · 12/08/2020 19:26

My teenager has just told me that Rick Astley is real music - AIBU to send for urgent help?

OP posts:
SuitedandBooted · 12/08/2020 22:46

Great soul voice - don't judge him by cheesy 80's videos!

This is an interesting read for Rick fans Smile
----------------------

Rick Astley: how we made Never Gonna Give You Up
‘One day I was making the tea for Bananarama. The next I was at No 1’

Interviews by Dave Simpson

The Guardian Mon 23 Mar 2020 14.40 GMT

Rick Astley, singer
I was the drummer in FBI, a jangly guitar band in Newton-le-Willows, Lancashire. After I started writing a few tunes, I became the singer. Pete Waterman, the producer, saw us at a showcase in a working men’s club in Warrington. He heard my voice and went: “I can make a record with that kid.”

I signed a deal, but within months Stock Aitken Waterman started having No 1s, so I was put on the backburner. Somebody – probably Pete – suggested I come and live in London so I wouldn’t get the hump and they could keep an eye on me. I lived in Pete’s flat. We’d go into the studio every morning and he’d be on his giant 80s mobile phone doing deals. I worked at the studio, making tea and sandwiches, but also watching how SAW made their records.

Usually, Pete would suggest a title and give Matt [Aitken] and Mike [Stock] an example of the sort of song he wanted. Matt normally played guitar and they both played keyboards really well. Pete wasn’t a musician but he was a DJ and knew what worked on the dancefloor. He’d go: “I can’t tell you why, but that bit’s wrong.”
They put out a single by me and Lisa Carter as Rick and Lisa, which didn’t do anything. Then they got a Fairlight synthesiser-sampler delivered. I helped them get it out of the box. I remember Mike inputting the chords to Never Gonna Give You Up. I made the tea while their programmer, Ian Curnow, did the basic track. Mike sang the melody literally into my ear and I went in and sang it. He was a tough producer but he needed to be. I was a kid who’d sung in pubs and clubs.

We shot the video in an old church near London’s Westway. All the clothes in the video are my own. There were no stylists – I shoved some stuff in a bag. I really liked the song. I remember thinking: “I’d dance to that if it came on in a disco in Warrington.” I thought it sounded like a hit and suddenly it was. One day I was making the tea. The next I was at No 1.

Pete Waterman, songwriter, co-producer

I turned up at Monks Social Club in a silver Ferrari. I don’t think anyone in Warrington had seen a Ferrari before, never mind a silver one. I was ill with flu, so I said to the guy on the door: “I’ll do 20 minutes, then I’ve got to get to bed.” But I stopped to watch the gig. I thought Rick’s voice was outstanding. And he moved quirkily, too. He reminded me of Van Morrison.

I said to his manager: “Don’t like the band. Don’t like the song. I’ll sign the singer.” We put Rick on a Youth Opportunities Programme government training scheme. I wanted him to understand the music industry and be a real artist. He made the tea while the likes of Bananarama, Mel and Kim and Dead Or Alive made records, soaking it all up like a sponge. His voice was so strong that finding a song for him that worked was difficult. In some ways, he was actually too good.

‘We mixed and mixed and mixed it. Then we promptly forgot all about it’ …
I’d been going out with a woman called Gaynor for ages. One morning, I came off the phone after a long call to her and Rick quipped: “You’re never going to give her up.” It stuck in my mind. Shortly afterwards, we were in my Jaguar going to work and Tony Blackburn played a record by [American R&B singer] Sybil. The hi-hat pattern clicked in my head and suddenly I knew exactly what we were going to do. I went into the studio and said: “I’ve got a title and a song idea for Rick.” Matt and Mike did a lot of work on Never Gonna Give You Up. We changed the key so Rick had to sing higher, and it worked. We mixed and mixed and mixed it. Then we promptly forgot all about it.

On Boxing Day that year, I was bored at home so I went into the studio. We pulled out Rick’s track and did a new version but forgot about that as well. Then one day someone played it in a meeting and everyone went: “What is this?” And the rest is history.

It went to No 1 in every country, including America. Because he looked so young, people thought it wasn’t actually him singing – Radio 1 rang him up in a hotel in Scotland and made him sing it in the bathroom.

Spermysextowel · 12/08/2020 22:47

My 20 yr old son keeps recommending 80s bands to me. He also wanted to buy vinyls & then the kit to play them on. I had to tell him that there’s a ‘record player’ & sine ‘records’ in the loft. He hasn’t bothered to go up there yet, but when he does I’ll be playing songs from my 20s non-stop. Rick, Howard Jones, Human League & I think Nu Shoes ‘I cant wait my which I played over & over & drove my sister mad.

CharlottesComplicatedWeb · 12/08/2020 23:10

@SuitedandBooted... great voice. Full stop

ssd · 12/08/2020 23:12

He seems to be a dead nice guy.

talkingkrustydoll · 13/08/2020 07:01

My 15 yr olds into the beetles, beach boys and Elton John. She borrowed all their vinyls off my nan and loves them. I feel like it's her form of rebellion as I'm a bit of a metal head.

ChicCroissant · 13/08/2020 07:14

I've seen him sing live at an outdoor event and he was good - he was singing swing music at the time. The crowd were shouting for his eighties stuff though!

Any time my DD hears a Rick Astley tune she says 'rickrolling' and I explain again that it doesn't mean hearing a song of his Hmm

DianaT1969 · 13/08/2020 07:41

I saw him live at at an arena event about 5 years ago and he was the best act of the night. Great voice, charisma, stage presence, engaged with the audience. Handsome too.

thepeopleversuswork · 13/08/2020 08:10

His music is absolute shite but he comes across as a lovely bloke so on those grounds alone I'll give him a pass.

LunchBoxPolice · 13/08/2020 09:25

Rick Astley, Elton John, Fleetwood Mac... so many legends in one thread. These kids have taste.

DGRossetti · 13/08/2020 10:30

His reappearance in the 90s as a more mature artist. This featured in between Nirvana and All About Eve on one of my mixtapes*

*ask your grandparents.

ScorchioScorchio · 13/08/2020 13:06

Rick Astley's singing voice is quite lovely. Rick Astley's speaking voice makes my undercrackers fall instantly to my ankles.

Grin
Vik81 · 13/08/2020 15:59

He is amazing! When I went travelling all I heard was Rick Astley in South America. His recent stuff is really different to his 80s hey day- all good in my book! Love him!

Leaannb · 13/08/2020 16:11

He was awesome on that tour

Washyourhands48 · 13/08/2020 16:20

Saw him at a festival, fab version of “Uptown Funk”

livelyredjellybean · 13/08/2020 16:29

He was absolutely awesome supporting Take That last year, the crowd just loved him! He was engaging and fun and had us all bopping away 😁

Scrumbleton · 13/08/2020 18:01

A friend is in his band he’s a lovely guy - met him with pal and he did me a favour - great, down to earth, guy

Scrumbleton · 13/08/2020 18:01

Wasn’t he so much better than tsk that

linmanuel · 13/08/2020 19:19

Better than Jason who is just bitter and always on the make

Getoffmyhelicopter · 13/08/2020 19:32

Tell DS he’s not allowed to listen and home - and if he tries remind him “you know the rules and so do I”

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