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Originally,
the Sweet were called the Sweetshop and consisted of Brian Connolly
(vocals), Mick Tucker (vocals, drums), Frank Torpey (guitar), and Steve
Priest (bass). In 1970, the group truncated their name to Sweet and
signed a record contract with Fontana/EMI, releasing four unsuccessful
singles. Following the failure of the four singles, Torpey left the
group and was replaced by Andy Scott. The new lineup of Sweet signed to
RCA Records in 1971,
where they were placed under the direction of songwriters Nicky Chinn
and Mike Chapman. Chinn and Chapman wrote a number of light bubblegum
pop songs for the group, the first of which, "Funny Funny,"
reached number 13 on the U.K. charts. Following "Funny Funny,"
the duo wrote five more Top 40 hits for the group -- including
"Little Willy" and "Wig-Wam Bam" -- which were all
lightweight bubblegum numbers loaded with double entendres. During this
time, Sweet were writing their own B-sides and album tracks. All of the
group's compositions were harder than Chinn and Chapman's songs,
featuring crunching hard rock guitars. Consequently, the duo decided to
write tougher songs for the group. "Blockbuster," the first
result of Chinn and Chapman's neo-glam rock approach, was the biggest
hit Sweet ever had in the U.K., reaching number one on the charts in
early 1973 and eventually going platinum. For the next two years, Sweet
continued to chart with Chinn and Chapman compositions, including the
Top Ten hits "Hell Raiser," "Ballroom Blitz,"
"Teenage Rampage," and "The Six Teens." By
the summer of 1974, the members of Sweet had grown tired of the control
Chinn and Chapman exerted over their career and decided to record
without the duo. The resulting album, Sweet Fanny Adams, reached number
27 in the U.K., but it yielded no hits. In the spring of 1975, Sweet had
their first self-penned hit with "Fox on the Run," which
reached the Top Ten in both the U.K. and the U.S. "Fox on the
Run" appeared on the collection Desolation Boulevard; in America,
it's release helped "Ballroom Blitz" reach the Top Ten in the
summer of 1975. Strung Up, released in the fall of 1975, continued
ALBUMS 1971 Funny How Sweet Co-Co Can Be 1974 Sweet Fanny Adams Desolation Boulevard 1976 Give Us a Wink 1977 Off the Record 1978 Level Headed 1979 Cut Above the Rest 1980 Waters Edge 1982 Identity Crisis SINGLES 1968 "Slow Motion" 1969 "Lollipop Man" 1970 "All You'll Ever Get from Me" "Get on the Line" 1971 "Funny Funny" "Co-Co" "Alexander Graham Bell" 1972 "Poppa Joe" "Little Willy" "Wig Wam Bam" 1973 "Block Buster!" "Hell Raiser" "The Ballroom Blitz" 1974 "Teenage Rampage" "The Six Teens" "Turn It Down" "Peppermint Twist" 1975 "Fox On The Run" "Action" 1976 "The Lies in Your Eyes" "4th of July" "Lost Angels" 1977 "Fever of Love" "Funk It Up (David's Song)" "Stairway to the Stars" 1978 "Love Is Like Oxygen" "California Nights" 1979 "Call Me" "Big Apple Waltz" 1980 "Give the Lady Some Respect" "Sixties Man" 1984 "The Sixteens" / "Action" "It's... It's... The Sweet Mix" 1985 "Sweet 2th - The Wigwam Willy Mix" |
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