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Gary Osborne (born in London) is an English singer and songwriter from the United Kingdom. Gary Osborne chairs The Songwriters Executive of the British Academy Of Songwriters Composers and Authors and is also Chairman of The Ivor Novello Awards ==Career== Born in London in 1949, Gary is the son of the late musical director Tony Osborne. Gary Osborne was educated in Switzerland and entered the music industry at the age of 15. As a teenage songwriter Osborne had recordings by the likes of Timi Yuro, Nana Mouskouri and Val Doonican and at age 17 had his first US chart entry with "On The Other Side" by The Seekers, which he wrote with Tom Springfield. Osborne's early career included presenting the '60s radio show ''Cool Britania'' on the BBC World Service and a stint with RCA Records in its A&R department. In the early '70s he was active in television jingles, writing and performing hundreds of songs for brands such as Pepsi, Ultra Brite, Shredded Wheat and Abbey National.〔(British Academy of Composers and Songwriters ) retrieved May 2008〕 Gary and his then musical partner Paul Vigrass also released two albums: ''Queues'' in 1972 and ''Steppin' Out'' in 1974, both produced by Jeff Wayne. Vigrass and Osborne made the US top 50 with "Men Of Learning" and the Japanese top 3 with "Forever Autumn" (originally a jingle for Lego Toys). His first UK hit was "Amoureuse", sung by Kiki Dee, co-written with Véronique Sanson and co-produced by Elton John. Osborne went on to collaborate with Elton John throughout the album ''A Single Man'', and on parts of the albums ''21 at 33'', ''The Fox'', ''Jump Up!'', and ''Leather Jackets''. The three biggest singles co-written by Elton John and Gary Osborne were "Part Time Love" from 1978, "Little Jeannie," a U.S million seller in 1980, and the worldwide hit "Blue Eyes" from 1982.〔 Osborne was principal lyricist on the best-selling concept album ''Jeff Wayne's Musical Version of The War of the Worlds'' which has sold in excess of 15 million albums and performed half a dozen sold-out UK arena tours as well as touring in Europe and Australia. More recent work includes the 2006 UK top 3 hit "Checkin' It Out" by Lil' Chris. Gary's collaboration with Richard Kerr yielded the US hit "I'm Dreaming" for Jennifer Warnes and "Making The Best Of A Bad Situation" for Millie Jackson's ''Still Caught Up'' album, as well as cuts by Jimmy Helms, Cliff Richard, The Edwin Hawkins Singers and The Righteous Brothers. He co-wrote songs for Albert Hammond's 1982 album ''Somewhere in America''. "I Am The Future," written with Lalo Schifrin for the soundtrack of the movie ''Class of 1984'', was performed by Alice Cooper. Other films featuring Osborne songs include ''My Own Private Idaho'', ''Stardust'', ''Every Day's A Holiday'', ''Summer Lovers'', ''The Legacy'' and ''Oh Heavenly Dog''. Osborne's credits as a backing vocalist include "Sugar Baby Love" by The Rubettes, "You Can Make Me Dance" by Rod Stewart and The Faces, "Part Time Love" and "Little Jeannie" by Elton John, Randy VanWarmer's "You Left Me Just When I Needed You Most" and "Gonna Make You A Star (I don't fink so)" by David Essex. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Gary Osborne」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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