Judie Tzuke

Songwriter

Birthday April 3, 1956

Birth Sign Aries

Birthplace London, England

Age 67 years old

Nationality United Kingdom

#63432 Most Popular

1920

Tzuke's family relocated from Poland to England in the 1920s, and changed their surname from Tzuke to Myers, like other Jewish families from Eastern Europe.

Her mother, Jean Silverside, was a television actress, and her father, Sefton Myers, was a successful property developer who also managed artists and singers—most notably Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice during the writing of Jesus Christ Superstar.

Tzuke preferred the original family name, started using it at school and so, when Tzuke embarked on her singing career, she used it as her stage name.

Educated in the visual arts, performing arts, and music, Tzuke performed in folk clubs from the age of 15.

1956

Judie Tzuke (born Judie Myers, 3 April 1956) is an English singer-songwriter.

1975

Her meeting with Mike Paxman in 1975 was a turning point and they began to collaborate.

Under the name Tzuke & Paxo, they eventually secured a recording contract and the duo released a single, "These are the Laws", produced by Tony Visconti.

1977

Tzuke's career as a solo artist began in 1977, when she signed to Elton John's label The Rocket Record Company.

1978

Her first single on Rocket, "For You", was released in 1978.

1979

She is best known for her 1979 hit "Stay with Me till Dawn", which reached number 16 on the UK Singles Chart.

Her only notable success, "Stay with Me till Dawn", was released in 1979.

The song, which was co-written with Mike Paxman, became a top 20 hit on the UK Singles Chart in the summer of 1979 and a top 10 hit in Australia and was featured on Tzuke's 1979 debut album, Welcome to the Cruise, which was also a top 20 hit on the UK Albums Chart.

1980

Tzuke's second album, Sports Car (1980), charted higher than her debut album (reaching No. 7 in the UK) and contained one single, "Living on the Coast", which failed to chart.

Tzuke became Elton John's support act for his North American tour, and she was the opening act in front of 400,000 people who turned out to watch his free concert at New York's Central Park on September 13, 1980.

1981

Both albums were certified gold by the British Phonographic Industry in 1981.

She went on to release one more album on Rocket, I Am the Phoenix (1981), which also made the UK top 20.

1982

In 1982, Tzuke signed to Chrysalis Records and released her fourth album, Shoot the Moon.

Although the album reached the UK top 20, it was Tzuke's last album to do so.

Three singles were taken from the album (including a 7" picture disc release for "I'm Not a Loser"), but none were chart hits. Tzuke completed a 57 date tour of the UK, culminating as the headline act at that year's Glastonbury Festival. The performance was recorded for a TV special by ITV. Several performances from the tour were recorded and released at the end of 1982 as a double album, Road Noise: The Official Bootleg.

1983

In 1983, Rocket issued a compilation album, The Best of Judie Tzuke, and released the track "Black Furs" as a single (the original version of which was on Tzuke's 1981 album I Am the Phoenix).

September 1983 saw the release of Tzuke's fifth studio album, Ritmo (Spanish for "rhythm").

The album was somewhat of a departure from her previous work, with a more electronic feel.

The album peaked at No. 26 in the UK.

After two albums, Tzuke left Chrysalis Records.

She signed with the small independent Legacy Records for the release of her next album.

1984

A new single, "You", was released in October 1984.

A cover of a lesser-known Marvin Gaye track, her version peaked at No. 92 in the UK.

1985

In March 1985, "I'll Be the One" was issued as a new single from Tzuke's forthcoming sixth album, The Cat Is Out, which was mainly recorded at her home studio and released in June 1985.

The single peaked at No. 97, while the album peaked at No. 35 on the UK Albums Chart.

1987

Following the muted reception of The Cat Is Out, Tzuke signed with another major label, Polydor Records, in 1987.

She began working on her seventh album, though took some time off in June 1987 when she gave birth to her first daughter, Bailey.

1989

The album, Turning Stones, was released in April 1989, peaking at No. 57 on the UK Albums Chart.

It was preceded by the single "We'll Go Dreaming", which had peaked at No. 96 several weeks earlier.

1990

In 1990, she switched to Columbia Records (CBS).

In August, she released a new single, a cover version of The Beach Boys song "God Only Knows".

However, the song failed to gain chart success.

The song featured in an ITV documentary series about recording techniques, where Tzuke and her producers Mike Paxman and Paul Muggleton showed how the song had been constructed using samples of her voice which were transposed into a synthesizer range.

1991

Her eighth album, Left Hand Talking, was released by Columbia in May 1991.

"Outlaws" was released as a single by Columbia in June 1991, but neither the album nor single made an impact upon the charts.

2002

In 2002, "Stay with Me till Dawn" was chosen by the British public in a poll of the 50 Best British Songs 1952–2002 (ranking at number 39).