Manfred Mann (musician)

Artist

Birthday October 21, 1940

Birth Sign Libra

Birthplace Johannesburg, Union of South Africa

Age 83 years old

Nationality South Africa

#24758 Most Popular

1940

Manfred Sepse Lubowitz (born 21 October 1940), known professionally as Manfred Mann, is a South African-born musician, resident in the UK since 1961.

He is best known as a founding member of the bands Manfred Mann, Manfred Mann Chapter Three and Manfred Mann's Earth Band.

Lubowitz was raised in a Lithuanian Jewish family in Johannesburg, the son of David Lubowitz and Alma Cohen.

He studied music at the University of the Witwatersrand, and worked as a jazz pianist at a number of clubs in Johannesburg.

1960

Prominent in the Swinging London scene of the 1960s, the group regularly appeared in the UK Singles Chart.

Three of their most successful singles, "Do Wah Diddy Diddy", "Pretty Flamingo", and "Mighty Quinn", topped the UK charts.

Mann has used various keyboard instruments through his career (piano and organ in the early 1960s, later also including Mellotron), but he is especially known for his distinctive solo performance on the Minimoog synthesizer, which he personalized by extensive use of a filter.

His keyboard parts are often improvised and inspired by jazz.

One example, as he explained in an interview with eclipsed magazine, is his tendency to bend notes downwards on the synthesizer, which he says he got from Miles Davis.

1961

Strongly opposed to the apartheid system in his native South Africa, Lubowitz moved to the United Kingdom in 1961 and began to write for Jazz News under the pseudonym Manfred Manne (after jazz drummer Shelly Manne), which was soon shortened to Manfred Mann.

1962

In 1962, he met drummer and keyboard player Mike Hugg at Clacton Butlins Holiday Camp; together they formed a large blues-jazz band called the Mann-Hugg Blues Brothers.

1963

This eventually evolved into a five-piece group named after him, and they signed a record deal with EMI in 1963, under the HMV label.

1964

The band's 1964 hit "5-4-3-2-1" was the theme tune for the ITV pop music show Ready Steady Go!.

They were also the first southern-England-based group to top the US Billboard Hot 100 during the British Invasion.

1969

The band split up in 1969.

With Manfred Mann recently broken up, Mann and Mike Hugg created Manfred Mann Chapter Three.

The group's debut performance, which was at Newcastle's Mayfair ballroom on 24 October 1969, consisted of Mann and Hugg on keyboards and organ, as well as:

They were also backed by a five-piece brass group consisting of:

They recorded two albums: Manfred Mann Chapter Three, in 1969, and Manfred Mann Chapter Three Volume Two, in 1970.

Manfred Mann appeared as a jazz pianist in the 1969 Jesús Franco film Venus in Furs, and performed the score for that film.

He also released solo projects under the names Manfred Mann's Plain Music and Manfred Mann '06.

Manfred Mann played a Minimoog solo on the Uriah Heep song "July Morning".

He also played keyboards on Trevor Rabin's album Wolf.

1970

The group were never commercially successful, and split up in late 1970.

Although the group never had the same success of "Blinded by the Light" with any of their other songs, they still hold a great legacy when it comes to music of the 1970s.

The band is still active, and Mann still tours with the group along with founding member Mick Rogers.

In the early 1970s, he played drums during the intro of the song "Black and Blue" (see video).

By the early 1970s Mann used a Hammond M3 organ which he had acquired from Alan Price and then modified to give it a grittier sound.

This instrument was the basis for his live keyboard setup in Chapter Three as well as the classic Earth Band lineup until the late 1970s.

By the mid-1970s he added a Fender Rhodes 73 Stage Piano to his setup.

In the late 1970s and early 1980s he combined the Minimoog with an Oberheim SEM to expand the filter and effect section.

At this point Mann used a considerably bigger live setup for which he had replaced the bulky Hammond M3 with a one-manual Korg CX-3 organ and added a Yamaha CP-70 for piano sounds as well as an ARP Omni for string sounds.

When digital keyboards became more common, Mann began replacing the bulky analogue instruments with them.

1971

In 1971, Mann formed Manfred Mann's Earth Band.

For the Earth Band Mann added a Minimoog monophonic synthesizer to his setup which he had bought in the summer of 1971.

1976

They had a chart topping hit in 1976 with a cover of the 1973 Bruce Springsteen song "Blinded by the Light;" their cover went to number one in Canada and the U.S.

1990

In the early 1990s he used a Yamaha SY77 and a Korg M-1 together with the Minimoog.

During the 1990s Mann also used a Yamaha VL 1.

2000

In the 2000s, he has regularly used a Roland keytar on stage for two or three songs.

The instrument is visually striking for being decorated with zebra stripes.