Mike d'Abo

Singer

Birthday March 1, 1944

Birth Sign Pisces

Birthplace Betchworth, Surrey, England

Age 80 years old

#36039 Most Popular

1781

His d'Abo heritage is via the Netherlands and the Dutch East Indies; his maternal line includes Edward Harbord, 3rd Baron Suffield (1781–1835).

. He was educated at Wellesley House Prep School in Kent, then at Harrow School and Selwyn College, Cambridge.

He is 5 ft, and has eyes "that honestly seem to change from blue to brown to green, depending on the light" according to Journalist Pete Goodman.

1944

Michael David d'Abo (born 1 March 1944) is an English singer and songwriter, best known as the lead vocalist of Manfred Mann from 1966 to their dissolution in 1969, and as the composer of the songs "Handbags and Gladrags" and "Build Me Up Buttercup", the latter of which was a hit for The Foundations.

With Manfred Mann, d'Abo achieved six top twenty hits on the UK Singles Chart including "Semi-Detached, Suburban Mr. James", "Ha! Ha! Said the Clown" and the chart topper "Mighty Quinn".

D'Abo was born in Betchworth, Surrey, the son of Dorothy Primrose (née Harbord) and Edward Nassau Nicolai d'Abo, a London stockbroker.

1966

D'Abo's original intention at Cambridge was to read theology and become a priest but, faced with "everything to learn" (not least Classical Greek and Hebrew), and a disconnect between the "strange, impractical philosophy" he was being taught and his idealism about "bringing comfort to people" and spreading "understanding in the world," he "became wholly disillusioned" (Rave, November 1966).

He switched to economics, also unsuccessfully, and left Cambridge with "a first class jazz collection" but without completing his studies.

His musical career began while he was still at Harrow School.

He had minor success with a group of Old Harrovians, A Band of Angels, that had their own comic strip in a UK pop music weekly, Fab 208.

A Band of Angels did not make the big time and d'Abo later reflected on what had gone wrong for them: "We weren't right for each other. We weren't a group. They didn't want me to be too outstanding, a thing that happens naturally in most groups.... Also we looked old-fashioned when we started. I knew I looked wrong but I didn't want to change, I looked like me and what I am. It is just lucky that fashion now agrees with me" (Rave, November 1966).

In July 1966, after leaving A Band of Angels, D’Abo joined Manfred Mann, an established chart-topping group, as a replacement for lead singer Paul Jones, who was leaving to start a solo career.

Comparisons between d'Abo and Jones (whom d'Abo physically resembled) became a media preoccupation at the time of the switch, but d'Abo wasted little time dwelling upon it.

"I enjoy being with the group," he told Pete Goodman.

"We really do have an enormously wide range of musical tastes among us."

D'Abo's first big hit with Manfred Mann was "Semi-Detached Suburban Mr James".

It was nearly recorded with "Mr Jones" in the title before it occurred to the group that it might be interpreted as a reference to Paul Jones.

D'Abo then helped record Manfred Mann's As Is album (with the attaching single of the Bob Dylan-penned "Just Like a Woman").

All of the UK Fontana and US Mercury releases featured d'Abo.

He composed and produced Chris Farlowe's "Handbags and Gladrags", a hit single (which was also notably recorded by Rod Stewart and Stereophonics and subsequently became the theme music to the BBC television show The Office) and "The Last Goodbye".

He also wrote two songs recorded by Rod Stewart on Immediate Records: "Little Miss Understood" and "So Much to Say (So Little Time)".

With d'Abo fronting, Manfred Mann enjoyed numerous hits, including "Ragamuffin Man", "Ha! Ha! Said the Clown", "My Name is Jack" and the Dylan-penned number one hit, "Quinn the Eskimo (The Mighty Quinn)", which they retitled simply "Mighty Quinn".

1967

His first marriage was to model Maggie London in 1967.

They had two children: Ben d'Abo (born 1967) and Olivia d'Abo (born 1969).

His second wife was Karen and they had one son, Bruno d'Abo.

1968

In 1968, he and Tony Macaulay co-wrote "Build Me Up Buttercup", which was recorded by The Foundations and sold over four million copies by April 1969, including one million discs in the United States.

In December 1968, d'Abo played the lead in Gulliver Travels (subtly, not Gulliver's Travels) at the Mermaid Theatre, Blackfriars, London and he also portrayed Herod on the original recording of Jesus Christ Superstar.

He had a short role on the original recording of Evita.

He also wrote "Loving Cup" for The Fortunes and "Mary, Won't You Warm My Bed" for Colin Blunstone.

1969

Manfred Mann subsequently disbanded in 1969.

1970

In 1970, he composed and performed the music for the Peter Sellers film There's a Girl in My Soup, and played John Lennon in No One was Saved at the Royal Court Theatre Schools scheme.

D'Abo also worked with Mike Smith, the former keyboard player of the Dave Clark Five.

1976

In 1976, they released an album on the CBS (UK) label, Smith & d'Abo.

1986

He also presented a number of programmes on BBC Radio 2 in 1986 and 1987.

D'abo has been married three times.

1990

During the 1990s, he also presented "Late Night West", a popular weeknightly programme on west-of-England local radio for five nights a week, that included music, competitions, and a listener phone-in.

In the late 1990s, he contributed to The Mike d'Abo Story, a documentary written by Geoff Leonard, narrated and produced by Phil Vowels, and broadcast on BBC Radio Bristol and BBC Radio Gloucestershire.

1996

His third marriage was to Lisa Weaver in 1996, which produced twins Ella and Louis in July 2007.

1997

In 1997, d'Abo presented a programme on BBC Radio Bristol, "The Golden Years", playing music from the 1950s onwards; it broadcast on Saturdays on BBC Radio Gloucestershire.

BBC Wiltshire Sound subsequently added the programme to their schedules.