Les McKeown
Les McKeown | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Birth name | Leslie Richard McKeown |
Born | Edinburgh, Scotland | 12 November 1955
Died | 20 April 2021 London, England | (aged 65)
Genres | Pop rock |
Occupation(s) | Singer |
Instrument(s) | Vocals |
Years active | 1973–2021 |
Spouse(s) |
Peko Keiko (m. 1983) |
Leslie Richard McKeown (12 November 1955 – 20 April 2021) was a Scottish singer. He was the lead vocalist of the pop rock band Bay City Rollers during their most successful period in the 1970s.
Early life
McKeown was born in Broomhouse, a suburb close to the south-western city limit of Edinburgh, on 12 November 1955. His father, Francis, worked as a tailor and was deaf; his mother, Florence (née Close), was a seamstress who moved to Scotland after getting married. Both emigrated to the United Kingdom from Ireland. The family communicated with his father via hand signals. McKeown was raised in a city tenement block, attended Broomhouse Primary School, then nearby Forrester High School, and volunteered in the Boys' Brigade. He left school at 15 and became a member of the band Threshold. He was employed at a paper mill in between the group's gigs, which earned them £20 per show. In his autobiography, Shang-a-Lang: Life as an International Pop Idol (2003), he admits he had a happy childhood in Broomhouse, but Edinburgh, in his view a drab place to live, became a place to escape from. Among the core members of the band, McKeown was the only one, after the band ran its course, who did not go back to live in Scotland.
Career
Bay City Rollers
McKeown joined the Bay City Rollers in November 1973, replacing founding lead singer Gordon "Nobby" Clark. He was initially reluctant to join the group, later stating in his memoir that it was not "high on my list of bands I'd have wanted to join". The band only achieved national, and then international, popularity after McKeown joined. That said, the locally well-known band, with a recording contract with a minor label, was already established and the newly recruited singer, in his autobiography, maintains that there always was a chasm between him and the rest of the band, despite the fact they were of, more or less, the same age and shared similar backgrounds. The rest of the band members were all from Craigmillar/Liberton, suburbs of similar character to Broomhouse, but near to the southern border of the city, and as the subtitle of his autobiography suggests, McKeown had no pretension to be a rock musician/artist unlike some members of the band.
His arrival also coincided with an overhaul of the group's image introducing half-mast trousers, platform shoes and tartan. They had four songs in the Top 10 in 1974 ("Remember", "Summerlove Sensation", "All of Me Loves All of You", and "Shang-a-Lang" which featured McKeown as the frontman). This was followed by 2 UK number ones ("Bye Bye Baby", "Give a Little Love") and a U.S. number one ("Saturday Night", which was re-recorded with McKeown as the lead vocalist) a year later.
Their manager Tam Paton, who was concerned about the inadequacy of the band's musical capabilities, apart from McKeown's singing talent and good looks, chose songs for them and hired song writers and competent studio musicians for the recordings. As a result, often in the Bay City Rollers' recordings, McKeown's vocals were the only musical contributions from the band.
McKeown later wrote that he was raped by Paton and that Paton provided him with Mandrax and amphetamines to help him cope with the pressures of touring.
McKeown left the group in 1978 as its popularity began to decline.
Later works
He established the pop band Egotrip and released a solo album in 1979 titled All Washed Up, which was successful in Japan. He went on to release eight more solo albums. He rejoined the Bay City Rollers in 2015 for a series of reunion shows, the first of which, at Glasgow's Barrowlands, sold out in three minutes. He released his final album, The Lost Songs, in 2016.
Personal life and death
McKeown married Peko Keiko, a native of Japan, in 1983. They had a son. In 2008, McKeown stayed at a treatment facility in California for four months, successfully overcoming his addiction to alcohol. One year later, in the Living TV show Rehab, covering celebrities fighting addiction, he disclosed that he was a "secret bisexual" and admitted being unfaithful to his wife with both men and women.
McKeown killed an elderly neighbour in 1975 as a result of reckless driving, for which he was banned from driving for one year and fined £100. He later revealed how the guilt he felt over the event played a key role in his alcoholism. He was fined and banned from driving for 18 months after another incident in 2015 when driving while drunk.
McKeown died on 20 April 2021, at the age of 65, after going into cardiac arrest at his home in London. A coroner's report concluded that his death was from "a combination of natural causes"; he had cardiovascular disease and hypertension, at least partially caused by years of drug and alcohol abuse.
Discography
Albums
Title | Album details |
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Rollin' |
|
Once Upon a Star |
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Bay City Rollers |
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Wouldn't You Like It? |
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Rock n' Roll Love Letter |
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Dedication |
|
It's a Game |
|
Breakout '85 |
|
A Christmas Shang-A-Lang |
|
Live Albums
Title | Album details |
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Live in Japan |
|
Rollerworld:Live at the Budokan 1977 |
|
Singles
Year | Title |
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1971 | "Keep on Dancing" |
1972 | "We Can Make Music" |
"Mañana" | |
1974 | "Remember (Sha-La-La-La)" |
"Shang-a-Lang" | |
"Summerlove Sensation" | |
"All of Me Loves All of You" | |
1975 | "Bye, Bye, Baby" |
"Give a Little Love" | |
"Don't Stop the Music" | |
"Love Me Like I Love You" | |
1976 | "Saturday Night" |
"Money Honey" | |
"Rock and Roll Love Letter" | |
"I Only Want to Be with You" | |
"Yesterday's Hero" | |
"Dedication" | |
"Don't Worry Baby" | |
1977 | "It's a Game" |
"You Made Me Believe in Magic" | |
"The Way I Feel Tonight" | |
"Don't Let the Music Die" | |
1983 | "Piece of the Action" |
1985 | "When You Find Out" |
Solo
Albums
Title | Year |
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All Washed Up | 1979 |
The Face of Love | 1980 |
100% Live | 1980 |
The Greatest | 1980 |
Sweet Pain | 1981 |
Heart Control | 1982 |
It's a Game | 1989 |
Love Letter | 1993 |
The Lost Songs | 2016 |
Bibliography
- McKeown, Les; Elliott, Lynne; Welsh, Irvine (2003). Shang-a-lang: Life as an International Pop Idol. ISBN 1-84018-651-8.
- 1955 births
- 2021 deaths
- 20th-century Scottish LGBT people
- 20th-century Scottish male singers
- 21st-century Scottish LGBT people
- Bay City Rollers members
- Bisexual male musicians
- Bisexual singers
- British pop rock singers
- Deaths from hypertension
- Hansa Records artists
- Scottish bisexual people
- Scottish LGBT singers
- Musicians from Edinburgh
- Scottish memoirists
- Scottish people of Irish descent
- Scottish people of Northern Ireland descent
- Scottish pop singers
- Scottish rock singers