Helen Terry | |
---|---|
Born | 25 May 1956 |
Genres | Pop, rock |
Instrument(s) | Vocals |
Years active | 1982–present |
Labels | Virgin, Parlophone |
Helen Terry (born 25 May 1956) [1] is a British singer and television producer, known for her backing vocal work with Culture Club. As a solo performer, she scored a Top 40 hit single in 1984 with "Love Lies Lost", [2] and released one album in 1986, Blue Notes.
Terry changed careers, with a focus in film and television production, and moved behind the scenes in the music industry. She has been a producer and executive producer for the TV broadcast of the BRIT Awards since 2001.
Terry was asked to perform on Culture Club's debut album, Kissing to Be Clever , after lead singer Boy George met her at a London club. [3] Her soulful vocals became a key element of the Culture Club sound [4] on the group's debut album and its follow-up, Colour by Numbers . She is featured in several of the band's videos, including "Time (Clock of the Heart)", [5] "Church of the Poison Mind", "It's a Miracle", "Black Money", "That's the Way", "Victims", and often appeared on television with them.
Her solo career began in 1984 on Culture Club's label Virgin with the single "Love Lies Lost" (which she wrote in collaboration with group members Boy George and Roy Hay). The single went to No. 34 in the UK, [6] reached the same position in Australia, [7] and was a No. 28 hit in Ireland. [8] That year she also co-wrote and recorded "Now You're Mine" with producer Giorgio Moroder for the soundtrack to the film, Electric Dreams , and released the single "Stuttering".
In 1985, she recorded "Take That Look Off Your Face" for the multi-artist tribute album Performance - The Very Best Of Tim Rice & Andrew Lloyd Webber. She also guested on backing vocals on the track "Take Me Home" on Phil Collins' No Jacket Required . [9]
Terry's album Blue Notes was released in 1986, and was produced by Don Was with contributions from Stewart Levine and Christopher Neil. It spawned three singles, "Stuttering", "Act Of Mercy" and "Come On And Find Me".
Also in 1986 she recorded "One Summer Day/Duelling Bikes" with Ray Parker Jr. for the 1986 Kevin Bacon movie "Quicksilver"; it reached #96 on the US Billboard Hot 100.
Her involvement with Culture Club was minimal after 1985, although she made a guest appearance during Boy George's 1987 UK solo tour [10] and would appear on background vocals on various Boy George projects up until 1990's The Martyr Mantras . Terry and Boy George had a falling out after he wrote about their relationship in his memoir, but have reconciled. [11]
In 1989, after signing to Parlophone, she released an EP, Fortunate Fool, featuring three new songs. Two of these, "Fortunate Fool" and "Lessons in Loneliness", were also released as singles, but differences with her record company led to a deadlock over plans for an album and she abandoned the contract. [12]
Blue Notes has been re-released as a remastered limited edition CD with bonus tracks in 2009.
Terry contributed all the backing vocals to the track "Whole New Way" [13] on the 2010 Scissor Sisters album Night Work .
Terry moved into film and television production, beginning as a children's TV researcher in 1990, [14] and as a producer for the BRIT Awards TV broadcast [15] since 2001, becoming the executive producer in 2005. [14] The 2008 broadcast attracted 6.1 million viewers. [16]
Single | Date | Label | 7" B-side | Additional tracks | UK chart position | AUS chart position [17] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
"Love Lies Lost" | April 1984 | Virgin | "Laughter on My Mind (live)" | "Love Lies Lost (extended version)" (on 12") | 34 | 34 |
"Stuttering" | 1 October 1984 | Virgin | "Stuttering (dub mix)" | "Stuttering (club mix)" (on 12") | 84 | - |
"Now You're Mine" | 12 November 1984 | Virgin | "Now You're Mine (instrumental)" | "Now You're Mine (extended)" (on 12") | - | - |
"Act of Mercy" | 1986 | Virgin | "Over The Border" | "Love Money And Sex" (on 12") | - | - |
"Come on and Find Me" | 1986 | Virgin | "Reach Out" | "Come on And Find Me (Alternative Mix)", "The River" (on 12") | - | - |
"Lessons in Loneliness" | 1989 | Parlophone | "Lessons in Loneliness (radio version)" | "Lessons in Loneliness (lessons learned)", "Lessons in Loneliness (Olympic version)", "Fortunate Fool (radio version)" (on CD single) | - | - |
"Fortunate Fool" | 1989 | Parlophone | "Heart of a Woman" | "Lessons in Loneliness", "Fortunate Fool (extended version)" (on EP) | - | - |
Track listing
Bonus tracks
Culture Club are an English pop band formed in London in 1981. The band comprises Boy George, Roy Hay, and Mikey Craig, and formerly included Jon Moss. Emerging in the New Romantic scene, they are considered one of the most representative and influential groups of the 1980s.
Kissing to Be Clever is the debut album by the English band Culture Club, released on 4 October 1982 in the United Kingdom. It includes Culture Club's international breakthrough hit single, "Do You Really Want to Hurt Me", which reached number one in the band's native UK and the top 10 of many charts around the world. The album has reportedly sold over 4 million copies worldwide, including over 1 million in the US where it has been certified Platinum by the RIAA.
Sex Gang Children are an early gothic rock and post-punk band that formed in early 1982 in Brixton in London, England. Although the original group only released one official studio album, their singles and various other tracks have been packaged into numerous collections, and they remain one of the more well-known bands of the early Batcave scene and have reformed for new albums and touring at various times since the early 1990s.
Colour by Numbers is the second album by the British new wave group Culture Club, released in October 1983. Preceded by the hit single "Karma Chameleon", which reached number one in several countries, the album reached number one in the UK and has sold 10 million copies worldwide. It has been certified triple platinum in the UK and quadruple platinum in the US. It was ranked number 96 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 100 Best Albums of the 1980s.
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Michael George Farr, known professionally as Mike Leander, was a British arranger, songwriter and record producer.
Electric Dreams is a soundtrack album from the film Electric Dreams, released in 1984.
Sold is the debut solo studio album by English singer Boy George, released in 1987 by Virgin Records. The album includes George's cover of "Everything I Own", which reached number one in the United Kingdom, Ireland, and Norway, and also reached the top 10 in several other countries.
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This Time – The First Four Years is the first official greatest hits album by British new wave group Culture Club, released by Virgin Records on 6 April 1987. Its release came one year after the band had split up.
"Time " is a song by the British new wave band Culture Club, released as a stand-alone single in most of the world and as the second single from their debut album Kissing to Be Clever in North America. Following on the heels of the band's global #1 hit, "Do You Really Want to Hurt Me", "Time " peaked at #3 on the UK Singles Chart, selling over 500,000 copies in the UK. In the United States, the song matched the #2 peak of its predecessor on the Billboard Hot 100, kept from the #1 spot by "Flashdance... What a Feeling" by Irene Cara for two weeks.
The Martyr Mantras is the only studio album by Jesus Loves You and the fourth studio album by Boy George. It was credited to Jesus Loves You worldwide except in North America, where it was credited to Boy George upon its release there in 1991.
George Alan O'Dowd, known professionally as Boy George, is an English singer, songwriter, DJ, author and mixed media artist. Best known for his soulful voice and his androgynous appearance, Boy George has been the lead singer of the pop band Culture Club since the group's formation in 1981. He began his solo career in 1987. Boy George's music is often classified as blue-eyed soul, which is influenced by rhythm and blues and reggae.
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Boyfriend is the third solo studio album by English singer Boy George, released in April 1989 by Virgin Records, just six months after his previous album, Tense Nervous Headache, which Virgin Records decided to not release in the United Kingdom, due to its lead-single "Don't Cry" performing poorly.