Betty Thatcher | |
---|---|
Birth name | Betty Mary Newsinger |
Also known as | Betty Thatcher |
Born | Westminster, London, England | 16 February 1944
Died | 15 August 2011 67) Hayle, Cornwall, England | (aged
Occupation(s) | Writer, lyricist |
Years active | 1969–2011 |
Betty Thatcher (16 February 1944 – 15 August 2011) was an English lyricist who wrote many of the lyrics for the progressive rock band Renaissance.
Early life
Betty Mary Newsinger was born in Great Titchfield Street, central London. She was taught to read newspapers at home, started conventional school at the age of eight, and became a fast and prolific reader. After passing the Eleven-plus exam, she won a scholarship to a grammar school,[1] where she refused to take part in any examinations. After two years excelling in English and art, she transferred to a school that accepted difficult students.
Career
Thatcher's friend Liz Kellett introduced her to Kellett's school friend Jane Relf, the younger sister of ex-Yardbirds singer Keith Relf. When Keith and Jane formed Renaissance, they asked her to be the lyricist, Relf having read Thatcher's letters to Jane.[2] When Betty moved to St Ives, Cornwall, she sent her lyrics from there to Jim McCarty who would write songs around them,[3] including "Love Is All" and "Past Orbits of Dust" from the album Illusion, produced by Paul Samwell-Smith and released in Germany in 1971, but not released in the UK until 1976.
After many personnel changes, the Renaissance lineup finally stabilised from 1972 to 1980, featuring Annie Haslam (vocals), John Tout (keyboards), Michael Dunford (guitar), Jon Camp (bass guitar/vocals) and Terence Sullivan (drums). Dunford sent tapes of his compositions to her when it was inconvenient to play through his ideas in person and said that "she writes amazingly quickly... three days later I get these stunning lyrics back in the post!"[4]
During this period, Thatcher wrote most of the band's lyrics for the studio albums Prologue (1972), Ashes Are Burning (1973), Turn of the Cards (1974), Scheherazade and Other Stories (1975), Novella (1977), A Song for All Seasons (1978) and Azure d'Or (1979). She wrote the lyrics to their 1978 UK top 10 hit single "Northern Lights". After further personnel changes, she wrote lyrics for the 1981 album Camera Camera; these lyrics were her final contributions to the band. She wrote the words to "Bonjour Swansong" as "a private goodbye to the group."[5]
In 1973, McCarty formed the group Shoot, whose only album, On the Frontier, featured the McCarty/Thatcher-composed title track that Renaissance recorded for Ashes Are Burning (1973).
During the 1970s, Thatcher wrote English lyrics for German and Spanish hits. In 1985, she wrote the lyrics to Annie Haslam's Still Life album, which was recorded with Louis Clark and the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra.[6] Thatcher and Clark also recorded an album entitled The Life of Dorian Gray, which was never released. She contributed lyrics to the Don Airey's 1989 album K2.[7] In 1998, Thatcher wrote the words for a Japanese commercial for Nikka Whiskey which won five awards.[8]
In 1994, Thatcher wrote the lyrics for the album The Other Woman by Michael Dunford's Renaissance, which featured singer Stephanie Adlington. These were written "during the painful period when a relationship was coming to an end... during which I was unable to speak, so I tried to put some of my feelings to song".[9]
In 2005, Thatcher wrote lyrics for the album South of Winter by Terence Sullivan's group Renaissant, which featured John Tout on keyboards, Sullivan's wife Christine on most of the vocals and Sullivan singing lead on two songs.[10][11]
About the lyrics
John Tout described Thatcher's lyrics as "reclusive, almost. They're not drawn from the normal sort of thing that people write about in a rock band", and Jon Camp opined, "What she's written has always been correct for the group. It fits very well with what we've tried to do musically."[12]
"Carpet of the Sun" conveys Thatcher's "joy of being alive, and seeing the grass grow", and "Ashes Are Burning" relates "a near death experience." "Running Hard" tells of "a long dark cliff path, that if you miss the last bus from Hayle to St. Ives, you have to walk...the sea's at one side of you and there's a train the other side...the trees looked like webs and the stars and the moon looked like mirrors." "I Think of You" conveys how "you can love everybody, in every way, even the unlovable." "Black Flame" relates to the Vietnam War and the horrors of killing.[2]
"Mother Russia" was inspired by Alexander Solzhenitsyn's book One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich. About "Ocean Gypsy" Thatcher "always thought the sun was the man and the moon was the woman...it's like they're lovers and they never really meet." "The Vultures Fly High" was "actually written for Wishbone Ash and it had even darker words...so I tried to make it a little lighter." Thatcher said she "always regretted writing 'Sounds of the Sea' because I felt that it was such a personal thing...every time I heard it for the first five years I cringed and thought, oh my God, everyone can see into my brain."[2] Interpretations of "Can You Hear Me?" vary; Annie Haslam felt it was "about the city and people", while Jon Camp said that "It's about people hiding behind their social facades, I think ... people are never actually saying what they mean, never meaning what they say."[12] Thatcher herself has declined to explain "Can You Hear Me?", preferring that each listener view it through their own individual understanding.
Personal life
In 1972, she married at the Kensington and Chelsea Register Office and became Betty Brown. She divorced in 1976 and changed her name back to Newsinger in the 1980s, having found out her real birth name. Also her stepfather’s name Thatcher, which she had previously used, had gained negative political connotations. She was a private person and lived most of her life in St Ives and then in Hayle.
In her late years she was not in the best of health, suffering from emphysema. Thatcher died of lung cancer on 15 August 2011, in Hayle.[13]
References
- ↑ Perrone, Pierre (16 September 2011).""Betty Thatcher: Lyricist..."". Independent.co.uk. Archived from the original on 26 September 2011. Retrieved 26 September 2014.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) . The Independent. - 1 2 3 "Northern Lights - The Renaissance Fan Site: Interview with Betty Thatcher and Annie Haslam (from WYSP Radio Broadcast, 27 June 1993)". Jtl.us.
- ↑ "Northern Lights - The Renaissance Fan Site: The History of Renaissance by Russell W. Elliot". Jtl.us.
- ↑ "Renaissance in Concert, 1975 Tour Programme" (PDF). Api.ning.com. Retrieved 16 July 2020.
- ↑ "Renaissance - Camera Camera (1981)". Discogs.com. Retrieved 11 November 2016.
- ↑ "Annie Haslam - Still Life (1985)". Discogs.com. Retrieved 11 November 2016.
- ↑ "Don Airey - K2 (Tales of Triumph & Tragedy) (1988)". Discogs.com. Retrieved 11 November 2016.
- ↑ "Annie Haslam/Artist Shop IRC Chat Log". Artist-shop.com.
- ↑ "Northern Lights - The Renaissance Fan Site: Heartache Brought Her a Successful Song Writing Career - Betty Celebrates the Launch of an Album of Love Songs (by Steve Fletcher, 2 March 1995)". Jtl.us/nlightsweb. Retrieved 13 June 2020.
- ↑ "Renaissant - South of Winter (2004)". Discogs.com. Retrieved 11 November 2016.
- ↑ "Interview with Terry Sullivan". Dmme.net. Retrieved 11 November 2016.
- 1 2 "Northern Lights - The Renaissance Fan Site: Renaissance Class Chops and Classical Cops - The Good Times (by Don Kossoff, 8-21 March 1977". Jtl.us.
- ↑ Obituary: Betty's lyrics might have been 'reclusive' but they were heard by a global audience. The Cornishman