Music legend dead as tributes as paid to iconic singer who was a household name in the UK
20.05.2024 - 09:45
/ ok.co.uk
Music legend Frank Ifield, who helped give The Beatles their start in the industry, has died of the age of 86.
The Australian singer passed away peacefully in his sleep on Saturday night.
The sad news was shared on Facebook by his friend, music historian and journalist Glenn A. Baker. He posted: "I just took a call from David Ifield, telling me that his brother FRANK IFIELD peacefully passed on this Saturday night, at age 86.
There is so much to be said about this remarkable man, who had four number ones in Britain, three of them before the Beatles (who he had briefly support him in concert).
I Remember You became an indelible hit all around the world and a perfect signature song. It topped the U.K. charts for 7 weeks.
"This is not the time to say any more than my thoughts are with Frank's brothers and his wife Carole and to say how fortunate I was to see him earlier this year. I'm still gathering my thoughts." He then went on to share images of Frank with Alan Lancaster of Status Quo, Eric Burdon, John Rowles, Frankie Davidson, Mary Schneider, Nicki Gillis, Keith Potger, Wayne Horsburgh and Glenn himself. As a boy in Sydney, Frank developed a love for country music and yodelling and when he received a guitar from his grandmother at just 13, he taught himself to play and began writing songs.
By the time he was 19 he had released 44 records and was the top recording artist in Australia, New Zealand, and Tasmania. He then moved to London in 1959, where he proceeded to become an international household name after he had four number-one hits on the UK singles chart: I Remember You, Lovesick Blues, The Wayward Wind, and Confessin’ That I Love You. It was during this time that he had The Beatles open for him, meaning the foursome
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