Ian Levine: Difference between revisions
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In 1987, Levine began recording his first love, the former artists of [[Motown]]. By 1989 the project had grown enormously and a reunion of 60 [[Motown]] stars in [[Detroit]], outside the original Hitsville [[USA]] building, attracted massive media attention and over forty appearances on US television news and chat shows. Levine was on the front page of every Detroit newspaper and on US national TV, on all four networks. Motorcity Records was launched as a record label, initially distributed by PRT and later Pacific, then Charly and finally [[Total/BMG]]. By the time the project ended in the mid 1990s, over 850 songs had been recorded by 108 artists who had all been formerly signed to [[Motown]]. As an album range, the project continues to be released to this day, but the most successful single was by an artist who hadn't recorded for twenty three years, [[Frances Nero]], with "Footsteps Following Me", co-written with Levine and Ivy Jo Hunter, the man who wrote "[[Dancing In The Street]]". |
In 1987, Levine began recording his first love, the former artists of [[Motown]]. By 1989 the project had grown enormously and a reunion of 60 [[Motown]] stars in [[Detroit]], outside the original Hitsville [[USA]] building, attracted massive media attention and over forty appearances on US television news and chat shows. Levine was on the front page of every Detroit newspaper and on US national TV, on all four networks. Motorcity Records was launched as a record label, initially distributed by PRT and later Pacific, then Charly and finally [[Total/BMG]]. By the time the project ended in the mid 1990s, over 850 songs had been recorded by 108 artists who had all been formerly signed to [[Motown]]. As an album range, the project continues to be released to this day, but the most successful single was by an artist who hadn't recorded for twenty three years, [[Frances Nero]], with "Footsteps Following Me", co-written with Levine and Ivy Jo Hunter, the man who wrote "[[Dancing In The Street]]". |
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Unfortunately Levine's musical career was marred by several actions. The most disappointing was that despite giving him his biggest hit, Frances Nero was never paid a single cent in royalties for the number one single. |
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=="Doctor Who"== |
=="Doctor Who"== |
Revision as of 00:09, 8 February 2007
Ian Levine is an English songwriter, producer, and DJ. He's also a well-known (and sometimes controversial) fan of the long-running television show Doctor Who. He was born on 22 June 1953 [citation needed] in Blackpool, England.
Music career
Levine is most noted for his work in the music genres of pop, soul, disco, and Hi-NRG. He and songwriting partner Fiachra Trench were among the main figures in the development of the Hi-NRG genre, writing and producing "So Many Men So Little Time" by Miquel Brown (two million sales), and "High Energy" by Evelyn Thomas (seven million sales). During the 1980s and 1990s he mixed a huge amount of pop dance hits including the Pet Shop Boys, Erasure, Kim Wilde, Bronski Beat, Bananarama, Tiffany, Dollar, Hazell Dean and founded his own groups: Seventh Avenue and Bad Boys Inc. He also wrote and produced for the highly successful UK boy band Take That and The Pasadenas. He has written and produced many TV themes including "Discomania", "Gypsy Girl", "ITV Celebrity Awards Show", "Christmasmania", and "Abbamania".
Earlier in his career he was an influential disc jockey at the Blackpool Mecca, and became an avid collector of soul, R&B, and Northern Soul records. In the mid-1970s he also embraced disco, and would ultimately be influential as a producer in the genre's evolution into Hi-NRG.
Levine was also a resident DJ at the legendary gay disco Heaven, London's answer to the infamous, state-of-the-art New York nightclub The Saint.
In 1987, Levine began recording his first love, the former artists of Motown. By 1989 the project had grown enormously and a reunion of 60 Motown stars in Detroit, outside the original Hitsville USA building, attracted massive media attention and over forty appearances on US television news and chat shows. Levine was on the front page of every Detroit newspaper and on US national TV, on all four networks. Motorcity Records was launched as a record label, initially distributed by PRT and later Pacific, then Charly and finally Total/BMG. By the time the project ended in the mid 1990s, over 850 songs had been recorded by 108 artists who had all been formerly signed to Motown. As an album range, the project continues to be released to this day, but the most successful single was by an artist who hadn't recorded for twenty three years, Frances Nero, with "Footsteps Following Me", co-written with Levine and Ivy Jo Hunter, the man who wrote "Dancing In The Street".
"Doctor Who"
Ian Levine is well-known as a fan of the BBC science fiction television series Doctor Who, on which he acted as an unofficial continuity consultant during the early 1980s.
In recent years he has claimed that he co-wrote the Season 22 story Attack of the Cybermen with series script editor Eric Saward, although the writer's credit is officially given to “Paula Moore”, a pseudonym for Saward's then girlfriend, Paula Woolsey. Levine's claim is that he wrote the story outline and that Saward wrote the script, with Woolsey contributing nothing. [1]
This version of events was flatly denied by Eric Saward in a Doctor Who Magazine interview, as well as by Woolsey herself when she was interviewed by David J. Howe, Mark Stammers and Stephen James Walker for their series of Doctor Who reference books.
Some critics have speculated that the Abzorbaloff monster played by Peter Kay in the Doctor Who episode Love & Monsters was based on Levine and reflects his role in fandom.[2][3]
Doctor in Distress
In 1985, when the BBC announced that the series would be placed on an 18-month hiatus, and the show's cancellation was widely rumoured, Levine gathered a group of actors from the series, together with a number of minor celebrities, to record a protest single called "Doctor in Distress" . The participants included the series' two lead actors, Colin Baker and Nicola Bryant, as well as other actors associated with the series such as Nicholas Courtney and Anthony Ainley. Also involved were members of the bands Bucks Fizz, The Moody Blues and Ultravox.
The single was released under the name “Who Cares?”, and was universally panned. Levine himself said later, “"It was an absolute balls-up fiasco. It was pathetic and bad and stupid. It tried to tell the Doctor Who history in an awful high-energy song. It almost ruined me.”"[4]
Missing episodes
There is a long-standing fan myth that Levine secretly owns copies of missing episodes of the series that were destroyed by the BBC after their original broadcasts, but there is no known basis in fact for this rumour. Levine, in fact, was responsible for the return of a number of missing episodes of the show to the BBC's archives, and was instrumental in stopping the destruction of further serials after he learned that they were being wiped.
Levine's efforts to locate the other missing episodes continue to this day. On April 20, 2006, it was announced on the BBC childrens' show Blue Peter that Levine would purchase a life-sized Dalek for anyone that would return one of the 108 missing episodes; details were provided on Blue Peter's website.[5]
DVDs
Ian Levine has also been responsible for producing a number of extras on the Doctor Who DVD releases: the documentaries "Over the Edge" and "Inside the Spaceship" were included on the 3-disc set "The Beginning", while "Genesis of a Classic" appeared on the release for Genesis of the Daleks.
K-9 and Company
He also composed the theme music for K-9 and Company, a pilot for a never-made Doctor Who spin-off series featuring the robotic dog K-9.
American comic books
Ian Levine also possesses one of the world's great collections of American comic books. He claims to have the only complete set of DC Comics in the world, with at least one copy of each DC comic book sold at retail (i.e., not including promotional or giveaway comics) from the 1930s to present.[6] The last vintage comic book he obtained for his collection was a copy of New Adventure Comics #26, which he acquired at the San Diego Comic-Con in July 2005.
Although Levine's complete DC comic book collection does not include all of the hundreds of different promotional (non-retail) and giveaway comic books that DC released over the decades (the particular indentifying information for many of them has been lost due to DC's failure to retain decades-old licensing information), his DC promotional and giveaway collection contains the vast majority of all of the DC promotional and giveaway comic books currently known to have existed, and is perhaps the most complete DC promotional and giveaway collection currently in existence. [7]
Other information
In 1996 Levine traced over 660 members of his own family on his mother's side and organised the enormous Cooklin family reunion, on July 21st in London. This has been called called the biggest family reunion of all time[citation needed], and was covered on the BBC Evening News, and, extensively, in The Jewish Chronicle.
Between 1997 and 1998 Ian Levine produced and directed the documentary film The Strange World of Northern Soul, an anthology of the underground music cult. This was a video box set, containing over 12 hours of footage with booklet and CD, and incorporating 131 performances by the legendary American soul acts who have, in most cases, never been filmed before. The event premiered at the King George's Hall in Blackburn to an audience of 1300. The Strange World of Northern Soul was released on DVD as a six-disc box set, replete with extras, in 2003.
In May 2000, Levine organised the reunion of his entire school class from the 1960s at Arnold School in Blackpool. All 30 members of class 3A were found and brought together to experience lessons, P.T. in the gym, a rugby match, and an assembly with their original teachers, all in original style school uniform. The reunion was filmed and shown by the BBC.
References
- ^ Levine, Ian (2006-11-26). "Re: TV Cream rumour" (free registration required). Outpost Gallifrey forum. Retrieved 2006-11-26.
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(help) - ^ Phipps, Tim (2006-08-08). "Happy Times and Places: "Love and Monsters"". Strange Horizons. Retrieved 2006-11-25.
I've no idea if [Russell T. Davies] was explicitly thinking of Ian Levine when he wrote the Abzorbaloff, but I can't help but suspect that Levine was bouncing somewhere around the back of his head.
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(help) - ^ Petridis, Alexis (2006-11-24). "Take That, Beautiful World" (free registration required). The Guardian. Retrieved 2006-11-25.
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(help) - ^ McGurk, Stuart (2005-10-22). "Shows of support" (free registration required). The Guardian. Retrieved 2006-11-25.
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(help) - ^ "Missing Doctor Who films". Blue Peter website. bbc.co.uk. 2006-04-19. Retrieved 2006-11-25.
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(help) - ^ Zurzolo, Vincent (2005-08-09). "DC Completist Ian Levine Interview all the way from the UK!" (HTML with Windows Media links). Comic Zone. World Talk Radio. Retrieved 2006-11-25.
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(help) - ^ Levine, Ian (2005-07-15). "The DC Collection Is COMPLETE". Collectors Society Message Board. Retrieved 2006-11-25.
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External links
- Ian Levine at IMDb
- Ian Levine's top 10, Heaven, Jan. 1980
- 2-part interview by Bill Brewster.
- "Doctor in Distress" MP3 at TV Cream
- Further information on "Doctor in Distress"
- Ian Levine Doctor Who Discussion Forum Ian Levine's own set of discussion forums.