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Red Hurley

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Red Hurley
Red Hurley in 1976
Background information
Birth nameBrian Hurley
Born (1949-11-11) 11 November 1949 (age 75)
Milltown, Dublin
GenresPopular music, easy listening, gospel music
OccupationVocalist
Years active1969–present

Brian "Red" Hurley (born 11 November 1949) is an Irish singer. Hurley's career includes singing lead for bands such as The Colours, The Wheels, and The Nevada (né The Nevada Showband).[1] He had a series of number one records in the 1970s while performing with The Nevada.[2] Hurley also represented Ireland at the Eurovision Song Contest in 1976 with the song "When".[3]

Personal life

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Hurley was born in 1949 and grew up in Milltown, Dublin, with four brothers (Fran, Liam, Joe, and Des) as well as two sisters (Flo and Olive).

Hurley's first marriage was to Dublin model Patricia Ward and ended in the mid-1980s; they had one daughter together, Kimberley.[4] He met his second wife, Norma, in 1990 when she was a dancer in one of his shows.[5] She was 18 years old performing mutually in a show called Can't Stop The Music at the Gaeity when Hurley was set to perform with Twink.[5] Norma slipped off stage on her first night performing, but stayed as an audience member the remainder of the shows due to her interest in Hurley.[5] She was 18 years old when Hurley was 38 years old, though she told him on their first date she was 23 years old.[5] Eventually they agreed that the age gap did not bother them and they were eventually married in Dublin in 2008.[5] The couple have two daughters, Kristina and Stephanie.[5]

Career

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1969-71: Early Career & The "Big Break"

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Hurley started his career in 1969 as lead vocalist with The Colours. In 1970, he went on to form his first band, The Wheels. He released several successful singles during this period with The Wheels including Isadora, Take Me Tonight and Poor Man's Roses, all of which made it into the Irish charts.

In early 1971, Hurley joined The Nevada, one of Ireland's top pop acts of that era, quickly becoming their most popular ever lead singer with a string of number one hits - many penned by British songwriters Les Reed and Barry Mason specifically for Hurley including "Sometimes", "Kiss Me Goodbye", and "I Never Said Goodbye". He left The Nevada in 1974 to form his own band, the Red Hurley Band, and performed songs such as "Love Is All", "Broken Promises", "Tennessee Special" among others. Hurley toured extensively right up to the late 1980s. Throughout this time, despite domestic success in Ireland, international success eluded him. Though he was signed to Red Bus Records (one of the UK's premier agencies), Hurley was considered an uphill battle for showbiz promoters. Hurley's overall record in the Irish Charts places him with over twenty songs in the Irish Charts and five number-ones overall. Altogether he has recorded over 500 songs in a career spanning the early seventies to the present day. Due to his consistent activity, Hurley has one of the longest chart careers in Irish show-business history.

1970-2005: End of an era and new beginnings

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Towards the end of the 1970s and into the 1980s, the Irish pop music scene underwent a period of significant change. Established artists like Hurley, whose careers had begun in the showband era, were making way for rock groups like U2 (among others) who were changing the music map in Ireland and internationally. Despite this, Hurley managed to maintain his career in Ireland throughout this time, albeit at a lower profile. In 1976 Hurley represented Ireland at the Eurovision Song Contest.[6] Though one of the early favourites to win the contest, his song finished 10th on the night with 54 points, beaten by the winning UK entry Brotherhood of Man and their song "Save Your Kisses for Me".

Hurley's song "When" became a major chart hit in Ireland and with Eurovision fans, landing it as a regular in Hurley's live show set lists. "When" was written by Brendan Graham, who subsequently composed two Eurovision winning songs for Ireland, "Rock 'n' Roll Kids" in 1994 and "The Voice" for mezzo-soprano Eimear Quinn in 1996.[7] Graham also composed the worldwide hit "You Raise Me Up", a major hit for Josh Groban in the U.S and Westlife in the UK.[7]

Throughout the 90s, while his chart career declined in Ireland, Red Hurley moved to the United States. He gradually made inroads into the market there but would have to wait until 2003 for a return to the music charts with the release of his new album You're Still You. The album was a surprise success in Ireland, eventually leading to a successful comeback in the Irish market and a string of new recordings, as well as the international success (in both the UK and USA) which had previously eluded him. Gradually record sales increased, as did attendance at his live concert performances. Hurley managed to re-establish himself as a major live concert and cabaret artist. Regular appearances on high-profile TV and radio shows in Ireland, the UK and the USA followed.

2010 - Present

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Red Hurley now enjoys renewed success both in Ireland and the USA. In 2010 he celebrated 40 years in show business with a sell-out tour of Ireland with his special guest, legendary singer Rita Coolidge at Dublin's Grand Canal Theatre. Pulitzer Prize-Winning American author Maya Angelou became an admirer of the singer and helped introduce him to American audiences. A greatest hits compilation 'Red Hurley – The Hits' reached the Irish top ten in 2009 and the singer also starred in a TV special for PBS in America in 2006, filmed before a live audience in Dublin's Olympia Theatre. Speaking in September 2010 of the renewed interest in his career, Hurley said that he was delighted and really enjoying his life again. Kevin Myers, writing in the "Irish Independent" in September 2010 said:

His intuitive sense of the beautiful is one reason why Red Hurley is such a wonderful singer. He will find the key element of any song – a single note or phrase – and elevate that into an unexpected little musical jewel.[8]

Internet concert reviews blog Daniel Lindon Reviews said of Red, 'Rarely has an artist had the persistence and self-belief to rise above many career setbacks and emerge once again triumphant, he is one of the great male voices and his international success is long overdue'. Red Hurley continues to tour regularly in Ireland, USA and in the UK. In August 2014, he was one of the musical soloists chosen to perform at the State Funeral of former Irish Prime Minister, Albert Reynolds.[9] In 2022, Hurley began a 50th anniversary tour in Ireland in venues such as The Civic, the Pavilion Theatre, the Draīocht, among others.[10] He also appeared on Today with Maura and Daithi on 28 November 2022, has been a guest on the RTÉ Radio 1 show from the same network numerous times prior, and appeared with Claudia Boyle on The Late Late Show on 10 October 2020 where they performed "Time To Say Goodbye".[11]

Irish Charts Positions

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Song Title Month/Year Rank Record Company
*A Poor Man's Roses / I Didn't Even Know June 1969 #14 Target Records
**Isadora / Amgios May 1970
**Take Me Tonight / Let's Get Started Sept 1970 #20
***Going Away March 1971 Unknown Play Records
***Sometimes / I'll Be Home July 1971 #1
***Kiss Me Goodbye / Bring Back The Good Times Oct 1971
***Hold Me / Trudy April 1972 #3
***Arkansas / Hold Me Just One More Time Feb 1973 #2
***I Never Said Goodbye / I'd Like To Teach You Aug 1973 #5
I Know 1974 Release Records
Love Is All / Morea 1975 #1
Broken Promises Jan 1976
When March 1976 #4 PYE Records
Tennessee Special / Granny's Got A Painted Leg Sept 1976 #3 EMI/Red Bus Records
In Shame Love, In Shame / Listen To The Children Feb 1977 Release Records
You're My Day, You're My Night / Morena July 1977 #2
You Don't Have To Say You Love Me May 1978 #5
You're So Good To Me / Steppin' Aside Feb1979 #9 Spider Records
The Furey Man Nov 1979 #6
I Want To Live With You / Perfect Love Jan 1981 #29
Hey / Cut Across Shorty Feb 1983 #15 Crashed Records
Danny Sept 1983
I Believe I'm Going To Love You June 1985 #21 Dolphin Records
Let The Heartaches Begin June 1987 #20
For Always April 1989 #19
We Were in Love Sept 2006 #27 Ensign Records

*The Colours | **The Wheels | ***The Nevada | Solo unless otherwise specified

Albums Year Rank (Irish Charts)
Red Hurley 'Hits' 1973 #1
When 1976 #2
Red Hurley With Love 1978 #8
Warm Red 1981 #23
Various Compilations (Ireland/UK/USA) 1982-2003 Unknown
You're Still You 2003 #8
Always There For Me 2005 #14
Raised on Songs and Stories (USA) 2006 Unknown
Red Hurley 'The Hits Album' 2008 #6
How Great Thou Art 2009 #21
Sings My Soul (USA Only) 2010 Unknown
Red Hurley 'The Hits Album' (Re Issue) 2012
Updated Greatest Hits CD 2014

References

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  1. ^ "The Nevada Showband". irishshowbands.net. Archived from the original on 16 January 2021. Retrieved 3 October 2021.
  2. ^ "Brian 'Red' Hurley". Irish-Showbands. Archived from the original on 29 December 2019. Retrieved 6 April 2020.
  3. ^ Knoops, Roy (10 November 2013). "Ireland: Red Hurley shows his spiritual side". ESCToday. Archived from the original on 6 April 2020. Retrieved 6 April 2020.
  4. ^ Collins, Liam (10 September 2006). "Marriage break-up still haunts Red Hurley, but the show must go on". Independent.ie. Archived from the original on 3 October 2021. Retrieved 3 October 2021.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Smith, Andrea (25 August 2013). "Red Hurley is 'blessed amongst women'". Independent.ie. Archived from the original on 3 October 2021. Retrieved 3 October 2021.
  6. ^ Eurovision 1976 The Hague Netherlands Archived 3 July 2007 at the Wayback Machine. Eurovision-contest.com (21 May 2006). Retrieved on 3 October 2011.
  7. ^ a b "Songs written by Brendan Graham | SecondHandSongs". secondhandsongs.com. Retrieved 3 January 2023.
  8. ^ "Red Hurley - Love is All". The Journal of Music. Retrieved 3 January 2023.
  9. ^ "John Major and Bertie Ahern among mourners at Albert Reynolds' funeral mass". The Irish Post. 25 August 2014. Archived from the original on 3 October 2021. Retrieved 3 October 2021.
  10. ^ "Red Hurley". www.facebook.com. Retrieved 3 January 2023.
  11. ^ "Claudia Boyle and Red Hurley perform on The Late Late Show". 10 October 2020. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
[edit]
Awards and achievements
Preceded by Ireland in the Eurovision Song Contest
1976
Succeeded by