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Career
Batt began his career in pop music at
the age of eighteen as a signed artist with Liberty
Records, having answered the same advertisement as Elton
John and Bernie Taupin placed by Ray
Williams in the New Musical Express. The
talented youth quickly became part of Liberty's production team, and in
1969 he took over production duties from Noel Walker, on blues great McKenna Mendelson
Mainline's seminal first release, Stink. Walker and
Batt were credited on the album only as "Liberty Staff". Also in 1969,
Batt released as producer/artist a Liberty single,
his bouncy cover of The Beatles' "Your Mother Should Know".
Batt subsequently became Head of A&R for Liberty Records.
His first hits as a singer/songwriter/producer
were by The Wombles, in 1974. After eight hit
singles and four gold albums with The
Wombles, he moved on to work with various artists as a
songwriter/producer, most successfully with Steeleye
Span and their most successful single and album All
Around My Hat in 1975. Also in 1975, at the end
of the summer, he troubled the UK charts for the one and only hit under
his own name (credited alongside the New Edition) with "Summertime
City" which reached number 4.
Arguably his most famous success is Watership
Down (including music and lyrics to Art
Garfunkel's international number one single, "Bright Eyes", which
won "Best Film Song or Music" one of his five Ivor
Novello Awards. Criticized for being trite and overly sentimental, the
song remains a radio
favourite.
He produced the hit single Lilac Wine
for UK songstress Elkie Brooks in 1978. The song was a
huge hit in the UK and across Europe.
As a singer, his solo albums include Schizophonia
and Tarot Suite (both with the London Symphony
Orchestra). From these albums came the European hit songs “Railway
Hotel”, “Lady Of The Dawn”, “The Winds Of Change” and “The Ride To
Agadir”. A version of "Introduction (The Journey of a Fool)" from Tarot
Suite was used as the theme for Sydney,
Australia radio station Triple M from its first broadcast in 1980 until well into
the 1990s.
In 1980 Mike Batt released his next album, entitled Waves.
In the same year, he went off with his family aboard his boat
“Braemar”, ending up in Australia after two and a half years,
travelling via France,
The West Indies, South
America, Central America, Mexico, Los Angeles, Hawaii and Fiji. At the end of
that journey, he wrote for the 50th anniversary of the Australian
Broadcasting Company the musical Zero, Zero.
Returning to the UK in 1983, Batt wrote and produced
three more Top Ten hits, "Please Don’t Fall In
Love" (for Cliff Richard), "A Winter’s
Tale" (for David Essex, with lyrics co-written
by Tim
Rice) and "I Feel Like Buddy Holly" (for Alvin
Stardust).
The album The Hunting of the
Snark, based on Lewis
Carroll's epic nonsense poem, was recorded in 1984. It was presented
as a dramatised concert at Sydney’s State Theatre in 1990, and was
produced as a musical in London’s West
End in 1991 with Batt designing and directing. Performers included:
Mike Batt as The Boots, Billy Connolly as The
Bellman, Roger Daltrey as The
Barrister, Justin Hayward as The
Butcher, John
Hurt as The Narrator and Julian Lennon.
In the late eighties, Batt also produced Justin
Hayward’s album Classic Blue
and the music for "The Dreamstone", ITV’s high-rating fifty
two part animated series, once again with the London Philharmonic
Orchestra.
In 1995 he made another solo album for Sony
Germany, entitled Arabesque.
He was then commissioned to write the official Anthem
for the inauguration of the Channel Tunnel by The Queen,
entitled "When Flags Fly Together". This was performed for the Queen
and President Mitterrand, along with
many senior politicians,
by members of the choir of the Harvey Grammar School, Folkestone.
Batt composed and produced the four million-selling
album The Violin Player with classical violinist Vanessa
Mae (EMI Classics, 1995) from which the Top Ten single "Toccata and
Fugue in D minor" was taken.
In 1997 Batt produced an album for soprano, Anna
Maria Kaufmann, with the Royal Philharmonic; an original dramatic song
cycle called Blame It On The Moon, from which his
song, "Running With A Dream" was taken as the theme for Germany’s
national football team at the World Cup in June 1998.
Also in 1998, Batt produced, arranged and conducted the
album, Philharmania with the Royal Philharmonic and
guest singers included Roger Daltrey, Marc
Almond, Bonnie Tyler, Status
Quo, Huey Lewis, Kim
Wilde, Justin Hayward and others.
Later the same year Batt relaunched The Wombles pop group, with two
hits, "Remember You’re A Womble" (at number 13) and "The Wombling Song"
(at number 22). In 2000 he collaborated with Roy
Wood for a single which combined new versions of oldie Christmas
hits by Wizzard
and The Wombles, released as "I Wish It Could Be a Wombling Merry
Christmas". Although loathed by most fans who could remember the
originals, it was a UK Top 30 hit, thanks largely to generous TV
exposure.
After conceiving and co-creating the all-girl string
quartet "bond"
and producing their first single, he then created the eight piece
classical crossover band The Planets. Their album Classical
Graffiti was released in February 2002 and went straight to
number one (classical charts) on the day of release and remained there
for three months. Batt was sued for copyright infringement over the
track "A One Minute Silence", which consisted of one minute of silence
and was credited to "Batt/Cage". The publishers of John Cage's
music alleged that the credit invoked Cage's famous "silent" piece 4'33",
and that the trust was entitled to receive royalties. An out of court
settlement was reached, with Batt paying a six-figure sum to the John
Cage Trust.
Currently, Mike Batt is dedicating most of his time to
guiding the career of singer Katie Melua from Georgia,
formerly part of the USSR.
Melua's album Call Off The Search
(containing six of Batt's songs including "The Closest Thing to
Crazy") was released in November 2003. It has sold over 1.5 million
copies in the UK on the Dramatico label, and was one of the
biggest selling albums of 2004, spending six weeks at No. 1 in the UK
Albums Chart.
biography quoted from various sources, mostly
from Mike Batt's official website
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