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Roger Greenaway |
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Roger John Greenaway (born August 23, 1938, Fishponds, Bristol, England), is a popular British songwriter, best remembered for his collaborations with Roger Cook.
Both were members of close harmony group
Their hits as writers for other acts, sometimes with other
collaborators, include: 'Home Lovin' Man' (Andy
Williams); 'Blame It On The Pony Express' (
When Blue Mink were formed in 1969 Greenaway was asked to be lead vocalist alongside Madeline Bell; he declined the offer and recommended Cook, who accepted. The following year Greenaway teamed up for a while with singer Tony Burrows to form Pipkins, a duo who had a Top 10 novelty hit in 1970 with 'Gimme Dat Ding'.
The New Seekers' "I'd Like to Teach the World to Sing" began life as a Cook-Greenaway collaboration called "True Love and Apple Pie", recorded by Susan Shirley. The song was then rewritten by Cook, Greenaway, Coca-Cola account executive Bill Backer, and Billy Davis and recorded as a Coca-Cola radio commercial, with the lyric "I'd like to buy the world a Coke and keep it company." First aired on American radio in 1970, it was also used as a TV commercial a year later, sparking public demand for its release as a single. Reworked, again, to remove the references to the brand name, the single climbed to UK #1 and US #7 in 1972.
After Cook moved to the US in 1975, Greenaway worked with
other partners, notably Geoff Stephens, both being
jointly responsible for Crystal Gayle’s 1980 No. 1 country
song ‘It’s Like We Never Said Goodbye’. He took an increasing role in
business administration, becoming Chairman of the
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