«

»

BEEB BIRTLES

beeb

BIOGRAPHICAL DETAILS

Full Name: Gerard Bertelkamp
Description: Vocalist , Guitarist, Composer, Australia
Known For: LRB (Band)
Instruments: Voice, Guitar
Music Styles: Rock , Easy listening
Location: Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

Date Born: 28th November 1948
Location Born: Amsterdam

CONTACT DETAILS

YOUTUBE VIDEO

BIOGRAPHICAL PROFILE

Beeb Birtles

Beeb Birtles (born Gerard Bertelkamp, 28 November 1948), is a Dutch-Australian musician, generally as a singer-songwriter and guitarist (bass, electric or acoustic). He has been a member of various Australian groups including Zoot (1967–71), Mississippi (1972–74), Little River Band (1975–83), and Birtles Shorrock Goble (2002–07). He has also worked as a solo artist, including releasing an album, Driven by Dreams (2000). In 2004 Birtles and other members of the classic line-up of Little River Band were inducted into the ARIA Hall of Fame.

Beeb Birtles was born on 28 November 1948 as Gerard Bertelkamp in Amsterdam, Netherlands to Gerard Bertelkamp senior (born 30 May 1923), a carpenter and building contractor, and Elisabeth Hendrika (née Deubel on 8 January 1924). He has a younger sister, Elisabeth H (born 17 September 1952). Birtles later recalled seeing his parents singing in an amateur operetta in Amsterdam “I was very young and I went with my grandparents. They took me to the theatre to see my parents, and, er, I was so young that I actually called out my mother’s name from the audience!”.

The Bertelkamp family emigrated to Australia in September 1959 aboard MS Willem Ruys. The family settled in Adelaide where Birtles attended Netly Primary School – he was held back a year due to his language problems. He discovered a passion for music while attending Plympton High School. His mother taught him to sing “after dinner at night, we would sing together. And she would take the melody and I would take the harmony”. While at high school he was nicknamed “B.B. Eyes”, after a Dick Tracy character from the associated TV cartoon show, it soon became “BB”.

In 1966 after high school Beeb Birtles, initially on lead guitar and harmony vocals, formed his first group, Times Unlimited, with his school mate, John D’Arcy on guitars and vocals; they were joined by Ted Higgins on drums and a bass guitarist. D’Arcy was from Manchester and introduced Birtles to the music of The Hollies. When the bass guitarist left, Birtles took over that instrument and soon they asked Darryl Cotton to join on lead vocals.

Times Unlimited changed their name to Down the Line in homage of The Hollies’ cover version of Roy Orbison’s “Go Go Go (Down the Line)”. During 1966 Down the Line played regular gigs in their home town, Adelaide, including a Friday night residency at Scot’s Church, performing covers of English Mod groups: The Hollies, The Move, The Who and The Small Faces. By May 1967 they backed English-born singer, Johnny Farnham, and as session musicians they were used on demos, which secured Farnham’s contract with EMI Records. One of the demos, “In My Room”, became the B-side of Farnham’s debut single, “Sadie (The Cleaning Lady)” (November 1967).

imagesCA9TG8II

By June 1967 the group had changed their name to Zoot. They moved to Melbourne by mid-1968, where they recorded their debut single, “You’d Better Get Goin’ Now”. At this time Birtles adopted his professional name: Cotton had shortened his nickname to “Beeb”, and Birtles Anglicised the first two syllables of Bertelkamp. Birtles and Cotton co-wrote “Little Roland Lost”, which was issued as the B-side of Zoot’s June 1969 single, “Monty & Me”. As a member of Zoot, Birtles appeared on all their recorded material including both of their studio albums, Just Zoot (1970) and Zoot Out (1971), but they broke up in May 1971.

After Zoot, Birtles and Cotton performed together as an eponymous pop, soft rock duo, Daryl and Beeb, which were renamed as Frieze for their sponsors – a clothing company. Teenage-themed newspaper, Go-Set, published its annual reader pop poll in July where Birtles appeared second as Best Bass Guitarist behind The Masters Apprentices member, Glenn Wheatley. The duo issued an album, 1972 B. C. in May 1972, which was produced by Brian Cadd, but the group disbanded in the next month.

YOUTUBE

In July that year Birtles was asked to join a folk rock band, Mississippi, which like Zoot had moved from Adelaide to Melbourne. The new line-up with Birtles on vocals and guitar, by October, were three of its founders, Graham Goble on vocals and guitar; Russ Johnson on vocals and guitar; John Mower on lead vocals (all ex-Alison Gros); and fellow new members Colin DeLuca on bass guitar (ex-Fugitives); and Derek Pellicci on drums (ex-Ash).

During 1973 the group issued a single, “Early Morning”, which had been co-written by Birtles with Goble and Johnson. It peaked at No. 56 on the Australian Kent Music Report Singles Chart. In January 1974 Mississippi appeared at the Sunbury Pop Festival and then released another single, “Will I?”, which was co-written by Birtles and former band mate, Cotton. It reached No. 26. They toured the United Kingdom from May that year, where they “made little headway” and various members left the group. In London they met with fellow Australian musicians Glenn Shorrock (ex-Twilights) and Wheatley – both expressed a desire to return to Australia and work on a new version of Mississippi.

In early 1975 Mississippi band members Birtles, Goble, and Pellicci, had returned to Australia where they recruited Shorrock on lead vocals and Wheatley as their manager. They soon changed their name to Little River Band (LRB) and by year’s end included Ric Formosa on guitar and Roger McLachlan on bass guitar. This line-up released their debut self-titled album in November, which was co-produced by Birtles, Goble, Shorrock and Wheatley. It peaked at No. 12 on the Kent Music Report Albums Chart. Their lead single, “Curiosity (Killed the Cat)”, which was written by Birtles, appeared ahead of the album in September and reached No. 15 on the related singles chart. Soon after LRB moved to the United States and became “the first Australian band of the 1970s to gain significant international success, paving the way for AC/DC, Air Supply, Men at Work and INXS”.

In July 2003 he told Debbie Kruger of Melbourne Weekly Magazine about writing the group’s first hit single:

I wrote “Curiosity (Killed the Cat)” in London in 1974 when I was in the band Mississippi. Goble’s wife had been given a kitten, which I would see running around the house we shared, and the idea for “Curiosity (Killed the Cat)” came to me. The lyrics in the song pertain more to me being the crazy cat and my girlfriend at the time being the one to keep me on an even keel. It’s a song about hope and hanging on to your dreams no matter what!

—Beeb Birtles, Melbourne Weekly Magazine, 6–12 July 2003.

From 1978 to 1980 while still with LRB, Birtles & Goble also performed and recorded together as a duo, they issued three singles “Lonely Lives” (February 1978), “I’m Coming Home” (April 1979) and “How I Feel Tonight” (June 1980). In 1979 he had married Donna Brucks, the US assistant to LRB’s booking agent. In May of the next year Birtles & Goble released an album, Last Romance. He told Kruger “I never felt ‘pressured’ to write hit songs because I’ve always written from my heart. In the early days quite a few of my songs were picked to be the singles and as we started to become more popular in the States, Shorrock’s and Goble’s songs were chosen to be the singles. We always left the choosing of the singles to the record label. As long as I had a few songs on each album, there were no complaints. We were selling millions of albums anyway, so people were still hearing my songs”.

After a run of major international chart and critical successes from the late 1970s to the early 1980s, Birtles left LRB in October 1983. Birtles and Donna lived in Melbourne: they have two daughters, Hannah and Emmie. He gave his reasons for leaving the group: “I realised I was well and truly burned out from being on the road, travelling the world for eight years straight. It was the right decision at the time for me because my daughters were young and I got to spend their formative years at home with them”.During this period Birtles produced a variety of releases, including Steve Grace’s album, Children of the Western World (1988), the first Australian Christian artist album to be certified gold.

Beeb and long time friend Chris Warren. Photo by Chris Warren in Adelaide 2017.

In 1992, Birtles moved to the US with his family. They briefly settled in Donna’s hometown of Jefferson, before moving to Nashville, where he and his wife still live – both daughters graduated from college in the US. In 1998 Birtles and Bill Cuomo established Sonic Sorbet, a music production company. Sonic Sorbet has produced albums for a number of recording artists, including Birtles’ first solo album Driven by Dreams, released in 2000.

From February 2002 to 2007, Birtles joined with Shorrock and Goble to form Birtles Shorrock Goble, initially they wanted to perform as The Original Little River Band. However, they were not entitled to use the name Little River Band as it was legally owned by Stephen Housden, the group’s guitarist from August 1981 to 2006, after previous members had been paid out upon leaving. Kruger described the situation “due to clumsy paper work and general disinterest on the part of original band members as they each left the group in the 1990s”.

During this period, Birtles won music awards, including a gold award for the DVD Full Circle, Classic Rock Performers of the Year and induction into the Australian Songwriters Association Hall of Fame. In 2004 Birtles and other members of the classic line-up of Little River Band – Goble (1975–92), Pellicci (1975–84, 1987–98), Shorrock (1975–82, 1987–96), David Briggs (guitarist, 1976–81), and George McArdle (bass guitarist, 1976–79) – were inducted into the ARIA Hall of Fame.

In 2011 Birtles joined other key members of Zoot – Cotton, Rick Brewer and Rick Springfield – for a short performance cruise out from Miami.

Further reunions of Zoot were prevented by sad and sudden death of Darryl Cotton in July 2012. Birtles continued to write and produce music in Nashville.

Discography

Studio albums

Beeb Birtles is credited with: composer, guitar (bass, electric, acoustic, rhythm), vocals (lead, harmony), producer, mixing. Studio albums with Beeb Birtles:

Zoot Just Zoot (1970)
Zoot Out (1971)
Frieze 1972 B. C. – Warner Bros. Records WS 20006 (May 1972) AUS No.

Glenn Wheatley, and formed the Little River Band.

After a run of major international success in the late 1970s and early 1980s, Birtles left the Little River Band in 1983. He had married Donna Brucks, a United States woman who was the assistant to LRB’s booking agent in 1979. They settled in Melbourne and had two daughters, Hannah and Emmie. During this period Birtles produced a number of albums, including the Steve Grace record “Children of the Western World”, the first Australian Christian artist album to be certified gold.

In 1992, Birtles moved to the U.S. with his wife and children. They briefly settled in Donna’s hometown of Jefferson City, Missouri, before moving to Nashville, Tennessee, where he and his wife still live (both daughters have since graduated from college in the U.S.). In 1998 Birtles and Bill Cuomo established Sonic Sorbet, a music production company. Sonic Sorbet has produced albums for a number of recording artists, including Birtles’ first solo album Driven by Dreams, released in 2000.

Currently

Birtles continues to write music, and performs with Goble and Shorrock as Birtles Shorrock Goble: The Original Voices of the Little River Band.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia