Ringo Starr
Born Richard Starkey, was the drummer
in the Beatles from 1962 to 1970 and thus one of the most famous
musicians of the '60s. Though the least prominent member of the
quartet, he distinguished himself as an occasional singer of
good-natured material and as an actor. Upon the group's split,
Starr went solo with two novelty projects: the first, an album
called Sentimental Journey, found him covering pre-rock
standards, and the second, Beacoups of Blues, was a country
music collection.
Starr then scored Top Ten hits with two nonalbum singles,
"It Don't Come Easy" in 1971 and "Back off
Boogaloo" in 1972. In 1973 he paired with producer Richard
Perry and, with assistance from the three other ex-Beatles, made
Ringo, which featured two #1 hits, "Photograph" and
"You're Sixteen." "Oh My My," a Top Ten hit,
was also included. Almost as successful was the 1974 follow-up,
Goodnight Vienna, which featured the hits "Only You"
and "No No Song."
Starr continued to release albums through 1981, though with
diminishing success. His 1983 album Old Wave did not find a U.S.
distributor. Starr was also suffering from the excesses of his
lifestyle, but by the late '80s he had cleaned up, and in 1989
he toured with his "All-Starr Band." In 1992, he
signed to Private Music and released a new studio album, Time
Takes Time. Vertical Man, his first album for Mercury, followed
in 1998, as did a disc culled from his performance on the VH1
Storytellers series. Starr's first seasonal effort, I Wanna Be
Santa Claus, appeared a year later. By William Ruhlmann The
All Music Guide
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