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This was the start of de Paul's becoming a regular British chart and TV fixture over the next five years. The arrangement featured a distinctive piano counter-melody motif as well as Hammond organ backing, a violin solo a and a distinctive whip-crack. Released as a single on the MAM Records label, "Sugar Me" rapidly reached the Top 10 of the UK Singles Chart, as well as the top of the singles charts in the Netherlands, Spain and Belgium. For my stage name I took De from my mother’s maiden name, De Groot, and my father’s middle name was Paul”. Explaining her change of name from Rubin, she said: "There had just been the massacre of Jewish athletes at the Munich Olympics and I was told that it would be better not to have an obviously Jewish name. She wrote the song " Sugar Me" for Peter Noone, but her boyfriend at the time, Dudley Moore, suggested that she take a demo version to Gordon Mills, who urged her to record it herself and release it on his MAM record label. De Paul was initially a reluctant performer. We think we found her in Lynsey Rubin." Early 1970s Īlthough she had recorded demo versions of her songs. In an interview with Cashbox (magazine), in early 1972, Don Kirshner said "We are looking for another Carole King. "Boomerang", the B-side to " Papa Do" and another de Paul/Blue collaboration was released as a single in the UK by "The Young Generation", a group of dancers and singers recruited by Dougie Squires and they performed it on their BBC prime time TV show while a French version was also released by "Jane and Julie". De Paul's own versions of both of these two songs would later be found as tracks on her debut album, Surprise. Other notable songs from this period included " Papa Do", which was released by Barry Green as a single, and made the lower reaches of the French singles chart, as well as " Crossword Puzzle", also co-penned with Barry Green and which led to an appearance on Top of the Pops and "Saturday Variety" for the Irish singer Dana. Around this time, she also had chart success in Malaysia and the Netherlands as the writer of " On the Ride (You Do It Once, You Do It Twice)", a Top 30 hit by the Continental Uptight Band, and also " When You've Gotta Go", an Australian chart hit recorded and released by Solomon King. Canadian singer Ginette Reno recorded a French language version of the song ("Dans la vie, tout s'arrange") which reached No. De Paul performed the song the same year on the BBC's The Two Ronnies. Her first major breakthrough came early in 1972 as the co-writer (with Ron Roker) of the Fortunes' Top 10 UK hit " Storm in a Teacup".
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One of their earliest songs (and the only song where all three collaborated) was "Sugarloaf Hill", recorded by the reggae artist, Del Davis and finally released on the CD "Trojan Carnival Box Set" in 2003 under the Trojan Box set series Trojan Box Set series
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ATV Music was located above the Peter Robinson's store on Oxford Street, where she joined a group of professional songwriters that included Barry Blue (at that time known as Barry Green) and Ron Roker (later to become Barry's brother-in-law), resulting in revenues from songs recorded by other artists. Īfter these initial successes, she was contracted to ATV-Kirshner music publishing by Eddie Levy when she was 18 years old. Another song co-penned by her, this time with Edward Adamberry, called " E.O.I.O.", was recorded by Wild as a track on his 1972 album A Beautiful World, and also released as a single by The Beads as well as an album track "Io.Aio (EEO-EIO)" by the Italian group Domodossola (band) on their album "D. "Bring Yourself Back To Me" was also the B-side to Wild's 1971 US single "(Holy Moses!) Everything's Coming Up Roses". Three of de Paul's earliest songs were co-written with Don Gould (formerly a member of The Applejacks (British band)) and recorded by Oliver! performer Jack Wild: "Takin' It Easy" and " Bring Yourself Back To Me" from the album Everything's Coming Up Roses, which was released in 1971. In one incident as a student aged 19, de Paul was concussed for two days following a fight with her violent father, prompting her to leave her comfortable family home for a two roomed flat above an Indian restaurant near her College. She attended South Hampstead High School followed by Hornsey College of Art, now part of Middlesex University. De Paul later claimed that she and her brother suffered physical abuse at the hands of their father. They were a Jewish family with a Dutch, Austrian and German background, and had one other child, John (b.1944). Lyndsey Monckton Rubin was born to Meta (née de Groot) and Herbert Rubin, a property developer.