He has conducted
many of the world's great orchestras including the London Symphony,
The London Philharmonic, The Royal Philharmonic, The Sydney Symphony
Orchestra, the State Orchestra of Victoria and The National Symphony
Orchestra Of Ireland.
He began
his career in popular music at the age of eighteen, as a signed
artist with and subsequently Head of A&R for Liberty/United
Artists Records. Leaving to form his own music publishing company
two years later, and simultaneously working as a recording artist.
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 Steeleye Span ('All Around My Hat'), the Kursall
Flyers ('Little Did She Know'), Elkie Brookes ('Lilac Wine'),
Barbara Dickson ('Caravan Song') and Art Garfunkel ('Bright Eyes')
all of which were top five in at least the UK.
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'. He achieved the number four
position as an artist in the UK charts in 1976 with his single
'Summertime City'.
In 1980,
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.
Returning
to the UK in 1983, Mike 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 lyric co-written by Tim Rice) and
'I Feel Like Buddy Holly' (for Alvin Stardust).
The
first 'Snark' album was recorded in 1984, featuring Art Garfunkel,
Cliff Richard, Deneice Williams, Captain Sensible, John Hurt,
Sir John Gielgud, Roger Daltrey, Julian Lennon, Stephane Grappelli
and George Harrison. It was the first step towards a full dramatic
treatment. Since then, he has been preoccupied with 'The Hunting
Of The Snark', stopping from time to time to become involved with
other projects such as the 'The Phantom Of The Opera' single,
which was a top ten hit for Steve Harley and Sarah Brightman.
Other projects include Colm Wilkinson's album 'Stage Heroes' with
the London Philharmonic Orchestra, Justin Hayward's album 'Classic
Blue' (also with the LPO) and the music for 'The Dreamstone',
ITV's high-rating 52 part animated series, once again with the
London Philharmonic. This score and album was composed, orchestrated,
conducted, produced and music-supervised by Mike.
He made his
concert debut as a conductor at the Barbican with the LSO in 1984,
with a programme including the Carmen Suites (Bizet), The Sorcerer's
Apprentice (Dukas) and other light classics, and has since conducted
the LSO, LPO and RPO in various programmes and/or recordings of
well-known repertoire pieces such as 'The Planets Suite' (Holst),
'Scheherezade' (Rimsky Korsakov) and 'Romeo and Juliet Fantasy
Overture' (Tchaikovsky). In 1990, he was Music Director of the
Melbourne Summer Music Festival, with the State Orchestra of Victoria.
In 1990 he
resigned his directorship of The Performing Right Society Ltd.
in order to concentrate on musical work, and was appointed by
the then Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher as a member of the Government
Working Group for music in the school curriculum.
He produced,
arranged and conducted the 'Cover Shot' album by David Essex (top
three in the UK albums chart) and recorded his Symphonic Suite
'The Dreamstone' with the London Philharmonic Orchestra at Abbey
Road Studios.
He also produced,
arranged and conducted the Irish number one album 'Whatever You
Believe' for tenor Finbar Wright, for which album he also wrote
the title song, and has conducted Finbar Wright with the National
Symphony Orchestra of Ireland in a televised recording of 'A Tribute
To John McCormack' - including the premiere performance of his
overture, the 'Dublin Overture' written especially for the occasion.
Also
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.
Mike composed
and produced the four million-selling album 'The Violin Player'
which launched the career of violinist Vanessa Mae in 1995.
Mike's 1996
projects included the completion of a new musical (both the music
and libretto) entitled 'Men Who March Away' - a love story set
in the first World War and the Spanish Civil War, and he also
wrote a humorous/surreal book soon to be published, called 'Tails
From Don't Be So Ridiculous Valley'.
In 1997,
he produced and conducted the hit album 'A Night At The Movies'
for David Essex and composed a special celebration piece, 'Royal
Gold' commissioned by the military for the Queen's 50th Wedding
anniversary. This was performed for Her Majesty at the Royal Tournament,
by the massed bands of the Scots, Welsh, Irish, Colstream and
Grenadier Guards, together with 100 pipers. That year, he also
acted as music supervisor to the film 'Richard III' starring Sir
Ian McKellern.
He scored
and music-supervised the British movie, 'Keep The Aspidistra Flying'
(released in the USA as 'A Merry War') starring Helena Bonham-Carter
and Richard E. Grant In 1998, he produced new music for the ongoing
52 part Womble series, and composed the music for Germany's most
popular television show 'Wetten, Dass....?'.
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. The 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.
Currently,
he is dedicating most of his time to guiding the career of 24
year old Katie Melua from Georgia, former USSR. Katie's album
'Call Off The Search' (containing six of Mike's songs including
'The Closest Thing To Crazy') was released on Mike's own Dramatico
label in November 2003. After six weeks at number one in the UK,
it sold six times platinum - over 1.8 million copies - in the
UK and three million copies in total, making Katie the biggest
selling UK female artist of 2004. Her second album, 'Piece by
Piece' (including Mike's song 'Nine Million Bicycles') was released
in September 2005 and to date has sold 3.5 million copies in Europe,
going to number 1 in the UK, Holland, Norway, Denmark, Iceland
and going top five in eight other countries. Dramatico has been
for the last three years, one of the top 3 UK based Indie labels,
based on official sales figures.
His recent solo album, “A Songwriter’s Tale”
achieved the number 24 position in the UK album charts in 2008.
He is Deputy Chairman of the BPI (British
Phonographic Industry).
