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    Mike Chapman (b. April 15, 1947) is an Australian-born record producer and songwriter who was a major force in the British pop music industry in the early 1970s. He created a string of hit singles for artists including Sweet, Suzi Quatro, Smokie and Mud with co-writer and co-producer Nicky Chinn, creating a formularised sound that became identified with the “Chinnichap” brand. He later produced breakthrough albums for Blondie and The Knack.

        Mike Chapman (record producer)
            Early career
            Chinn-Chapman
                Blondie
                The Knack
                Blondie again
            Writing technique
            Later work
            Hit singles

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    Early career
    Chapman was born in Queensland, Australia. He moved to Britain where he became a member of the group Tangerine Peel and in 1970 met millionaire's son Nicky Chinn while working as a waiter at a London hotel. The pair struck up a songwriting partnership and were hired by high-profile producer Mickie Most as in-house writers and producers to work on his RAK Records label. RAK quickly became home to a roster of artists including Suzi Quatro, Smokie, Hot Chocolate and Mud.

    Chinn recalled:


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    Chinn-Chapman
    From 1973 until 1978 Chapman and Chinn scored an enviable run of hit singles, with just the Chinn-Chapman writing or production credit seemingly enough to propel a song on to the airwaves and up the charts. From 1973 to 1974 alone the pair had 19 hits in the UK Top 40, including five No.1's. The pair’s dominance of the charts in Britain, Australia and New Zealand outlasted the decline of Glam rock and waned in line with the fading fortunes of Smokie and Suzi Quatro. The success of the Chinn-Chapman production partnership was eclipsed only in the late 1980s by the Stock Aitken Waterman team.

    Interviews with bands suggest Chapman was the more energetic and creative of the pair and the more flamboyant and outspoken. He exerted a tight grip on the output of the bands whose works he produced, determining the content of all albums. Some resented the level of control: The Sweet, whose interests lay in heavy rock, chafed at the teenybopper material Chapman gave them to perform, finally baulking at some songs and being sidelined as a result; Chapman would later make the curious decision of offering Some Girls to Blondie; it's not recorded how the band turned the song down, but it was eventually given to featherweight popsters Racey instead. Deborah Harry, among others, has referred to Chapman as a dictator , and for the photo shoot for one magazine interview he insisted on dressing up as US wartime General George S. Patton, Jr.

    The pair continued to write hits, including Exile’s Kiss You All Over (1978) and Toni Basil’s Mickey (1981, a reworked version of Kitty, a song they had written for Racey in 1980). The pair formed the Dreamland record label in 1979. It folded after two years.

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    Blondie
    Chinn’s involvement in production began to diminish in the late ‘70s, and Chapman produced three albums on his own for Suzi Quatro between 1978 and 1980. He co-produced Nick Gilder’s City Nights album in 1978 (which yielded the Hot Child in the City hit) with Peter Coleman, his long-time recording engineer, and in May the same year began working with Blondie to record their third album in New York. Chapman was a fan of their music, but was dissatisfied with the production of their albums. He told the band bluntly he would make them a hit record and he was right: Parallel Lines turned the band into an international success and became arguably the pinnacle of his own career.

    The Parallel Lines session lasted three months. Singer Deborah Harry was struck by the intensity of Chapman’s working methods. She said:

    Keyboardist Jimmy Destri recalled:

    Employing the same skills he had applied to records by Smokie and Nick Gilder, Chapman produced a more polished guitar and keyboard sound than the band had ever achieved, topped with layered vocals. The focal point of the album, and the breakthrough single, was Heart of Glass. The source of its driving disco beat is a matter of contention: Chapman claimed he had created the sound after the band had presented it as a slower, reggae-style song; band members insist it had always been known as their “disco song” and that they had arrived at the sound by combining the influences of Kraftwerk and Saturday Night Fever.

    Chapman relished the praise heaped on his work on Parallel Lines, commenting soon after its release:


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    The Knack
    Within months of Parallel Lines release, Chapman was working with another band for which he would achieve a career high water mark: power pop outfit The Knack. The band’s website notes that in November 1978, 13 record companies were engaged in a fierce bidding war for the band’s services, with Capitol Records finally signing the band. Producers clamoured to offer their services and even Phil Spector was anxious to participate.

    The website says:

    The album hit No.1 in the US and sold millions around the world. Its follow-up, ...But the Little Girls Understand, was less successful. Featuring a producer credit as "Commander Chapman" and liner notes in which Chapman boasted, "This record is very dear to me and my bank manager", it prompted a bitter falling-out between band and producer. Chapman claimed the album cost him his reputation. In the book Off the Record, Chapman said he and the band made the second album under the heady impression that they could do no wrong. He accused singer and guitarist Doug Fieger of being deluded with notions he was Jim Morrison or Buddy Holly ... "there was nothing he could do that wouldn't work". Fieger, in a 1994 interview, responded: "Mike Chapman is one of the bigger assholes that you'll ever meet on the planet. Unfortunately, Mike Chapman was not in any psychological or physical shape to produce that second album when we really needed a producer."

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    Blondie again
    Chapman produced three more Blondie albums –- Eat to the Beat, Autoamerican and The Hunter -- and most of Def, Dumb and Blonde, a Deborah Harry solo album. In an article in the Blondie Fan Club newsletter Chris Stein marvelled at Chapman’s attention to detail, noting that the percussion for The Tide Is High also includes "eight tracks of drum sticks tapping on a piano bench." He creates a vivid description:

    Others who have worked with Chapman also speak with awe at the volume levels of music in the studio as he worked. Engineer Lenise Bent observed: "The UREI Time Align speakers had these little red and green fuses and we blew boxes of them. I used to wear headphones, not plugged into anything."

    In a web forum posting, producer-engineer William Wittman (Cyndi Lauper, Joan Osborne, The Hooters) commented:


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    Writing technique
    Chinn and Chapman delivered their songs rapidly, often conceiving and completing them overnight. They claimed they created their songs by first thinking of a title, around which they then wrote the lyrics. The claim is supported by the lyrics of early bubblegum pop songs such as Wig Wam Bam
    Wig-wam bam, gonna make you my man

    Wam bam bam, gonna get you if I can

    Wig-wam bam, wanna make you understand

    Try a little touch, try a little too much

    Just try a little wig-wam bam


    … although later songs including those for Smokie such as Living Next Door to Alice injected a much more thoughtful, emotional tone …
    Oh, I don't know why she's leaving,

    Or where she's gonna go,

    I guess she's got her reasons,

    But I just don't want to know,

    'Cos for twenty-four years

    I've been living next door to Alice.

    Twenty-four years just waiting for a chance,

    To tell her how I feel, and maybe get a second glance,

    Now I've got to get used to not living next door to Alice...


    In a 2002 interview with The Guardian, Chapman reflected that writing hit songs was an art to which many aspired but few achieved: "It's always a gamble. We'd written something like eight top 10 hits for Sweet when we heard that they'd entered the studio to record their own songs. After that, it was over for them. The bottom line is this -- writing songs might be easy to do, but it's incredibly hard to do well."

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    Later work
    Chapman remained in demand through the ‘80s and ‘90s as a songwriter and producer. His compositions have included Tina Turner's "(Simply) The Best" and Pat Benatar's "Love is a Battlefield" (both co-written with Holly Knight), while he has produced albums for Altered Images, Australian Crawl, Agnetha Faltskog, Divinyls, Rod Stewart, Lita Ford, Pat Benatar, Baby Animals and Bow Wow Wow.

    In 2006 he wrote "Back to the Drive", the title track for a new Suzi Quatro album. In the liner notes Quatro thanks Chapman "for providing the title track and overseeing the entire project".

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    Hit singles
    Songs produced, or written and produced, by Chinn and Chapman which charted in the UK:

      1971:
    New World: Tom Tom Turnaround

    The Sweet: Funny Funny, Co-Co, Alexander Graham Bell

      1972:
    The Sweet: Poppa Joe, Little Willy, Wig-Wam Bam

      1973:
    Mud: Crazy, Hypnosis, Dyna-Mite

    Suzi Quatro: Can The Can, 48 Crash, Daytona Demon

    The Sweet: Blockbuster, Hell Raiser, Ballroom Blitz

      1974:
    The Arrows: Touch too Much

    Mud: Tiger Feet, The Cat Crept In, Rocket, Lonely This Christmas

    Suzi Quatro: Devil Gate Drive, Too Big, The Wild One

    The Sweet: Teenage Rampage, The Six Teens

      1975:
    Mud: The Secrets That You Keep, Moonshine Sally

    Suzi Quatro: Your Mama Won’t Like Me

    Smokie: If You Think You Know How to Love Me, Don’t Play Your Rock ‘N Roll To Me

      1976:
    Smokie: Something's Been Making Me Blue, I'll Meet You At Midnight, Living Next Door To Alice

      1977:
    Suzi Quatro: Tear Me Apart

    Smokie: Lay Back In The Arms Of Someone, It's Your Life, Needles and Pins

      1978:
    Suzi Quatro: If You Can’t Give Me Love, Stumblin’ In (with Chris Norman)

    Racey: Lay Your Love On Me

    Smokie: For A Few Dollars More, Oh Carol

      1979:
    Suzi Quatro: She’s In Love With You

    Racey: Some Girls





     
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