Joe Longthorne is remembered as one of the UK's finest vocalists and live performers, held in the highest esteem by his fellow professionals, loved and adored by his fans the world over, his status nothing short of legendary with accolades and credits from the true greats of the entertainment industry worldwide. Joe is one of those few select vocalists who have earned the right to be called song stylists, an instantly recognised voice with the ability to stamp their name on every song they perform and make it their own. Sinatra, Bennett, Davis,Presley,Diamond,Manilow,Mathis, the name โLongthorneโ surely stands proudly alongside these greats. Joe also possesses an incredible gift for impersonations, his repertoire is packed full. From his signature impression of Dame Shirley Bassey to Tony Bennett, Sir Tom Jones, Barry Manilow, Sammy Davis Jnr, the list is endless.
Joe performs in an intimate atmosphere on stage accompanied by his MD Andy Mudd. The show entitled โA Man and His Musicโ sees Joe singing songs old and new, all of which he has made his own .This year sees Joe introducing some of his own compositions into his performance. Songs from a career which began over 40 years ago and a career which has seen many highs and lows along the way but which is now well on track. 2012 sees Joe playing an extensive schedule of dates nationwide right up to December together with a major nationwide tour of Australia in November, and European dates in Spain and The Canaries in the Autumn.
Joseph Patrick Longthorne was born on 31st May 1955 in Kingston upon Hull to musical parents,Fred a very talented musician and Teresa a very fine singer. Joe comes from a travelling background and he enjoyed a very warm, safe upbringing in his early years, as he recounts in his 2010 biography, soon to be updated and published in paperback. It was soon evident that he had been born with a god given talent for singing, and at a very tender age he entered a local talent contest and won the first prize, a large red toy car. It was at this point that he realised that singing could indeed be a worthwhile profession to follow. Joe was developing and sharpening his talents with a gift for impersonating anybody at the drop of a hat with mum Teresa very wisely advising her son that it was always a good thing in showbiz to have more than one string to oneโs bow.
Quickly earning fame entertaining locally in Hull, his incredible talents saw him become one of the biggest stars of โJunior Showtimeโ in 1969, a ground breaking ITV series, the first childrenโs TV variety show with child performers. Joe stole the show most weeks with his brilliant performances and stayed until the age of 16 when he left with a wealth of experience and performing under his belt to pursue his dreams of a showbiz career. Worldwide success was to fall at Joeโs feet in the years that followed although as we will read his journey was to prove a roller coaster ride of highs and lows. The lows left him with battles to face which may well have defeated lesser men but Joe possesses an incredible spirit and determination, his faith and courage knows no bounds.
After leaving โJunior Showtimeโ in the early 70โs Joe worked a tough apprenticeship around the club circuit at home and abroad, quickly earning praise and respect, working his way up to top the bill every night. 1981 saw the big break arrive which launched him onto British TV and was to make him a household name. The LWT series โSearch For A Starโ featured Joe. The rest is history. Just pipped at the post in the final, he had the real prize already in his pocket. Major success followed with appearances on all the major TV variety shows of the day, together with appearances at the London Palladium and a season at the West Endโs Talk of the Townโ. The name โLongthorneโ was now firmly inscribed in the record books of British show business with sell out concerts wherever he performed. The Variety Club chose to honour Joe with their award for โMost Promising Artisteโ in 1983.Itโs fair to say they made a wise choice. Building on this mountain of success at home news reached America and in 1985 Joe headlined a season at the Drury Lane Theatre Chicago and was showered with critical acclaim.
Joe returned home and broke through to TV with a weekly appearance as the Special Guest Star on the Les Dennis Laughter Show series. This led onto his first television special and ultimately his own series. Joe had arrived at the very top of the showbiz ladder and it seemed that his life could not get much better. Guest appearances followed on all the major variety shows of the day and Joe consolidated his enormous success with a series of platinum and gold certified albums โThe Joe Longthorne Songbookโ, โEspecially for Youโ and โThe Joe Longthorne Christmas Albumโ. Joeโs appearance at the 1989 Royal Variety Performance stole the show and he appeared to be at the very pinnacle of his career. It was around this time that Joe was diagnosed with Lymphoma, a blood cancer that very nearly proved fatal. Feeling unwell he visited his doctor and was given the diagnosis, in Joeโs own words โCancer is not a word you expect to hear when things are going so well. I felt invincible and suddenly out of the blue I felt helpless. I had two choices, to give in or fight. I chose the latter. I got up dusted myself off and got on with lifeโ.
Responding well to treatment he embarked on a sell out Australian tour and although having to fight and battle the lymphoma when it returned periodically Joe continued to stay at the very top of the showbiz ladder of fortune and fame with countless sell out performances at The Sydney Opera House, The London Palladium and The Royal Albert Hall. Although TV companies became reluctant to invest in Joe at this time due to his recurring illness he continued to entertain his endless army of devoted fans up and down the country with his unforgettable live performances, breaking box office records everywhere. He released another album โI Wish You Loveโ in 1993 with many of his own songs included. A single was released, the very popular โMary In The Morningโ which gave Joe a Top 30 hit and he enjoyed great success with a string of video releases of his live concerts and TV shows. It was at this time that Michael Aspel managed to surprised Joe whilst he was performing on stage to present him with the famous red book. The struggle with returning bouts of his illness together with financial problems emerging from bad management advice ultimately took their toll on Joe in the late 90s.
The new millennium saw Joe get back in shape financially and work wise but he was given the biggest battle of his life to fight when it was discovered the Lymphoma he had fought for so long had deteriated into Leukaemia. Joe continued performing between treatments; however a bone marrow transplant was offered as the only hope by his doctors of beating the disease which was taking more of a hold on Joe. A donor was found by The Anthony Nolan Trust after many appeals on Joeโs behalf. Joe entered the Manchester Royal Infirmary in June 2005 for the transplant which initially went well. After a few days the signs were good but complications developed which resulted in Joe contracting pneumonia and being placed on a ventilator for a month, sedated and fighting for his life and being given the last rites. Many prayers were said and vigils were held by showbiz pals and fans around the globe; miraculously he pulled through. His condition improved gradually, inching his way back to recovery his medical team commented that they really had no idea how he had pulled through. It could well have been a miracle or maybe the mountain of love and prayers from family, friends and fans.
Joe, especially eager to get back on stage and entertain his audiences again, returned to performing at Easter 2006 at the Blackpool Grand and followed up with a nationwide tour. Edging his way back to recovery and full fitness he played an emotional sell out concert at the London Palladium in Sept 2006. In May 2007 the Variety Club of Great Britain awarded Joe their โLifetime Achievement Awardโ. The ceremony was packed with celebrities and devoted fans, all there to honour Joe and his tireless efforts and commitment to his profession, extensive charity work, courage, incredible bravery and determination. In his own words he announced โI have not felt this good for decades. Itโs like I have gone back 20 years.โ Joe Longthorne was indeed well and truly back.
Joe quickly reclaimed his title of the hardest working man in showbiz with an extensive nationwide tour in 2007, and indeed every year since, and has performed sell out summer seasons in Blackpool, together with headline concerts in Cyprus at the Kourian Amphitheatre and The IndigO2 at the O2 in London.
2010 saw Joeโs life story finally published with his autobiography written in conjunction with Chris Berry. It is a must for any fan, written in Joeโs own words it is a very honest and frank account of his life and has won praise from critics and fans alike.
The Variety Club further recognised Joe with a special award of a โSilver Heartโ in March 2010, in honour of his extensive charity work. He accepted the award graciously at the ceremony and proceeded to donate it to a Blackpool based charity of which he is patron of. DCWC Nepal helps the poor and sick in Nepal and the Silver Heart was auctioned for well over ยฃ1000 which was donated towards a hospital being built in a remote region of the country. A remarkable gesture on Joeโs part but this is all part of the manโs character, his charity work is always of paramount importance to him.
Joe returned to the West End with a sell out show at The Leicester Square Theatre last September. In October he travelled to the Spanish resort of Torrevieja to perform a special concert which was recorded for Spanish TV and has now been issued as a DVD โJoe Live In Spain.โ He returned to Spain in November to play a breathtaking two hour show to a packed Benidorm Palace, fans have remarked that they had never heard Joe perform so well.
In June this year came the announcement, by Royal Proclaimation from Buckingham Palace, that Joe was to receive a MBE for his extensive charity work, this award being part of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Birthday Honours List. A humble and unassuming man, Joe admitted to being totally surprised and utterly speechless at learning about the forthcoming award, in a letter from the Palace earlier this year, but immensely proud and deeply honoured to receive the award in the Jubilee year making it all the more special. He sees the award as something which will give the charities he supports a greater profile and status and reinforce his continuing charity work. His investiture later this year is sure to be a day celebrated and toasted in style by his family and loved ones, friends and his endless army of fans worldwide.
The time is indeed very right for Joe Longthorne M.B.E.
Never Say Never
Joe Longthorne Lyrics
Jump to: Overall Meaning ↴ Line by Line Meaning ↴
Young men wrote to me
Everybody seemed to have time to devote to me
Everyone I saw all swore they knew me
Once upon a song
Main attraction, couldn't buy a seat
The celebrity, celebrities were dying to meet
I've had every accolade bestowed on me
If I never sing another song
It wouldn't bother me
I had my share of fame
You know my name
If I never sing another song
Or take another bow
I would get by, but I'm not sure how
Always posing, but you love it all
Though you have to learn to act like you're above it all
Everything I did the world applauded
Once upon a star
Framed citations, hung on every wall
Got a scrapbook full of quotes, I can recall them all
There were times I felt the world belonged to me
And so you see
If I never sing another song
It wouldn't bother me
I had my share of fame
You know my name
If I never sing another song
Or take another bow
I would get by, but I'm not sure how
But I'm not sure how
But I'm not sure how
The lyrics to Joe Longthorne's song "If I Never Sing Another Song" speak of the singer's past glory days as a renowned performer, where young men used to write to him and everyone seemed to know him. He talks about how he was once the main attraction and celebrities were eager to meet him. The song talks about how he was at the height of his fame and received every accolade that could be bestowed upon him. However, despite all of the fame and success, the singer seems to have reached a point where he has grown tired of it all. He states that if he never sings another song or takes another bow, it wouldn't bother him because he has already had his share of fame.
The lyrics depict that despite his fame and success, the singer has grown tired of the life he had once so desperately coveted. The pressures of fame seem to have caught up with him and he reflects on the emptiness and loneliness that come with it. The song ends with the singer admitting that he isn't sure how he would cope if he were to stop singing and performing.
Line by Line Meaning
In my heyday
During the peak of my career
Young men wrote to me
I received letters from young men
Everybody seemed to have time to devote to me
People had time to give me attention
Everyone I saw all swore they knew me
Everyone claimed to know who I was
Once upon a song
During a time when I was known for my singing
Main attraction, couldn't buy a seat
I was highly sought after and shows were always sold out
The celebrity, celebrities were dying to meet
Other famous people wanted to meet me
I've had every accolade bestowed on me
I received recognition and praise for my work
And so you see
Therefore, you can understand
If I never sing another song
If I never perform on stage again
It wouldn't bother me
I wouldn't be upset
I had my share of fame
I was famous for a period of time
You know my name
I am well-known to others
Or take another bow
Or if I never receive another round of applause
I would get by, but I'm not sure how
I would survive, but I'm uncertain of how I would cope
Always posing, but you love it all
I always posed for photos, but people enjoyed it
Though you have to learn to act like you're above it all
However, I had to learn how to act unaffected by fame
Everything I did the world applauded
The world praised everything I did
Once upon a star
During a time when I was famous
Framed citations, hung on every wall
I received awards and hung them on display
Got a scrapbook full of quotes, I can recall them all
I collected quotes about myself and remember them all
There were times I felt the world belonged to me
There were moments when I felt like I owned the world
But I'm not sure how
But I'm uncertain of how
Lyrics ยฉ BMG Rights Management
Written by: Donald Black, Udo Juergens
Lyrics Licensed & Provided by LyricFind
Eileen O'Dea
Such a god given talent - miss you Joe ๐๐๐๐
Aileen Stack
Someone very special so sadly missed.rip Joe xx
catherine martin
I miss going to concerts so much xx
Miss him xx
Lee A
I miss you sweet joe ๐๐น๐น๐นโคโค
Stephen Collins
Every day we miss him. Stevie collins & family. Rip
typical libre
May I be the first to say... miss you Joe ๐
Talesian Lawson
When was this filmed? ๐๐๐
David Dillon
Not his best...Have heard him sing this much better..