In August 1964 The Strangers were hired as the house band for the ATV O pop music program, The Go!! Show. Both Farrar's future wife, Pat Carroll, and their close friend, Olivia Newton-John, appeared on The Go!! Show as singers and were backed by The Strangers. Carroll and Newton-John formed a vocal duo, Pat and Olivia, and in 1967 they first toured the United Kingdom which included a gig at the then infamous Raymond Revue Bar Club in Soho. After returning to Australia from a tour, Carroll was obliged to remain as her visa had expired, while UK-born Newton-John stayed on. Farrar dated and married Carroll and following their wedding in 1969, Carroll ceased to pursue her head-liner status and settled into occasionally reprising her duo work with Newton-John and session singing on Farrar productions or Newton-John's works. During 1968 The Strangers supported the Australian leg of a tour by UK instrumental group, The Shadows. In June 1970 The Strangers released their most successful hit, "Melanie Makes Me Smile", which peaked at No. 14 on the Go-Set National Top 60 in August.
However in July 1970 Farrar had left The Strangers and, with Carroll, moved to the UK where he was invited to become a member of Marvin, Welch & Farrar, a vocal-harmony group featuring two former members of The Shadows, Hank Marvin and Bruce Welch. By that time Newton-John and Welch were engaged and Farrar and Welch became two of her songwriters and producers. Welch and Farrar co-produced and performed on Newton-John's cover of Bob Dylan's track, "If Not for You", and the album of the same name released in November 1971. Farrar also worked with Cliff Richard as a backing guitarist and vocalist. Marvin, Welch & Farrar put out two albums, an eponymous one in 1971 and 'Second Opinion' (in both quadraphonic and stereo formats) in 1972. In 1973 a third album featured just Marvin and Farrar. The Shadows reformed soon after and Farrar joined as second lead guitarist and vocalist. In 1975 the group represented the UK in the Eurovision Song Contest with "Let Me Be the One". In 1973 Farrar had appeared at the same contest as a backing guitarist and vocalist for Richard's entry, "Power to All Our Friends"; the following year he backed and produced Newton-John on her effort, "Long Live Love".
From 1971 to 1976 various members of The Shadows were used as session musicians for Newton-John's early albums which were recorded at London's Abbey Road Studios. Aside from Farrar and Welch, they included Brian Bennett, Alan Hawkshaw, Alan Tarney, Dave Richmond and Trevor Spencer; other session musicians were fellow Australians Kevin Peek and Terry Britten – both also worked with Richard – and some other musicians. They worked under co-producers Farrar and Welch – until mid-way through Newton-John's second album, 'Olivia', thereafter Farrar was her main producer. He produced her number-one albums, 'If You Love Me, Let Me Know' (1974), 'Have You Never Been Mellow' (1975) and 'Olivia's Greatest Hits Vol. 2' (1982). Farrar also produced Newton-John's first US number-one hit single, "I Honestly Love You", which was awarded the Grammy Award for Record of the Year in 1975. His last production for Newton-John was her 1989 album, 'Warm and Tender'.
In 1974 Farrar used the vocoder SFX unit on an instrumental track, "No, No, Nina", ahead of Peter Frampton's 1975 single, "Show Me the Way", and the associated double live album, 'Frampton Comes Alive!' (1976) which featured the same device for its talk box effect. However Farrar's track was held back from release by EMI until 1997, when it appeared on the CD album, 'The Shadows at Abbey Road', containing mostly unreleased material. A vocal version of "No, No, Nina" appeared on the 'Specs Appeal' album as a Eurovision contender track; but it was voted sixth out of six initial entries. Aside from instrumentation and vocals Farrar worked as an arranger on The Shadows' albums: 'Rockin' with Curly Leads', 'Specs Appeal', 'Tasty' and 'Live at the Paris Olympia'.
Farrar's work with Newton-John embraced a wide range of styles, from "You're the One That I Want" (duet with John Travolta) to "Physical". Farrar's biggest success with Newton-John as a writer-producer came with the film version of the musical, Grease. In 1977 during filming, its producers required extra songs, so Farrar wrote and submitted two originals, "Hopelessly Devoted To You" and "You're the One That I Want". Both were accepted and became two of the soundtrack's most successful singles, being international number-one hits during 1978. In June 2004 Farrar recalled writing the tracks: "'You're the One That I Want': The weird thing was it was the fastest song I ever wrote. It came so fast, the actual melody and the feel of it. 'Hopelessly Devoted To You': I spent the longest period writing the lyrics of any song I’ve ever written. Every thesaurus and every rhyming dictionary I had, just trying to really make it work properly".
Other number-one hits for Newton-John that were written and produced by Farrar are "Have You Never Been Mellow" (1975) and "Magic" (1980). Farrar produced one side of the 'Xanadu' soundtrack for the 1980 film of the same name. The other side featured tracks by Electric Light Orchestra and was produced by their guitarist-vocalist, Jeff Lynne. In March 1981 he was nominated for a Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Original Song for the Xanadu track, "Suspended in Time".
In 1995, Farrar collaborated with Newton-John and lyricist Tim Rice for the musical score of Richard's musical, Heathcliff based on the Emily Brontë novel Wuthering Heights. Farrar also co-wrote songs for a musical based on the 1959 film, Gidget, which, as of April 2012, was indefinitely postponed. Farrar runs the Moonee Ponds Studio at Sweetwater Road in Malibu.
''Recovery / It'll Be Me Babe'' 1981 CBS
In 1995, Farrar collaborated with Newton-John and lyricist Tim Rice for the musical score of Richard's musical, Heathcliff based on the Emily Brontë novel Wuthering Heights. Farrar also co-wrote songs for a musical based on the 1959 film, Gidget, which, as of April 2012, was indefinitely postponed. Farrar runs the Moonee Ponds Studio at Sweetwater Road in Malibu.
SINGLES
''With Rainnie On My Mind (#90) / John And Mary (Instrumental)'' 1971 Fable''Recovery / It'll Be Me Babe'' 1981 CBS
ALBUMS
'John Farrar' 1980 CBS
References
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Farrar
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