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Born: Dec. 5, 1952 in Montreal, Quebec
Barely into his teens, an ambitious Andy Kim arrived in New York
City from Montreal in 1967 with $40 in his pocket and no idea how
to pursue his dream of becoming a songwriter. He knocked on doors
and soon returned home with the knowledge on how to ‘make it’.
After writing a handful of songs, he began commuting to New York,
doing odd jobs and earning money to make demos. Eventually, he met
producer Jeff Barry and after pestering the man, Andy Kim finally
got to record the song "How’d We Ever Get This Way?"
It was released in April 1968 and made the Canadian and US Top 20
charts. It sold 800,000 copies, which confirmed his potential. The
next single was "Shoot ‘Em Up Baby" which, despite being banned by
certain stations that worried that it was either a drug song, or a
song about guns (this was the year that Robert F. Kennedy and
Martin Luther King Jr. were both assassinated, and sensitivities
in the U.S. were high), managed to still sell ˝ a million copies.
Succeeding singles "Rainbow Ride" hit the U.S. top twenty. It was
followed by "Baby I Love you", which hit the top five and earned
Kim his first Gold Record selling in excess of 1.5 million copies.
This was acknowledged back home in Canada where he won the Top
Male Vocalist Juno in 1968. His success continue with hits such as
"Sugar, Sugar", and "Jingle Jangle" for The Archies and "Rock Me
Gently" his #1 6 million selling hit record.
In all, as a writer, producer and/or recording artist with such
songs as "How’d We Ever Get This Way?", "Shoot ‘Em Up Baby",
"Sugar, Sugar", "Baby I Love You",
"Jingle, Jangle", "Be My Baby", "Rainbow Ride", and
"Rock Me Gently". Andy Kim
went on to sell 30 million records, tour the globe and earn his
place in rock history. "Sugar, Sugar" and "Rock Me Gently" reached
#1 on the Billboard charts the pinnacle of industry success. |