There are so many harsh comments about this vid. Freddie did what he did and probably had a lot of fun doing it! I'm no great fan of Freddie and the Dreamers from a musical point of view, but he had a great sense of fun! When one of their songs comes on the radio, I have great images in my mind of Freddie leaping about like a lunatic. To use an old word, 'fab'! Freddie and the Dreamers were part of the Sixties musical landscape. Some bands of that era went on to ultra-stardom and some didn't. But Freddie was still gigging to the very end. That's dedication and that's the mark of a true musician. Love and peace.
Update:- Roy Crewdson (Dreamers original guitarist) is still fit and very much alive (December 2023) and is the owner of a cabaret bar run by his family in Los Cristianos - called Dreamers - which is very well known for being the place to go for a good night out. Andy, the resident compere, is most entertaining. Roy also has a Karaoke bar round the corner from Dreamers called Churchills, and for the past 13 years my family and I have been entertained at either venue. Michelle Minty, the resident vocalist and compere at Churchills, has become a family friend over the years. Roy is one of the nicest chaps you could wish to meet, and still has a very good singing voice, with which he occasionally entertains Churchills clientele - and very professionally I might add.
Freddie appeared in a kids TV show as part of a musical series called Oliver in the underworld seem to remember there were a few cachy songs such as the undercog and the Hungary drain😊😊
My parents took us to see Freddy and the dreamers in Blackpool in the mid 60s ,Peter gordeno and his dancers were on the same bill,they sang I’m telling you now as he ran across the stage oh happy days,better times altogether.
Freddie and my dad used to work together for a while before Freddie became famous. He was a lovely man according to my mum and dad and they would have went to his concerts in Manchester.
I knew Bernie Dwyer in the mid to late 70s and early 80s when we were both regulars at The Friendship in Fallowfield in Manchester. He was always a loyal friend to those who knew him. A real genuine guy. And l know that from those who knew him, he’s sadly missed.
Freddie and his band were from Manchester, at one point he was delivering milk when one of their songs entered the Top Ten selling singles, so he had a change of career. They got to No 2 in 1963 with 'I'm Telling You Now, which went to No 1 in the US two years later, he died around 2010. It was said of Freddie he was the only person that could sing, dance and drop his trousers simultaneously. The songwriters Mitch Murray and Peter Callender wrote a few of Freddie & the Dreamers' hits.
Freddie Garrity was born on 14 November 1936 in Manchester, Lancashire, England, UK.He died at Bangor in North Wales, at the age of 69, after being taken ill while on holiday. Garrity was cremated at the Carmountside Crematorium in Abbey Hulton, Stoke-on-Trent, where his ashes are interred.
We saw them in 1977 as a support act for Jim Davidson at Great Yarmouth. He looked, back then, pretty much as he did back in the 60's with his trademark black glasses. He kept coming in to the audience and getting people to sing along with him. The last time I saw him on tv Freddie had lost his trademark black hair.
It was called Little Big Time and was on Children’s TV. It featured a serial called Oliver in The Overworld. Sadly, I don’t think there are any surviving episodes.
@@davidhamm7909 The lyrics to the intro to the show were "I want to go to the Overworld - do you want to go to the overworld with me - off to the land of machinery" Other lyrics were - "don't underestimate the under cog" and "Beware the hungry drains." BTW Thanks for providing the title of the show. I'd been scratching my brains trying to remember it.
I was playing ten pin bowls in Blackpool back in 1965 when the Dreamers came in for a game. Freddie wasn’t with them. The daft things your memory stores is crazy.
Can't understand the haters. This band's music still makes me happy, I often sing their songs. The can't be anything wrong with making people smile surely? Like so many other bands then and still now, a few people have made fortunes of their talent. And yes you need talent to convince people to listen. People have had great sing and failed because they have no talent - some become session people or songwriters. You can have a bad song but as long as you have talent people will listen - this era is filled with them. FTD had enough talent and that's why we are still interest 50-60 years later. Can't say the same about others.
For more than 10 yrs (not during Covid) I have holidayed in Tenerife ( Canaries) up to 4 times per year. I regularly go to a bar in Los Cristianos to watch a Bowie Tribute act. It's called 'Dreamers' ; I didnt know until I was told last year that its name was given by the original owner, Roy Crewdson.
I saw Freddie and the Dreamers in the late 90s as part of a 60s show also featuring Peter Noone among others. None of the Dreamers were originals (apart from Freddie) and looked as if they weren’t even born when Freddie was having his hits. The same band later re-appeared backing Peter Noone - they were Dreamers and Hermits in the same evening. Freddie was on top form in his half hour set. So sad he is no longer with us.
A novelty act perhaps, but not untalented performers.... They were quite popular at the time and made the top ten charts a few times... I liked their tunes, though not my type of group..... Try playing guitar and/or sing while leaping around? Not easy. hahahaha
A band called the Zephyrs appeared around the same time and were on TV at least once . I think it was on Ready, Steady, Go. They did a routine like the Freddie but instead of lifting one leg at a time, they jumped from side to side. It was so weird it has stayed with me ever since.
I remember seeing them in a children's tv show in the black-and-white era. I'm afraid I can't remember its name but it had quite an entertaining, offbeat humour .
Derek Quinn ran a pub in Newton, Hyde, Cheshire, called the King William IV, during the mid 70's to the mid 80's. Following a debacle about non-payment of VAT, he lost the pub and I heard that he then became a soft-drink salesman.
What happened to Freddie and the Dreamers? They got caught in a rainstorm and became Freddie and the Wet Dreamers and everyone said we're having none of that.
I grew up during this time and I would be about 5 when these clowns first appeared on TV, I hated them, they made me cringe, even at that age I knew that they were terrible, I was listening to Luxemborgue most nights with my older brother on his transistor radio, the times these came on we would say "battery saving time" Cliff Richard had the same effect on us,
Junior Showtime was a Yorkshire TV show for young talent sort of New Faces / Opportunity Knocks programme. Little Big Time was a BBC programme a children's quiz programme.
Met him once at some 60's nostalgia show and he was so arrogant and obnoxious which is a joke because I've met some real legends like Bryan Ferry and Ray Davies who couldn't have been more humble.
Freddy does look a bit like Buddy Holly. If the Crickets were a British Band this what they’d look like. The influence of the Crickets was a part of this band and since Freddy and Buddy Holly wore glasses. The statement they were making that it was Okay to wear glasses especially for performers.
This bands name should be Freddie and The Goofballs. What a bunch of Clowning Geeks. Freddie and the Dreamers where doomed from the beginning. Why?… Because there Goofballs in a pod.
Sadly rigor mortis set in before Freddie could be buried.During which time he adopted his trademark ' Spastic Dance'meaning that the undertakers had to bury him in a rather bizarre shaped grave.On the upside his grave has become a tourist attraction.
Probably the least talented of all the 60s groups. A bit of an embarrassment really. But when there are so many groups, someone has to be the bottom of the pile, i suppose.