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Darren Burn - Bubblegum kid of tragedy

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  • #31
    Re: Darren Burn - Bubblegum kid of tragedy

    I'm so shocked and sad to learn Darren had died.. I only found out last night and I honestly thought he would have been successful in some music field. Darren had good looks beautiful voice and charisma one could never have dreamed his fate. I still have the singles he released in the 70's.

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    • #32
      Re: Darren Burn - Bubblegum kid of tragedy

      Yes, he's been gone over twenty-four years now. How time has flown. But at least he'll never have to suffer the indignity of growing old, not like those of us who are still around.

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      • #33
        Re: Darren Burn - Bubblegum kid of tragedy

        After all, anyone can say they're anyone on the Internet, can't they?[/QUOTE]

        Well yes, of course. But ask yourself this - why would I bother? It's not as if this is hot stuff, or even yesterdays news. I only made contact because I thought You had a genuine interest.
        If you want proof, I have photos galore that I could share. Or maybe not. Check your dialogue with my sister on YT 3 years ago - If I was a barrister, I would put THAT to you - look pointedlly at the
        Jury and say " No further questions, M'Lud " https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ygx5w8wjMRg

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        • #34
          Re: Darren Burn - Bubblegum kid of tragedy

          October 30th, 2016. Twenty-five years ago today, in 1991, Darren was found dead on the bathroom floor of his flat, flat 7, at 146 – 156, Grosvenor Terrace, Southwark, London, SE5 0NL, having taken his own life with an overdose of the anti-depressant drug Dotheipin.

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          • #35
            Re: Darren Burn - Bubblegum kid of tragedy

            DISC music paper, July 13th, 1974.

            And so we come to Darren Burn. At the age of 12, a veteran of four singles releases, but sadly, not a hit to his name. So far, the nearest that Darren has got to chart success has been with his first release, 'Something’s Gotten Hold Of My Heart'. That record shot up the chart, coming to rest at the number 69 slot before finally sinking without trace. Darren’s reaction to his failure to make an impact on the music scene is philosophical. “I suppose I was a bit upset when the records didn’t make it, but you just keep hoping that one day they will. I suppose they didn’t get enough exposure. You really need something like ‘Opportunity Knocks’ to break a record and I didn’t have anything like that.” At the moment, Darren’s hopes are pinned on his new single Summertime Time. “It’s a very summery, commercial sound which I hope will do better than my other records. It’s timed really to coincide with kids breaking up from school for the summer holiday.” Darren may not be getting the hits , but he’s certainly not without fans and admirers. “I get recognised quite a lot on the tubes. I don’t have a fan club, but I do get fan letters. Funnily enough, most of them come from Newcastle. I’m not quite sure why that should be, but I’d say at least 90 per cent of the letters come from up there. One girl from Newcastle used to phone me up regularly. I sent her one of my T-shirts and her mother auctioned it for £20. We also get people coming to the house to see me. If they knock on the door I invite them in and show them the pets. We’ve got a dog; two cats and a guinea pig."

            -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


            A bit of a mystery here is how that girl from Newcastle found out his phone number and the others his address. Neither of those details were published in the media at the time. It even took me many years to track down those details for myself.
            It’s interesting to note that the following month, August, 1974, Darren was callously and unceremoniously got rid of by EMI. Their replacement for him appears to have been a young boy from Wales, Jeffrey Hooper, who had won ATV’s New Faces talent contest with his rendition of 'For The Good Times'. Like Darren, he was photogenic and he could sing. But after his first two singles failed to make an impression on the charts, EMI released no more of his records.
            Last edited by DavidRayner; 31-10-2016, 19:52.

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            • #36
              Re: Darren Burn - Bubblegum kid of tragedy

              An old editing copy of the July, 1973, Man Alive film about Darren has now been uploaded to YouTube.

              https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MQ1NGOiCWiQ&t=36s

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              • #37
                Re: Darren Burn - Bubblegum kid of tragedy

                None of this rings even the faintest bell with me, which is surprising as I was about David's age and music mad at the time. I wonder if it was a regional thing? Perhaps Londoners/Southerners were more aware of him?

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                • #38
                  Re: Darren Burn - Bubblegum kid of tragedy

                  No, tepee, it was all over the country at the time, in all the music magazines and newspapers. His records got constant plays on the radio and he was getting fan letters from all over the place. What he really needed though, was about half a million people buying his records.

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                  • #39
                    Re: Darren Burn - Bubblegum kid of tragedy

                    It's interesting that in spite of all the publicity Darren didn't click with the record buying public.
                    The Trickster On The Roof

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                    • #40
                      Re: Darren Burn - Bubblegum kid of tragedy

                      I'd never heard of Darren or his music before and have only just read this thread. It truly is a sad tale indeed.

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                      • #41
                        Re: Darren Burn - Bubblegum kid of tragedy

                        One of the strange things about those days, and I've often said this, was that EMI aimed Darren at too narrow a target audience. Most eleven year old girls in those days seemed not to be interested in boy singers of their own age, but in adults like Gary Glitter, who was old enough to be their father.

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                        • #42
                          Re: Darren Burn - Bubblegum kid of tragedy

                          That's odd consideirng David Cassidy & Donny Osmond were having plenty of success at the time, & still fairly young.
                          The Trickster On The Roof

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                          • #43
                            Re: Darren Burn - Bubblegum kid of tragedy

                            Originally posted by DavidRayner View Post
                            One of the strange things about those days, and I've often said this, was that EMI aimed Darren at too narrow a target audience. Most eleven year old girls in those days seemed not to be interested in boy singers of their own age, but in adults like Gary Glitter, who was old enough to be their father.
                            And as it turns out he was way more interested in 11 year old girls than he should have been
                            Age is just a number - If yours bothers you stop counting

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                            • #44
                              Re: Darren Burn - Bubblegum kid of tragedy

                              Originally posted by Richard1978 View Post
                              That's odd consideirng David Cassidy & Donny Osmond were having plenty of success at the time, & still fairly young.
                              Yes, but David Cassidy was 23 years old in 1973 and Donny Osmond was 15. So maybe Darren would have been more successful with them if he'd been a few years older. It's hard to say. Certainly, his voice would have broken by the age of 14 and perhaps he wouldn't have been able to reach the high notes like he did in 1973. Someone once said to me that even though Darren had a fabulous singing voice, being a trained choir boy, even if he'd become a big hit with the record buying public, he wouldn't have had a very long shelf life.

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                              • #45
                                Re: Darren Burn - Bubblegum kid of tragedy

                                Originally posted by Jay Mc View Post
                                And as it turns out he was way more interested in 11 year old girls than he should have been
                                I saw a documentary once showing the hysteria at one of Gary Glitter's concerts in 1973 and all these young girls were throwing their knickers at him. What they saw in him, I don't know. I've still got all the singles I bought in 1973, but there are none of Gary Glitter's among them. I didn't like his records at the time and so I never bought any.

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