Heinz Burt
Heinz Burt (24 July 1942 – 7 April 2000) was a German-born British rock and roll bassist and singer, best known as the blonde-haired bassist for the instrumental group The Tornados and for his solo career under the stage name Heinz, mentored by producer Joe Meek.[1] Born in Detmold, Germany, to a German father and English mother, Burt moved with his family to Southampton, England, at age seven, where he developed an interest in the bass guitar after leaving school.[2] He first played in local bands like The Falcons before joining The Outlaws and then The Tornados in 1961, contributing to their groundbreaking success with the Joe Meek-produced instrumental "Telstar," which became the first UK band record to top the US Billboard Hot 100 in 1962 and sold over five million copies worldwide.[2][3] After leaving The Tornados in 1963, Burt launched a solo career under Meek's guidance, adopting a rebellious image inspired by Eddie Cochran and achieving a top-ten UK hit with "Just Like Eddie," a tribute to the late rockabilly pioneer that reached number five on the charts.[4] He released several singles and the album Tribute to Eddie that year, appeared in the film Live It Up alongside future stars like Steve Marriott, and toured with American rock 'n' roll legends including Gene Vincent and Jerry Lee Lewis, while collaborating with session musicians such as Jimmy Page and Ritchie Blackmore.[3] Despite early promise in the pre-Beatles pop scene, Burt's career waned with the British Invasion, leading to a string of less successful releases until Meek's suicide in 1967, after which Burt continued performing sporadically in 1960s revival shows.[2] In his later years, Burt lived in Eastleigh, Hampshire, and battled motor neurone disease for about a decade, making his final stage appearance in February 1999 before dying at age 57 with limited financial means; he was twice married and survived by his mother and a son.[4][2]Early life
Childhood in Germany
Heinz Burt was born on 24 July 1942 in Detmold, Germany, the son of a German father and an English mother.[1] The family faced significant hardships during the closing stages of World War II, as Allied forces advanced into Germany. Burt's father was killed in action while serving in the German military, leaving his mother to raise young Heinz amid the chaos of the war's end. This tragic loss deeply impacted the family and motivated his mother to seek a new life in England, where she had ties through her heritage.[5]Arrival in England and early influences
In 1949, at the age of seven, Heinz Burt immigrated to the south of England with his mother after his father's death during World War II.[5] The family, reliant on support as dependents of a war widow, settled in Eastleigh, Hampshire, a working-class railway town, where Burt spent his formative years adapting to British life amid the post-war economic recovery.[6] Burt attended local schools in Eastleigh, leaving with a developing interest in music that would shape his future.[7] The family's hardships, stemming from the loss of his father and the challenges of relocation as German immigrants in a country still recovering from conflict, fostered resilience in young Burt.[5] By his mid-teens in the 1950s, he discovered American rock and roll through records by Eddie Cochran, whose energetic style profoundly influenced him.[5]Music career
With The Tornados
Heinz Burt joined The Tornados in 1961 after auditioning with his earlier band, The Falcons, for producer Joe Meek, who singled him out for the role of bassist due to his enthusiasm despite limited skills.[8][5] The Tornados, formed that year as Meek's house band, initially backed artists like Billy Fury while recording instrumentals; Burt also contributed occasional vocals, adding a distinctive edge to their sound.[2] The band's breakthrough came with "Telstar," an instrumental track written and produced by Meek in 1962, inspired by the recent launch of the Telstar communications satellite.[9] Released in August 1962, it topped the UK Singles Chart for five weeks and reached No. 1 in the US in December 1962, becoming the first single by a British band to do so and selling over five million copies worldwide.[9] This global success propelled the Tornados on international tours, cementing their status as pioneers of space-age pop.[10] Group dynamics were strained by Meek's favoritism toward Burt, whom he groomed as a star by suggesting he dye his hair peroxide blond, inspired by the eerie children in the 1960 film Village of the Damned.[2] This stark image set Burt apart, fueling tensions within the band as Meek prioritized his promotion. During a 1963 UK tour supporting Gene Vincent and Jerry Lee Lewis, audiences—often hostile working-class crowds—booed Burt and pelted him with baked beans, highlighting the era's rock 'n' roll rivalries and his precarious position.[2]Solo career
After leaving The Tornados in early 1963, following the international success of their hit "Telstar," Heinz Burt transitioned to a solo career under the production and mentorship of Joe Meek, with whom he shared a flat at 304 Holloway Road in London.[2][11] Burt's solo debut, "Dreams Do Come True," released in May 1963 on Decca Records, was a commercial failure, reportedly selling only around 400 copies due to concerns over the quality of his vocals, which Meek had partially overdubbed with another singer.[5] Despite this setback, Meek continued to promote Burt as a teen idol, leveraging his blonde good looks and rockabilly style. Burt achieved his biggest solo success with "Just Like Eddie," a tribute to deceased rock 'n' roll pioneer Eddie Cochran, which reached No. 5 on the UK Singles Chart in August 1963.[12][13] Later that year, "Country Boy" peaked at No. 26 on the UK chart, marking another modest hit written by frequent Meek collaborator Geoff Goddard.[14] By 1965, with the backing group Heinz and the Wild Boys, Burt released "Diggin' My Potatoes," an upbeat track arranged by Meek that briefly entered the charts at No. 49, featuring session guitarist Jimmy Page.[14] The rise of the Merseybeat sound, exemplified by the Beatles' "She Loves You" topping the UK charts in 1963, overshadowed Burt's instrumental rockabilly style, leading to a sharp decline in his chart performance and fewer recording opportunities.[2] Following Meek's suicide in February 1967, Burt ceased recording music altogether and took up manual labor jobs to support himself.[2]Later performances
After the decline of his solo recording career in the late 1960s, Heinz Burt returned to performing in the 1970s through 1960s pop revival shows.[2] He participated in events such as the 1972 London Rock & Roll Show, where he shared the bill with acts including Wilko Johnson.[5] Burt formed backing groups for these revival tours, with later lineups featuring musicians like Chas Hodges and Don Blackmore, the brother of Ritchie Blackmore.[5] These performances often blended his rock and roll hits with light entertainment, including occasional summer seasons that incorporated musical numbers alongside comedy.[2] A notable event was the 1992 Joe Meek tribute concert, where Burt closed the show with an audience sing-along to "A Teenager in Love."[2] He continued live engagements into the 1990s, making sporadic television appearances and performing at local venues until health issues confined him to a wheelchair.[2] His final stage appearance was on 3 February 1999 at a Joe Meek Appreciation Society gig in London.[3]Acting career
Film roles
Heinz Burt's foray into acting was brief, consisting primarily of roles in low-budget British films designed to capitalize on the burgeoning popularity of rock musicians during the early British Invasion era. These productions often blended comedic storylines with musical interludes to showcase emerging talents, providing pop stars like Burt a platform to extend their fame beyond records and live shows. In 1963, Burt played the role of Ron, a band member in the youth-oriented comedy Live It Up!, directed by Lance Comfort and produced by Robert S. Baker and Monty Berman. The film follows a group of young friends, including aspiring musician Dave (David Hemmings) and his companions, who form a rock band called The Smart Alecs after discovering a lost demo tape; Ron, portrayed by Burt, contributes to their musical efforts alongside drummer Ricky (Steve Marriott). Released in the UK by Anglo-Amalgamated and in the US as Sing and Swing, the movie features Burt performing numbers like the title track "Live It Up" and integrates appearances by other acts such as Gene Vincent and Kenny Ball and His Jazzmen, highlighting the era's fusion of pop culture and cinema.[15]Stage and theatre work
Following the decline of his recording career in the mid-1960s, Heinz Burt shifted focus to stage performances in the 1970s as a means to continue his work in entertainment. This period saw him take on roles in provincial pantomimes and theatre tours, where he often performed as the principal boy despite being somewhat miscast in these traditional British holiday productions. Burt's engagements included summer seasons that combined acting with musical numbers, allowing him to leverage his background as a singer and performer.[16] A notable highlight was his role in David Hare's rock musical Teeth 'n' Smiles, which premiered at the Royal Court Theatre in 1975 and transferred to the West End in 1976.[17] In the production, Burt portrayed Randolph, an ageing, dim-witted former rock star from the 1950s; he co-starred alongside Helen Mirren in the satirical exploration of the rock scene.Personal life
Marriages and family
Heinz Burt's first marriage was to Della Burke, which took place during the height of his musical success in the 1960s. The couple remained married for 15 years before divorcing in the mid-1970s.[18] Burt and Burke had one son together, Simon Burt, born in 1970. Simon later pursued a career as a DJ and has been involved in preserving his father's legacy.[18] Burt's second marriage, the details of which are sparse, also ended in divorce. His family provided ongoing support through the fluctuations of his career.[2][18] At the time of Burt's death in 2000, he was survived by his mother, Martha, and his son Simon. Family members, including Burke and Simon, actively participated in post-death matters, such as publicly addressing portrayals of Burt in biographical films like Telstar: The Joe Meek Story.[2][18]Sexuality and relationships
Heinz Burt's close professional and personal association with record producer Joe Meek, who discovered and promoted him in the early 1960s, gave rise to persistent rumors about Burt's sexuality due to Meek's unreciprocated romantic obsession with the young musician. Burt moved into Meek's flat at 304 Holloway Road in London, where Meek both lived and operated his recording studio, an arrangement that lasted nearly three years and intensified speculation about the nature of their relationship amid the era's strict social taboos on homosexuality. In a 1991 BBC Arena documentary, The Very Strange Story of... the Legendary Joe Meek, Burt described Meek's feelings as an "infatuation," stating, "That was the thing with him, where I told him to get off, that I wasn’t into that sort of thing," and emphasizing that he rebuffed any advances while maintaining their collaboration was strictly professional. Burt further noted in the same interview, "If there’s something you can’t have, you want it even more," underscoring the one-sided dynamic without any romantic involvement on his part. Burt's family has vehemently denied any suggestion of his homosexuality, particularly in response to the 2009 biographical film Telstar: The Joe Meek Story, which portrayed a sexual relationship between the two men and provoked widespread outrage. His ex-wife, Della Burke, to whom Burt was married for 15 years, asserted, "It is completely and utterly untrue. Heinz was definitely heterosexual," and added that "Heinz did not actually like Joe Meek and he wanted to get away from the flat," highlighting the strain the living situation placed on Burt. Burt's son, Simon, echoed this sentiment, calling the film's depiction "not fair because they are trying to make something out of nothing" and accusing it of tarnishing his father's legacy through unfounded innuendo. These controversies unfolded against the backdrop of the 1960s British music scene, where homosexuality remained illegal until partial decriminalization in 1967, fostering a culture of secrecy and persecution that often blurred professional mentorships with personal rumors, especially for figures like Meek who were openly gay within limited circles. Burt's own public statements consistently framed his bond with Meek as a producer-artist partnership, shaped by the era's repressive attitudes rather than personal intimacy, a perspective reinforced by his family's insistence on his heterosexual identity.Later years and death
Health decline
In the early 1990s, Heinz Burt was diagnosed with motor neurone disease, a progressive neurodegenerative condition that gradually caused severe muscle weakness and physical deterioration.[19][3] Over the following decade, the illness led to significant physical crippling, ultimately confining him to a wheelchair and severely limiting his mobility.[2][20] Despite the advancing effects of the disease, Burt remained determined to perform, participating in 1960s pop revival shows into the late 1990s. His resilience was evident in his final appearances, including sets at the Banister Ballroom in Southampton's Hulse Road Social Club on March 24, 2000, where he sang hits like "Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On," "Three Steps to Heaven," and "Just Like Eddie" while seated in a wheelchair.[21][22] In his later years, Burt resided in Eastleigh, Hampshire, where the disease profoundly disrupted his daily life, making routine activities challenging due to his reduced mobility and dependence on assistance from his mother and son.[2][19] He faced these struggles with characteristic courage, supported by his close family in the town where he had settled as a child.[6]Death and funeral
Heinz Burt died on 7 April 2000 in Southampton, England, at the age of 57, from a stroke that complicated his long battle with motor neurone disease.[2][19] His cremation service was held on 15 April 2000 at the East Chapel of Southampton Crematorium in Eastleigh, Hampshire, attended by around 150 mourners including family members, fans, and fellow musicians such as Tornados drummer Clem Cattini.[23][19][21][22] As a tribute to his time with The Tornados, the instrumental hit "Telstar" was played during the proceedings while his coffin passed through the curtains; Burt was dressed in his stage clothes for the occasion, and wreaths from admirers included one shaped like a guitar and another from the Joe Meek Appreciation Society honoring him as "the white Tornado."[23][21] Burt died with limited financial means, leaving only £18.[21] Public obituaries highlighted Burt's life as a cautionary tale of fleeting fame in early rock music, with The Guardian noting his rise from a German immigrant to a teen idol overshadowed by personal struggles and professional setbacks.[2]Legacy
Musical influence
Heinz Burt, as the bassist for The Tornados, played a pivotal role in popularizing instrumental rock through the band's 1962 hit "Telstar," which became the first British recording to reach number one on the US Billboard Hot 100 and also topped the UK Singles Chart.[24] The track's innovative use of the clavioline synthesizer to evoke space-age sounds captured the era's fascination with satellite technology and the Space Race, influencing the development of space-age pop and early electronic music experimentation.[24] Burt's rhythmic bass lines provided a solid foundation for the song's futuristic melody, helping to bridge British instrumental styles with American audiences and serving as a precursor to the broader British Invasion wave led by bands like the Beatles.[25] In his solo career, Burt's 1963 single "Just Like Eddie" stood out as a heartfelt tribute to American rockabilly pioneer Eddie Cochran, reaching number five on the UK charts and marking his biggest commercial success.[26] Produced by Joe Meek and featuring guitar work from Ritchie Blackmore, the song revived interest in Cochran's raw energy and slap-back echo techniques, contributing to the UK rockabilly revival during the early 1960s by introducing younger British audiences to 1950s rock 'n' roll influences amid the shifting pop landscape.[27] This track exemplified Burt's ability to blend tribute with contemporary appeal, preserving Cochran's legacy through accessible, chart-friendly rockabilly that resonated with the era's youth culture.[27] Despite a chart career that spanned only a few years, Burt's work with The Tornados and as a solo artist left a lasting mark on 1960s teen idol culture, where his blond, heartthrob image and energetic performances briefly positioned him as a role model for British teenagers navigating the transition from instrumental hits to vocal pop dominance. His contributions highlighted the short-lived but vibrant intersection of space-themed innovation and rockabilly revivalism, influencing subsequent artists in the British rock scene by demonstrating how instrumental and tribute-driven music could achieve international breakthrough before the Beatles redefined the genre.[25]Biographical depictions
Heinz Burt was portrayed in the 2009 biographical drama Telstar: The Joe Meek Story, directed by Nick Moran, which chronicles the life of record producer Joe Meek, played by Con O'Neill. In the film, Burt's character is depicted as Meek's protégé and romantic interest, highlighting their professional and personal entanglements in the 1960s music scene. However, Burt's family strongly criticized this representation, with his ex-wife Della Burke describing it as "completely and utterly untrue" and accusing the film of perpetuating a "gay slur" by fabricating a homosexual relationship that Burt had denied during his lifetime.[18] Burt appeared in the 1991 BBC Arena documentary The Very Strange Story of... The Legendary Joe Meek, directed by Alan Lewens, where he provided firsthand accounts of his time working with Meek and the Tornados, including reflections on Meek's unrequited affection for him. The program, which aired on BBC Two, featured interviews with Burt alongside other associates, offering insights into the producer's eccentricities and the era's recording innovations. In 1992, Burt participated in a tribute concert honoring Joe Meek, performing songs like "A Teenager in Love" to an appreciative audience, serving as a living homage to their shared musical legacy shortly before Meek's story gained wider retrospective attention.[2] Biographical depictions of Burt often focus on his early fame and association with Meek, revealing notable gaps in coverage of his later life, such as his post-music employment on the production line at the Ford plant in Dagenham, which remain underdocumented and suggest opportunities for future scholarship to provide a more complete portrait.[5]Discography
Singles
Heinz Burt's solo singles career began in 1963 under the production of Joe Meek, who crafted a series of rock and roll tracks emphasizing Burt's vocal style and the era's instrumental flair. His debut single, "Dreams Do Come True" backed with "Been Invited to a Party," released on Decca in May 1963, failed to enter the UK charts despite Meek's innovative production techniques, including multi-tracked guitars and echo effects.[28] Burt achieved his greatest commercial success with early releases that paid homage to rock pioneers. The following table summarizes his UK charting singles, all produced by Meek and primarily released on Decca unless noted:| Title | B-Side | Release Year | Peak Position | Weeks on Chart |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Just Like Eddie | Don't You Knock At My Door | 1963 | 5 | 15 |
| Country Boy | Long Tall Jack | 1963 | 26 | 9 |
| You Were There | No Matter What They Say | 1964 | 26 | 8 |
| Questions I Can't Answer | Beating of My Heart | 1964 | 39 | 2 |
| Diggin' My Potatoes | She Ain't Coming Back | 1965 | 49 | 1 |