Larry Page, Kinks and Troggs manager who started out as ‘Larry Page the Teenage Rage’ – obituary

Page, right, with Reg Presley of the Troggs
Page, right, with Reg Presley of the Troggs - Bob Baker/Redferns

Larry Page, who has died aged 87, turned to music production after a short-lived performing career as “Larry Page the Teenage Rage”, becoming the manager of the Troggs, whom he persuaded to record Wild Thing, later an anthem for Jimi Hendrix, and for the Kinks.

He was born Leonard Davies at Hayes, Middlesex, on November 9 1936. After leaving school he became a packer at the nearby EMI factory and decided to audition as a singer at the company’s Abbey Road studios. To everyone’s surprise, he was given a contract by Columbia records.

Changing his name to Larry Page, he began attracting public attention when Jack Bentley, showbiz correspondent of the Sunday Mirror, wrote a feature raving about “Larry Page – the Teenage Rage”.

To stay in the media spotlight, Page became engaged to a fan after a whirlwind eight-hour romance. His marriage at Caxton Hall – and the inevitable marital difficulties that followed – made good tabloid copy, as did the accidental blue rinse he sported on a television show.

Page toured the UK with Cliff Richard and performed on Six-Five Special and Thank Your Lucky Stars. But there was one small problem – his voice. Bruce Welsh of the Shadows later described him as “the worst singer I ever heard in my life”, and although Page became the first British performer to record a cover of the Buddy Holly hit That’ll Be The Day, it mainly gained airtime after Kenny Everett on Capital Radio started looking for “The worst record ever made”.

At the end of the 1950s Page retired from the pop business and, after a brief period managing a pub in Wales, was appointed by Eric Morley’s Mecca Enterprises to manage the Orchid Ballroom in Coventry. There, he set about hosting talent contests and established himself as a talent spotter, his finds including Johnny Goodison, who would become Johnny B Great and the Goodmen.

In 1963 Page co-founded a production company and left Coventry for London to act as co-manager to a north London pub group called the Ravens. The band was rechristened the Kinks, and Page was credited with dressing the band in black leather and encouraging them to project a sexier image by using their guitars on stage as “phallic symbols”. He also pushed Ray Davies into the spotlight as the group’s front-man, sharing co-writing credits with Davies for Revenge (1964).

Within a year of Page’s appointment, the Kinks had scored major hits with You Really Got Me, All Day and All of the Night and Tired of Waiting and were rated the third most successful pop group in Britain.

But tensions between Page and his two co-managers, and internal frictions within the band, culminated in Page being shown the door in 1968 after a three-year legal battle, an appeal-court judge observing sympathetically that almost anything a manager might do “could induce hatred and distrust in a group of highly temperamental, jealous and spoilt adolescents”.

In the meantime, Page had enjoyed success helping to organise tours of the UK by American artists including Sonny & Cher. Inspired by the example of the Rolling Stones producer Andrew Loog Oldham, who had put together his own orchestra to record instrumental versions of Stones hits, he put together the Larry Page Orchestra and in 1965 released Kinky Music, featuring the future Led Zeppelin member Jimmy Page.

Page made instrumental albums
Page made instrumental albums

By 1966 Page was managing the Troggs, who had a massive hit that year with their second single, Wild Thing, which reached No 2 in the UK and No 1 in the US. They had a UK No 1 hit the same year with With a Girl Like You and earned helpful publicity when their humorously suggestive I Can’t Control Myself was banned from the airwaves in Australia.

Page was never short of publicity wheezes. In April 1967 he announced that Chris Britton was leaving the Troggs to lead a moral crusade to clean up the pop world. The saga kept the press occupied for several weeks, until Page supposedly persuaded the lead guitarist to return by threatening him with a lawsuit for breach of contract. As Britton admitted years later, it was all a Page-orchestrated hoax.

By the end of 1967 several more Troggs releases, including Any Way That You Want Me and Love Is All Around had made it into the top 10.

Most of these were released on Page’s own record label, Page One, but the fact that he was also the group’s manager and agent led to an obvious conflict of interest, as Britton recalled: “[As manager] he was turning around one day and saying, ‘Hey, Larry, how about these boys getting a break from recording and going to America?’ and with his record company hat on he’d say, ‘No, no, we’re going to make money out of them in England!’ ”

Page’s management contract with the Troggs ended in court in 1968, though, strangely, he would resume managerial duties for the band in the 1970s, and for the Kinks from the mid-1980s to early 1990s.

In the meantime, there were several more Larry Page Orchestra albums and his record labels (Page One Records was replaced by Penny Farthing Records in 1969) remained busy, releasing Venus by the Dutch group Shocking Blue in 1969 before notching up huge hits with Vanity Fare’s Hitchin’ a Ride in 1970 and Daniel Boone’s novelty song Beautiful Sunday in 1972.

He recorded the comedy band the Barron Knights, though his attempts to turn them into a mainstream pop group failed. He was also, for good or ill, the guiding influence behind Chelsea FC’s Blue is the Colour anthem (1972).

In later life Page, who moved to Avoca, New South Wales, in 2000, derived much of his income from his share of the publishing rights for Love Is All Around after it was recorded by Wet Wet Wet for the soundtrack to Four Weddings and a Funeral (1994) and subsequently spent 15 weeks at No 1 in the UK.

Page was married three times, and had two daughters from his first marriage and a daughter and a son from his second.

Larry Page, born November 9 1936, died April 19 2024

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