Will Hoebee

Will Hoebee
Background information
Born(1947-06-29)29 June 1947
Hilversum, Netherlands
OriginNetherlands
Died10 June 2012(2012-06-10) (aged 64)
Hasselt, Belgium
GenresPop
Occupation(s)songwriter, producer, arranger.
Years active1970-2012
Musical artist

Will Hoebee (29 June 1947 – 10 June 2012) was a Dutch record producer and songwriter. In late 1981, he married José Hoebee (singer of the girl group Luv'). Benny Neyman, Saskia & Serge, Gheorghe Zamfir, David Soul and Nana Mouskouri were among the acts he produced.

Debut

Hoebee was born in Hilversum, Netherlands. After graduating from high school, he found a job at the mailing service of the AVRO (a Dutch public broadcasting organisation) where he met many celebrities. He later worked at NRU (now: NOS) record library. At this time, he was approached by Herman Stok and Hans Kemna to produce various radio shows for public broadcaster NOS. In 1970, he entered the radio promotion division of Ariola Records. Two years later, he was hired by Phonogram Records where he stayed until the early 1980s.

A successful record producer

In the mid 1970s, Hoebee started his collaboration with producer/songwriter Peter Koelewijn. They co-wrote the Dutch Top 5 hit single "Patrick Mon Chéri" performed by Kiki & Pearly in 1975.[1] French pop singer Sheila covered that year this song that went gold in France and sold 800.000 copies.[2] Soon after, Hoebee produced the Dutch version of Austin Roberts signature song "Rocky" that hit the number one spot in the Netherlands and was performed by Don Mercedes.[3] In 1977, he founded with Koelewijn the "Born Free" label[4][5] (a Phonogram subsidiary). Saskia & Serge and Rob de Nijs were part of the roster of this short-lived record company.

In 1979, Will met Luv' singer José Andreoli. They got married in late 1981 and celebrated their wedding reception in David Soul's villa in Los Angeles. Their son Tim was born on 14 October 1985. Will supervised some of his wife's recordings (including the Top 20 hit "So Long, Marianne" (in duet with TV host Ron Brandsteder in 1984)[6] and the album "Herinnering"[7] with Bonnie Saint Claire with Dutch cover versions of ABBA songs in 1985). Then he was involved in the production of the Dutch version of the children's musical Abbacadabra.[8]

Moreover, he produced famous Dutch artists, like André van Duin, Bonnie St. Claire or Benny Neyman (with whom he scored the #1 hit "Waarom fluister ik je naam nog"[9] in the Netherlands) but also international performers (such as Gheorghe Zamfir ,[10][11] Vicky Leandros, Nana Mouskouri[12][13] and David Soul.[14]). During the 1980s, Hoebee was an A&R manager at the CNR label and later at Koch records.

Later career

He slowed down his career in the music business in the 1990s. In 2004, he took part in a music internet portal "muziekmaken.nl" (nowadays defunct) in which José wrote a weekly column. He also produced a TV talent show (Tijd Voor Talent) hosted by his wife and aired on a Dutch local channel "VSM TV". In 2009, he recorded with Piet Souer a new rendering of a Phil Spector classic hit (Be My Baby) performed by former BZN member Anny Schilder and José Hoebee.[15] He died in a hospital in Hasselt on 10 June 2012 of cancer.[16]

References

  1. ^ Story of "Patrick Mon Chéri" by Kiki & Pearly including Hoebee's involvement
  2. ^ Peter Koelewijn's Gold and platinum including "Patrick Mon Chéri" by Sheila
  3. ^ Chart performance of "Rocky" by Don Mercedes on Official Dutch Top 40 website
  4. ^ Brief news item published in Billboard magazine on October 16th 1976 announcing the creation of a new production unit for Phonogram Records
  5. ^ News item published in Billboard magazine on February 11th 1978 dealing with Hoebee's activities with Born Free Records
  6. ^ Details about "So Long, Marianne" by Ron Brandsteder & José
  7. ^ Album credits of "Herinnering" by Bonnie St. Claire & José Hoebee with Dutch cover versions of ABBA songs
  8. ^ Credits of the ABBAcadabra musical featuring a Dutch All-Stars cast
  9. ^ Benny Neyman on the Dutch Top 40 including his Number one hit with Hoebee "Waarom fluister ik je naam nog" in 1985
  10. ^ Information about "Music by Candlelight" LP by Gheorghe Zamfir in 1978
  11. ^ Credits of "The Lonely Shepherd" by Gheorge Zamfir in 1980
  12. ^ Information about the album "A Voice from the heart" produced by Will Hoebee and released by Philips Records in 1988
  13. ^ Credits of "Land of Hope and glory" performed by Nana Mouskouri in 1988
  14. ^ Credits of "Dreamers" by David Soul
  15. ^ Music video of "Be my baby" by Anny & José with Will Hoebee's cameo appearance on YouTube
  16. ^ Echtgenoot José Hoebee overleden

Bibliography

  • "500 Nr.1 Hits uit de Top 40", book by Johan van Slooten, Gottmer Becht Publishing, 1997
  • "Top 40 Hitdossier 1956-2005 (9e editie)", book by Johan van Slooten, Gottmer Bech Publishing, 2006
  • "50 jaar nummer-1-hits 1956-2006", book by Johan van Slooten, Gottmer Uitgevers Groep, 2006
  • "Albumdossier 1969-2002", book by Johan van Slooten, Becht's Uitgevers, 2002

External links

  • Information about Hoebee's career on the Nationaal Pop Instituut website (in Dutch)
  • Hoebee chart performances in the Netherlands on the DutchCharts.nl portal
  • Will Hoebee discography at Discogs
Authority control databases: Artists Edit this at Wikidata
  • MusicBrainz