Paul & Barry Ryan

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
There You Go 02:14 Tools
Madrigal 02:17 Tools
Keep It Out Of Sight 02:50 Tools
Don't Bring Me Your Heartaches 02:51 Tools
i love her 00:00 Tools
i love how you love me 00:00 Tools
have pity on the boy 02:36 Tools
Pictures Of Today 02:25 Tools
I Can't Make A Friend 00:00 Tools
Claire 02:14 Tools
Glad to Know you 02:32 Tools
Have You Ever Loved Somebody 02:32 Tools
missy missy 00:00 Tools
Eloise 05:39 Tools
Baby I'm sorry 02:36 Tools
Progress 02:02 Tools
Gotta Go Out To Work 02:39 Tools
Heartbreaker 02:03 Tools
Love is love 02:02 Tools
The hunt 03:00 Tools
Hey Mister Wise Man 02:02 Tools
Night Time 03:10 Tools
I CAN'T MAKE YOUR WAY 00:00 Tools
I MADE HER THAT WAY 00:00 Tools
From my head to my toes 02:22 Tools
Hey, Mr Wiseman 02:12 Tools
That'll Be The Day 02:24 Tools
Can't let you go 02:58 Tools
Love, You Don't Know What It Means 02:58 Tools
Magical spiel 03:54 Tools
Kitsch 04:37 Tools
I'm sorry Susan 02:28 Tools
To Remind You Of My Love 02:40 Tools
AM I WASTING MY TIME 00:00 Tools
It is written 03:42 Tools
TONIGHT'S THE NIGHT 00:00 Tools
PAY YOU BACK WITH INTEREST 02:40 Tools
'Twas On A Night Like This 02:40 Tools
SILENT STREET 02:40 Tools
Rainbow Weather 02:40 Tools
YOU DON'T KNOW LIKE I KNOW 00:00 Tools
Carry The Blues 03:44 Tools
COMEDY GIRL 03:44 Tools
Gotta Go Out Work 02:40 Tools
FIFI THE FLEA 00:00 Tools
i made her that way - UK 02:40 Tools
Hey, Mr. Wiseman 02:40 Tools
There You 02:40 Tools
I'm Telling You Later 00:00 Tools
So lass uns leben 00:00 Tools
Who told you 00:00 Tools
(Love) You Don't Know What It Means 00:00 Tools
I'll Make It Worth Your While 00:00 Tools
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The son{s} of pop singer Marion Ryan and Fred Sapherson, Barry [Ryan] and his twin brother Paul began to perform at the age of fifteen. In 1965 they signed a recording contract with Decca and brought out singles such as "Don't Bring Me Your Heartaches" (1965), "Have Pity on the Boy" (1966), and "Missy Missy" (1966). When it turned out that Barry's brother, allegedly on the verge of a nervous breakdown, was unable to cope any longer with all the stress connected with show business, the two brothers decided on a new division of labour: Paul would write the songs which Barry would then interpret as a solo artist. Their greatest success as a composer-singer duo, now for MGM Records, was "Eloise" (1968), melodramatic and heavily orchestrated. Later singles included "Love Is Love" (also 1968), "The Hunt" (1969), "Magical Spiel" (1970), and "Kitsch" (1970). [Barry] Ryan was also very popular in Germany. Promoted by BRAVO, the German youth magazine, Ryan also recorded a number of songs in German, for example "Die Zeit macht nur vor dem Teufel halt" ("Time Only Stops at The Devil"). [Barry] Ryan stopped performing in the early 1970s. There were rumours that Ryan had had an accident in the recording studio. Supposedly he suffered serious burn wounds in the face and could no longer appear in public. However, he made a comeback in the late 1990s when a two CD set with his, and his brother's, old songs was published. Ryan was also part of the 'Solid Silver 60s Tour' of the UK in 2003, singing "Eloise" backed by The Dakotas. [T]he stress of public attention caused Paul to retreat into the background while Barry went solo. Paul wrote Barry's enormous 1968 hit, "Eloise", the 1971 hit "Who Put The Lights Out?" for Dana and another of his songs, "I Will Drink the Wine", was a UK hit single for Frank Sinatra . New wave band The Damned reached number 3 in the UK charts in 1986 with their version of Eloise. Barry is married to Christine Davison and has 2 children, Jack Davison (18th April 1995) and Sophia Davison (4th September 1996). Paul died of cancer at the age of 44. (Quoted directly from the Wikipedia entries for "Barry Ryan (singer)" and "Paul Ryan (singer).") Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.