In 1974, Farrar used the
talk box on an instrumental track, "No, No, Nina". The device, which was based on effects devices that were first developed in the late 1930s, had been used by
Joe Walsh on the 1973 US
Top 40 single "
Rocky Mountain Way". In 1976,
Peter Frampton released two
Top 10 US singles from the
Frampton Comes Alive! album that used the talk box as well. Farrar's talk box track was held back from release by EMI until 1997, when it appeared on the CD album,
The Shadows at Abbey Road, containing mostly unreleased material. A vocal version of "No, No, Nina" appeared on the
Specs Appeal album as a Eurovision contender track, but it was voted sixth out of six initial entries. Aside from instrumentation and vocals, Farrar worked as an arranger on The Shadows' albums: ''
Rockin' with Curly Leads, Specs Appeal
, Tasty and Live at the Paris Olympia''. and became two of the soundtrack's most successful singles, being international number-one hits during 1978. In June 2004, Farrar recalled writing the two songs: "'You're the One That I Want': The weird thing was it was the fastest song I ever wrote. It came so fast, the actual melody and the feel of it. 'Hopelessly Devoted To You': I spent the longest period writing the lyrics of any song I've ever written. Every thesaurus and every rhyming dictionary I had, just trying to really make it work properly". Other number-one hits for Newton-John that were written and produced by Farrar are "
Have You Never Been Mellow" (1975), "
Don't Stop Believin'" (an easy-listening chart-topper from 1976, not the Journey song of the same name), and "
Magic" (1980). Farrar produced one side of the
Xanadu soundtrack for the 1980 film of the
same name. The other side featured tracks by
Electric Light Orchestra and was produced by their guitarist-vocalist,
Jeff Lynne. In March 1981, Farrar was nominated for a
Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Original Song for the song "Suspended in Time" from
Xanadu. In 1995, Farrar collaborated with Newton-John and lyricist
Tim Rice on the score of Cliff Richard's musical,
Heathcliff based on the
Emily Brontë novel
Wuthering Heights. Farrar also co-wrote songs for a musical based on the 1959 film,
Gidget, which, , had been indefinitely postponed. Farrar runs the Moonee Ponds Studio at Sweetwater Road in Malibu. == Personal life ==