Willem van Kooten, the managing director of the Dutch publishing company Red Bullet Productions, visited a
record store and happened to hear a
disco medley being played there. The medley combined original recordings of songs by
the Beatles,
the Buggles,
the Archies and
Madness with a number of recent American and British disco hits like
Lipps Inc.'s "
Funkytown",
Heatwave's "
Boogie Nights", and
The S.O.S. Band's "
Take Your Time (Do It Right)", as the rhythms of the various songs tended to complement and "dovetail" into each other. When van Kooten heard that the medley also used a segment of "
Venus", a 1970 US #1 hit by Dutch band
Shocking Blue — a song for which he himself held the worldwide copyright — and knowing that neither he nor Red Bullet Productions had given the permission for the use of the recording, he realised that the medley in fact was a
bootleg release. The record turned out to be a
12-inch single called "Let's Do It in the 80's Great Hits", credited to a nonexistent band called Passion and issued on a nonexistent record label called Alto. The medley had its origin in
Montreal, Canada, and it was later revealed that it was the work of one Michel Ali, together with two professional
DJs, Michel Gendreau and Paul Richer. Gendreau and Richer both specialised in the art of "splicing", stringing together snippets of music from different genres, in varying
keys and
BPMs from different sound sources, at this time still predominantly from
vinyl records. The first version of the medley was eight minutes long, and it included parts from some twenty tracks of which only three were by the Beatles: "
No Reply", "
I'll Be Back", and "
Drive My Car". A later extended, 16-minute, 30-track mix of the same medley labeled "Bits and Pieces III" added another five Beatles titles: "
Do You Want to Know a Secret", "
We Can Work It Out", "
I Should Have Known Better", "
Nowhere Man", and "
You're Gonna Lose That Girl".
First single personnel and recording With the bootleg recording obviously already circulating in
dance clubs on both sides of the Atlantic, van Kooten decided to "bootleg the bootleg" and create a licensed version of the medley by using
soundalike artists to replicate the original hits and therefore contacted his friend and colleague
Jaap Eggermont.
The Beatles soundalikes were established Dutch singers.
John Lennon's parts were sung by of the 1970s Dutch pop group
Smyle.
Paul McCartney's and
George Harrison's parts were sung by
Sandy Coast frontman , and , who had worked with Vermeulen in the band . Apart from the recreated songs, an original chorus and hook written and composed by Eggermont and musical arranger Martin Duiser called "Stars on 45" was added at intervals to help string differing sections together. The '45' in the title refers to the playback speed of a vinyl record
single — 45
rpm; such singles were often simply called "45s". The female vocals in the chorus were performed by session singer . Later recordings also featured uncredited vocals by Dutch 1970s star
Albert West and of the rock revival band
Long Tall Ernie and the Shakers. The Stars on 45 recordings were made before the birth of
digital recording technology, which meant that each song was recorded separately and the different parts were subsequently manually pieced together with a pre-recorded drumloop, using
analog master tapes, in order to create the segued medleys. The specific drumloop heard on most Stars on 45 recordings is often referred to as the "clap track", due to its prominent and steady handclaps. The first such release was an 11:30 12" single, issued in the aftermath of the so-called
anti-disco backlash, and was released on the (at the time) minor label
CNR Records in the Netherlands in December 1980. The single was simply entitled "
Stars on 45 Medley" by Stars on 45, with no credits on the label or the cover as to who actually sang on the recording. When Dutch radio stations began playing the four-minute, eight-track Beatles segment of the medley, placed in the middle of the original, 12" mix, an edited 7" single with the Beatles part preceded by "Venus" and
The Archies' "Sugar, Sugar" was released and hit the #1 spot of the Dutch singles charts in February 1981. A few months later, it also reached #2 in the UK, where it was released by the British subsidiary of
CBS Records and credited to 'Starsound'. In June 1981, the single went to #1 in the US, where it was released by Radio Records, a sublabel of
Atlantic Records. The track list for the 7" edit of the "Stars on 45 Medley" in the US was the names of all the songs that make up the medley as it appears on the actual record label: This single with its 41-word title continues to hold the record for a #1 single with the longest name on the
Billboard charts, due to the legalities requiring each song title be listed.
Follow-up releases and album Shortly thereafter, Eggermont created the first Stars on 45 album,
Long Play Album, issued with an equally anonymous
album cover and featuring a 16-minute side-long medley of the Beatles titles. The Stars on 45
Long Play Album (US title:
Stars on Long Play; UK title:
Stars on 45 — The Album) also became a massive seller worldwide, topping both the UK and Australian album charts, it was a Top 10 hit in most parts of Europe and also reached #9 on
Billboards album chart in the US.
.The popularity of the album even resulted in it being given an official release in the Soviet Union, where it was issued by state-owned record label Melodiya under the title Discothèque Stars''. The "Stars on 45 Medley" single was later awarded a platinum disc for one million copies sold in the US alone. A second Beatles medley went to #67 on the US charts. Another album followed later that same year,
Longplay Album – Volume II (US title:
Stars on Long Play II; UK title:
Stars on 45 — The Album — Volume 2), featuring medleys using the songs of
ABBA, a #2 hit in the UK and
Motown, a #55 hit in the US. The recordings of the "Stars on 45" medleys were also made before the advent of modern
synthesizers with the possibility of
sampling sounds. Consequently, for the recreation of tracks like the themes from "
Star Wars" and "
The War of the Worlds", included in the "
Star Wars and Other Hits" medley on
Longplay Album — Volume II and released as the third European single under the title "
Volume III", a full
symphony orchestra was used, including
strings,
brass,
woodwind,
harpsichord,
orchestral percussion like
timpani etc. — even if those particular parts were only ten or fifteen seconds long on the actual record released. In late 1981, Eggermont and Martin Duiser were awarded the
Conamus Export Prize in the Netherlands in recognition of their contributions to Dutch culture and economy. A third album,
The Superstars (US title:
Stars on Long Play III; UK title:
Stars Medley), featured medleys of
the Rolling Stones and
Stevie Wonder. The single "Stars on 45 III: A Tribute to Stevie Wonder" peaked at #28 in the US in 1982, where the act was now simply listed as
Stars On. It also reached #14 in the UK, where it was called "Stars Medley" — confusingly, exactly the same title as the third album in the
British Isles. In Continental Europe and most other parts of the world, the Stevie Wonder medley was entitled "
Stars on Stevie". In late 1982, Eggermont and Duiser again won the
Conamus Export Prize, this time together with
Tony Sherman, who sang lead vocals on "Stars on Stevie".
Later inspirations In 1982, there was a staged musical show at the
Huntington Hartford Theater in Hollywood, California and a video of that show was released in 1983 by
MCA Home Video. A spinoff group called
The Star Sisters had a hit in Europe in 1983 with an
Andrews Sisters medley. The albums were released under the moniker of
Stars on 45 Proudly Presents the Star Sisters. 1985 saw the release of an album titled
Stars on 45 — Soul Revue and a single called "The Sam & Dave Medley" credited to 'Stars on 45 featuring
Sam & Dave', and including the Stars on 45 logo on the album cover, but not produced by Jaap Eggermont. It featured
David Prater and his new singing partner Sam Daniels. Original Sam & Dave member Sam Moore demanded that the album and single be recalled; they were later re-labelled and
re-issued, but now credited to 'The New Sam & Dave Revue'. Later releases included
Stars on Frankie, released in October 1987; and some eleven years later,
Stars on 45: The Club Hits, released in 1998; the latter, however, was not produced by Eggermont. While the three original Stars on 45 albums have been reissued on
CD in their entirety or in their original form, several CD compilations on European budget labels such as
Demon Music Group's subsidiary Music Club,
Arcade, Edel Records, Falcon Neuen Media, Bunny Music, and
ZYX Records have been released under the non-copyrighted 'Stars on 45' moniker all through the 1990s and 2000s (decade). These include
The Best of Stars on 45,
The Very Best of Stars of 45,
The Magic of Stars on 45,
Stars on 45 Presents the Mighty Megamix Album,
Greatest Stars on 45,
The Non-Stop Party Album!,
Greatest Stars on 45 Vol. 1, and
Greatest Stars on 45 Vol. 2. It should, however, be noted that some of these compilations also feature titles such as "
Carpenters Medley", "
Beach Boys Gold", "
The Spencer Davis Group Medley", "Love Songs Are Forever", and the like—again, recordings that were neither produced by Jaap Eggermont nor originally released as by Stars on 45 in the 1980s. (See below.) ==Similar acts and parodies==