The Herald

Alan Merrill

- NEIL COOPER

Singer, guitarist, songwriter, actor Born February 19, 1951;

Died March 29, 2020

ALAN MERRILL, who has died aged 69 after contractin­g Covid-19, was already a rock veteran by the time he made the pop charts with Arrows in 1974 and 1975. Caught in the limbo between glam and punk, they were marketed as teenyboppe­r idols, and recorded for producer Mickie Most’s RAK label.

It was an image heightened when the trio were given their own teatime television series in the UK after a couple of hit singles. While they didn’t release any records during the programme’s two 14-week runs, a performanc­e of the band’s fourth single, co-written by Merrill and guitarist Jake Hooker, would outlive them all.

Initially released as the B-side of

Broken Down Heart, I Love Rock ‘n’ Roll was upgraded for the re-release that followed. It caught the ear of Joan Jett, who saw Arrows perform it on TV while she was touring the UK with her band, The Runaways.

Six years later, Jett released her own version, immortalis­ing I Love Rock ‘n’ Roll as a stadium-sized anthem. The song’s appeal spanned several generation­s. Britney Spears infused it with reinvigora­ted sass in 2001, while in 2017 Eminem sampled it on Remind Me.

Allan Preston Sachs was born in the Bronx, New York, to jazz singer Helen Merrill and saxophone and clarinet player Aaron Sachs. From ages nine to 13 he attended a British boarding school in Switzerlan­d, before attending schools in New York and Los Angeles and Sophia University in Tokyo.

As a teenager he played with various groups, and auditioned successful­ly for baroque psych-pop band The Left Bank just before they split up. In Japan he played with The Lead, and signed a solo record deal that necessitat­ed him changing his surname from the potentiall­y misunderst­ood Sachs to Merrill, which was easier on the Japanese tongue.

He released the Alone In Tokyo album, acted in a TV soap, Jikan Desu Yo, and modelled for Nissan cars. In 1971 he released Merrill 1, an album of his own compositio­ns, one of which, Movies, was covered by Tiny Tim. He also formed Vodka Collins, which became Japan’s biggest glam act, releasing the Tokyonew York album before moving to London and forming Arrows with Hooker and drummer Paul Varley.

By March 1974 the band was in the charts with Touch Too Much, following it up in 1975 with Toughen Up and My Last Night With You prior to I Love Rock ‘n’ Roll. Arrows’ only album, First Hit, was released in 1976.

In 1977, Merrill married model

Cathee Dahmen, and formed Runner, releasing three albums before becoming guitarist for Rick Derringer in 1980. Three years later, he recorded an eponymous solo album that featured contributi­ons from Steve Winwood and former Rolling Stone Mick Taylor. He played in Meat Loaf’s band, took part in a number of Vodka Collins reunions and recorded several solo records.

Latterly he took part in The Last Glam In Town, a forthcomin­g album by John Rossall of Arrows’ 1970s contempora­ries The Glitter Band, which looks set to feature members of post-punk groups, The Membranes and The Nightingal­es. One of the tracks will be the Merrill-penned Equaliser, showing again the breadth of one of rock music’s great unsung heroes.

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