Artist's albums
The Cream of Steve Harley & Cockney Rebel
1999 · album
The Best Years of Your Life
1993 · compilation
Make Me Smile: The Best of Steve Harley & Cockney Rebel
1992 · compilation
The Phantom Of The Opera
1986 · single
The Candidate
1979 · album
Hobo with a Grin
1978 · album
Face to Face (A Live Recording)
1977 · album
Love's a Prima Donna (1997 Remaster)
1976 · album
The Best Years of Our Lives (Deluxe Version)
1975 · album
Uncovered
2020 · album
I've Just Seen A Face
2020 · single
Ordinary People
2015 · single
Live at Hammersmith 1975
2014 · album
Birmingham - Live with Orchestra & Choir
2013 · compilation
For Sale. Baby Shoes. Never Worn
2010 · single
Faith & Virtue
2010 · single
Stranger Comes To Town
2010 · album
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Biography
British rocker Steve Harley was born Steven Nice in London on February 27, 1951; the son of a jazz singer, he was stricken with polio at age two and spent the better part of his adolescence in and out of hospitals. After trying his hand at journalism, by the early '70s Harley was busking throughout London, forming the band Cockney Rebel in 1973 with guitarist Jean Paul Crocker, bassist Paul Jeffreys, keyboardist Milton Reame James, and drummer Stuart Elliott. Signing to EMI, the group debuted with The Human Menagerie; the single "Judy Teen" followed in early in 1974, becoming Cockney Rebel's first hit. Psychomodo was also a success, but as Harley's combative relationship with the press worsened he dissolved the group soon after. A Harley solo single, "Big Big Deal, " preceded the formation of a new Cockney Rebel lineup, which again featured drummer Stuart Elliott in addition to new guitarist Jim Cregan, bassist George Ford and keyboardist Duncan McKay. 1975's The Best Years of Our Lives generated Harley's first U.K. chart-topper, "Make Me Smile (Come Up and See Me), " on its way to selling over a million copies; the follow-up Love's a Prima Donna also launched a Top Ten hit with its cover of the Beatles' "Here Comes the Sun." But in the wake of 1977's Face to Face -- A Live Recording, Harley again disbanded Cockney Rebel and relocated to the U.S., recording the better part of Hobo With a Grin in Los Angeles before returning to Britain. 1979's The Candidate failed to restore his commercial lustre, and with the exception of a minor 1983 hit "Ballerina (Prima Donna)" he spent the better part of the '80s removed from the pop scene. When his recording of "Mr. Soft" experienced a rebirth thanks to its use in a television commercial, Harley assembled a hits collection of the same name. Soon after he formed a new incarnation of Cockney Rebel and regularly toured into the following decade. 1999's Stripped to Bare Bones documents an acoustic set recorded the year previous. Yes You Can was issued in summer 2000. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi