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Too Shy: The Story Behind Kajagoogoo’s Definitive 80s Pop Song

Too Shy: The Story Behind Kajagoogoo’s Definitive 80s Pop Song

Kajagoogoo’s Too Shy sold millions around the world, but as the band tell Dig!, the song’s phenomenal success threatened to overwhelm them.

For many, Too Shy defines the sound and style of the early 80s, but the success of Kajagoogoo’s debut single was off-the scale and threatened to overshadow everything that followed. The former members of Kajagoogoo, and its charismatic lead singer, Limahl, sustain careers to this day, but no one lets them forget their first single together, which topped the UK charts for a fortnight, made it all the way to No.5 in the US and was a hit all around the world, too. Steve Askew, Nick Beggs and Limahl tell Dig! the full story behind one of the world’s best loved 80s anthems.

Listen to the best of Kajagoogoo here .

The backstory: “suddenly we had equipment, and our demos were transformed”.

Formed by Steve Askew (guitar), Nick Beggs (bass), Stuart Croxford Neale (synthesisers) and Jez Strode (percussion), the band were first called Art Nouveau when they advertised for a singer in the music press. Chris Hamill, using the professional name Limahl, started working with the group, and the challenge of getting a record deal soon became everyone’s shared focus.

“About a year before we were signed, a businessman friend of mine invested £10,000 in the band for new equipment,” Limahl tells Dig! “£10,000 was a considerable sum then and so, suddenly, we had all the musical equipment that our established contemporaries were using. Stuart went off programming sounds and our demos were completely transformed.

“We had sounded a bit prog-rocky and, dare I say it, a bit dated – certainly, nothing new – and, with these synths, we sounded like our contemporaries, and it was very exciting.”

The band name: “I thought of something a child would say… Kajagoogoo! The sound of primal life”

On the subject of changing their band name from Art Nouveau to Kajagoogoo, Beggs told pop bible Smash Hits that the group wanted a name that didn’t mean anything. “I thought of something a child would say – ‘Goo-ga-ga-goo-goo’ was the first thing that came into my mind,” he said in 1983. “I didn’t like the ‘goo-ga-ga’ part, and so went for something more casual. So, Kajagoogoo! The sound of primal life, don’t you know!” Limahl agreed in the same interview, saying it was the era of unusual names with contemporaries such as Yazoo and Spandau Ballet .

Duly renamed, the band secured a prized record contract in the summer of 1982. “EMI had signed us and knew we had potential but hadn’t heard what they regarded would be a hit record,” says Nick Beggs. “At the weekend, we would use the downtime at EMI’s Manchester Square studios for continuing with the demos with a terrific engineer called Ron Hill.

“It wasn’t until the late summer that we came up with what would become Too Shy.”

Writing Too Shy: “We felt we had stumbled on something… I was leaping up and down”

“I still have a cassette of us writing Too Shy in the living room of Nick’s flat in Leighton Buzzard [about 35 miles north-west of Central London], and Stuart is in the background playing the bridge melody,” recalls Limahl. “In the original bridge, Nick had written 35 lyrics and I remember saying there are too many words. With ‘Hey, girl, move a little closer’ it became six!

“We felt we had stumbled on something with Too Shy. Stuart is classically trained and so was an important influence creatively. Of course, everyone does focus on that great bassline from Nick on the intro but, before the bassline, came those beautiful chords from Stuart, and I don’t think, without those, we would have had that bassline. I was leaping up and down when Stuart was playing those chords because they were very seductive in the way they rose.

“I remember at the end of the intro the synth dropped out – I was the one who suggested we had to keep it in. It was a really equal, collaborative effort. Nick and I were the ones writing lyrics, but Nick is the one who came up with that chorus hook.”

The recording: “There are so many twists and turns in the evolution of Too Shy”

“Finding a producer was then really difficult,” recalls Beggs. “We sent out demos to loads of major producers and they all turned us down. I recall [longtime David Bowie collaborator] Tony Visconti saying, ‘Why would I want to produce this band? I am a living legend.’ Later on, of course, Mutt Lange [Def Leppard; Bryan Adams] wanted to produce us and we turned him down!”

The problem was solved when Duran Duran ’s Nick Rhodes and his band’s then producer, Colin Thurston, expressed an interest in working with Kajagoogoo. It proved to be a magic formula, though there were initial reservations. “We were a bit uncomfortable,” recalls Beggs. “We thought it was too obvious and came up with the idea they would produce us under a pseudonym and that would be Bill And Ben, The Production Men. When we actually did the demos, it was working well, and we thought this is ridiculous; what’s the problem? They were great.”

“Colin was a very calming influence; an old-school engineer and, of course, there was a massive confidence in him as he had done the first two Duran Duran albums,” says Limahl. “Nick was more focused on the arrangements and mixing levels. What you have in someone like Colin and Nick – and later, for me, in Giorgio Moroder – is someone who can crack the whip. Otherwise, bands can squabble… It’s always a compromise – a big and important word in any collaborative situation.”

The release: “Little did we know the international impact it would have”

Beggs confirms Too Shy was earmarked for release as the first single ahead of Kajagoogoo’s debut album being finished, though not everyone was convinced. Askew recalls that some at the label had reservations. “EMI International didn’t originally want to put it out,” he says. “They wanted to release what they considered to be a brighter, poppier track.” Beggs is sure there were concerns that the intro was too long, while Limahl remembers one of the band’s earliest champions, radio DJ Paul Gambaccini, thought they had more obvious hits they could release. “Paul absolutely loved Ooh To Be Ah,” he says. “It was the song that got him interested in the band, so we all initially felt that would be the first single.

A decision was finally reached and plans developed to launch the band with the song that made its members an almost-overnight sensation. “There are so many twists and turns in the evolution of Too Shy,” confirms Limahl. “First, there was a home demo, then there was a studio demo, and you could technically say that the released version was a third recording.”

Kajagoogoo supported the band Fashion, who had three minor UK hits, on an autumn tour, but Askew believes they didn’t even play what was to be their first single on those dates. Sessions continued at Chipping Norton Recording Studios in Oxfordshire to complete what would become the band’s debut album, White Feathers .

The promo video: “I was so excited… it felt like a movie set”

Shooting the iconic video for Too Shy was another early highlight for the band. “I was so excited doing it,” remembers Limahl. “I’m from a council estate in Wigan, I ran away from home at 16; my family had no money; my father was a bit of an alcoholic and, somehow, I found my way to London with these crazy dreams. I then spent three or four years in theatre, taking singing and piano lessons and doing talent contests in pub. Suddenly, we were signed to a big record label with Nick Rhodes producing, and we were making our first video. It was beyond excitement! Technology was so different back then – it felt like a movie set. There was such a massive team involved and I recall that video cost £30,000 – a huge amount of money in 1982.”

“The [idea] was that we wanted to have three delineated times where the song was playing in different eras – the end of the war; a 60s Austin Powers vibe; and modern times. But I don’t think that dialectic entirely came across,” says Beggs of the clip that still airs on rotation on some music channels.

Askew recalls another concern: “We were worried about the video and the connotations with ‘Welcome Home, Boys’ and the [then recent] Falklands War. It must have been shot pre-Christmas, just after we came off the tour with Fashion.”

The success: “They couldn’t keep up with demand”

Finally, at the start of January 1983, the 7” and 12” copies of Too Shy hit the shops. Limahl attributes some of the single’s immediate impact to two timely pieces of TV promotion. There was a performance on Saturday Superstore and a longer feature on the band in the launch episode of a Paul Gambaccini Channel 4 series The Other Side Of The Tracks , offering viewers a behind-the-curtains look at the music industry. The show, which aired the Saturday immediately prior to the single’s release on Monday, 10 January, featured a recording of the band’s first headline gig at Brixton’s Ace Club (later known as The Fridge), made on December 17. The show also featured a segment on the recording of the music video.

Unusually for a new act at that time, Too Shy shot straight into the UK Top 40. On the chart dated the week ending 22 January 1983, it was listed at No.33; the song vaulted into the Top 10 seven days later and was No.1 just three weeks after that, on 12 February.

“We were still finishing the album when the single became a hit and we had to complete the mixing of seven tracks in a night before we went to France to do some TV,” says Beggs. The pressure was starting to build: “We were mixing for about 48 hours and it really does mess with your head,” says Askew.

“We were very focused on the UK as the record took off – little did we know the international impact it would have,” says Limahl. “I will never forget that the first request to go overseas was to Holland and a show called TopPop . Back then, before the internet, the UK and US charts were so influential.” In some European markets, the Too Shy record sleeve was printed with the billing of the song’s chart-topping success in the band’s homeland.

In the UK, Kajagoogoo’s phenomenal success started to draw unfair flak, largely down to the band’s popularity with the teenage market and the perceived hype created by the involvement of Nick Rhodes (during a period when Duran Duran had yet to even score their own chart-topper). “Too Shy would have done its business, whether Nick was perceived as being involved or not,” says Beggs. “At the time, there were so many other issues that were overshadowing that – we were getting a lot of coverage in the media, and we looked ridiculous, so it instantly seemed to have its own atmosphere, irrespective of Nick’s involvement.”

“Too Shy was around for so long and the sales were so crazy, they had to hire another pressing plant,” recalls Limahl. “At its peak, they were pressing 30,000 copies a day and they still couldn’t keep up with demand.”

Too Shy’s fortnight-long hold on the top of the UK charts was ended by Michael Jackson’s Billie Jean, but the song was still climbing charts across Europe. In April, it would begin its ascent of the stateside Billboard listings, where the second British Invasion of pop acts was just starting. Too Shy formed part of that advance guard and eventually peaked in the US Top 5 that July.

The aftermath: “It was scary. The screaming was overwhelming”

Following such a sizeable success was to prove challenging. The choice of Ooh To Be Ah as Kajagoogoo’s second single was compromised from the start. Limahl picks up the story:

“Paul Gambaccini sent me something a few days ago. He told me: ‘I’ll never forget my horror when, in a single fortnight, EMI released Let’s Dance, Is There Something I Should Know and Ooh To Be Ah. The Bowie and Duran Duran singles leapt out of the radio at the listener, but the then manager of the band had given EMI the wrong mix on Ooh To Be Ah, which had only 60 per cent of the volume of the other two (I measured them). You may remember that [producer] Colin Thurston was on holiday at the time and the band’s manager had taken it upon himself to deliver the mix to EMI. I knew at once that the first track I had heard on your demo tape – the song that had convinced me you were going to make it – was not going to be as big a hit as it should have been because of a poor master.’

“There was a pressure and, of course, a No.7 [Ooh To Be Ah’s UK peak] felt like things were on the slide already,” concludes Limahl.

The band’s White Feathers tour offered a welcome respite from the stress. “The whole touring experience was surreal,” says Nick. “We had to have security men because young ladies would act in very strange ways towards us… the shows were a runaway success, but it was very disconcerting to have 200 girls pulled out of the audience by St John Ambulance teams before the concert even started!”

“I remember the first gig in Cornwall,” says Limahl. “I walked out on stage to see the first ten rows all had a Limahl haircut. I was kind of scared as I thought, My God, is that how much influence I have got? It was a scary responsibility. The screaming was overwhelming, and this female adulation put the musicians in Kajagoogoo off a bit. Of course, it wasn’t planned. We were just five vaguely cute guys, but, still, The Beatles had screaming fans…”

Despite a third single, Hang On Now, tensions continued to build. “We questioned after Too Shy: is this already the pinnacle of our career or is it the beginning of something?” says Beggs. “We were lucky to have another five hits after that. I think we could have had another No.1 if Limahl had stayed in the band. Looking back on it all, it was surreal.”

“Ooh To Be Ah is a great record – Stuart’s programming of the sequencers is wonderful – but it went in and out the charts really quickly,” says Limahl. “It hasn’t maintained the same sort of airplay as Too Shy, which around the world is still considered a classic.

“And then, Hang On Now peaking at No.13… one does have to wonder: did this influence the band’s decision to fire their singer? Perhaps they felt things were quickly on the slide for some reason.”

After Kajagoogoo: “We have all gone onto do many varied things”

Both Kajagoogoo and Limahl would continue to have hits, but Too Shy’s impact would not easily fade. “For each one of us, Too Shy played a different role as we followed our own careers,” says Beggs. “For me, it became a sticking block in interviews as I was always being asked about it and the band. There is a duality to it, to say the least.”

“It was a moment in time, as we have all gone onto do many varied things,” says Askew. “We were always pushing for new technologies. Some of the sequences on Too Shy and the album were created very manually to make it sound like a computer because the technology was all a bit hit-and-miss. We were trying to create this very organic electronic music that was very slick.”

“Our children are so proud and happy about Too Shy,” says Beggs. “For me, personally, I have a sense of resolution about it, and I know we will always be associated with the song. It was a good start, but the real success came with me being able to perpetuate a 40-year career as a musician.”

Limahl, a regular on the 80s revival circuit, confirms keeping a hit as big as Too Shy fresh is a good problem to have. “Any artist will tell you they never listen to their own music – and I admit the last song I want to hear is Too Shy,” he says. “But there’s a fine line, as any singer is tempted to play around with their big hit to keep it fresh. I have seen artists do that and it has made me realise you shouldn’t. It’s about giving the audience what they want.”

Limahl admits the signature first segment of the vocal on the track, the infectious “Time”, was never even meant to be there: “I was actually tuning up! I didn’t realise Colin and Nick were going to keep that in. I was just getting ready for the verse,” he reveals. Today, on some TV performances, Limahl leaves it out to demonstrate that he is singing live.

When challenged on personal favourites from White Feathers , Beggs picks the instrumental Kajagoogoo, which closed the original first side of the vinyl edition and was later used in the classic movie 16 Candles by filmmaker John Hughes, while Limahl and Askew pick the band’s third single, Hang On Now. Though Askew admits he isn’t entirely happy with how that song finally turned out, Beggs reveals that 80s super-producer Trevor Horn also rates the track.

Askew, who continues to record and, in 2020, released the solo project Gateway To Ultraworld , rarely plays Too Shy today, but Beggs was recently persuaded to revive his biggest hit. “I was touring with Howard Jones and he wanted to do it,” says the bassist. “It was his idea and I didn’t really want to do it, but he said, ‘This is a great song and we can do a great version of it together. You should be proud of it.’”

In 1992, Limahl was approached by a German record label to record a new album. The German market has been particularly important in his career: he recorded the theme to one of the country’s most celebrated cultural classics – The NeverEnding Story – in 1984, and he continued to have cut-through in the territory on later projects with Giorgio Moroder, including the highly regarded Love In Your Eyes, from the Colour All My Days album, released in 1986. Limahl also re-recorded Too Shy, with of-its-time production styling, and the track was issued as the first single from the album Love Is Blind .

The legacy: “It’s a bit like your first lover – it will never leave you”

In 2009, Kajagoogoo reunited for a few concert dates. “I have worked with a lot of producers and musicians over the years and the reunion felt like coming back home,” says Limahl. “It felt great to be back with the guys. I started working on a couple of songs with Nick, then we got together with the others to develop those songs. We had a new manager and everything felt exciting for that short period.

“I did an interview a couple of years ago and was generally very positive about Kajagoogoo. It’s a bit like your first lover – it will never leave you. Everything that is happening to you at that time is the first time it has happened. The first No.1, the first Top Of The Pops , interviews, tour and TV shows overseas. I have nothing but great memories.”

“I see Too Shy as an isolated piece of work and as a stepping-stone,” concludes Beggs today. “It has really crystallised in people’s memories.”

Those memories remain a powerful draw, and Too Shy, arguably more famous than the band that created it, lives on. One of 1983’s biggest global sellers, the song still regularly turns up on TV and in film, and on streaming and radio playlists, while it’s an inevitable highlight of any 80s revival set. Few bands enjoy a hit as big as Too Shy and, if there’s a sense that it was perhaps too much, too soon for a new group, Kajagoogoo’s former members now appreciate its place in their careers and the affection with which it is held by so many millions of others.

Keep up with what some of Kajagoogoo’s former members are doing today:

Limahl Twitter: @limahl_official Instagram: limahl_official

Nick Beggs nickbeggs.co.uk Twitter: @NickBeggs on Instagram: nick_beggs

Steve Askew Instagram: the-steven-askew

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Top 5 lists, memory jogger podcast, interview with nick beggs of kajagoogoo.

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Nick: I knew at the age of 15 that I wanted to be a pro-player. I turned professional at 20 and moved to London with Kajagoogoo in 1982 on signing our deal with EMI.
Nick: My first musical influences were the BBC Radiophonic workshop. I bought the Doctor Who theme as a 45 rpm single and played it to death. I still have it. Later I fell in love with Tubular Bells and Hergest Ridge by Mike Oldfield. I used to play drums along to them. I also bought “Son of My Father” by Chickory Tip and David Bowie “Fame”. However the biggest influence came when I heard Close to the Edge by Yes. It was at that point I knew I wanted to do that for a living. Chris Squire became my bass hero. Later Jaco Pastorius, Tony Levin, John Paul Jones, Geddy Lee, Roger Waters, Geezer Butler, Burke Shelly and Roger Glover all had their affect on my development.

kajagoogoo tour

Nick: I knew all of them from our home town. They were older than me and played in bands that I would go and see in the locality. I looked up to them as a younger aspiring player. Limahl was found after we held auditions for a front man. Steve and I had been doing it up to that point but it wasn’t working.
Nick: To make a living. So we had two bands. One was a covers band that played the workingmen’s clubs, called the Handstands. The other was earlier Art Nouveau and later called Kajagoogoo.

kajagoogoo tour

Nick: I came up with it and it was voted as a cool name at the time. I just pulled it out of the air actually.
Nick: I can’t really comment. Would it have been more successful another way or not at all? I’m grateful that I’m still making money from something I dreamed up 30 years ago.
Nick: Yes, after I dropped out of art school and my Mum died. I had to support my sister and run a house. I always was and still am a pragmatist.

kajagoogoo tour

Nick: Limahl ran into Nick at a London night Club and gave him our demo. Yes, we all were Duran Duran fans. It was a very important contribution actually. Colin and Nick did a great job.
Nick: I thought of the chorus and what became the second verse and sang them to Limahl. He responded instantly to it. We then developed the arrangement with the guys. Stuart’s synth opening came much later and the song was demo’d four times before it came close to what you now know. I was playing around with alliterative sounding phrases and liked the sound of shy shy. Pop is founded on repetition and so I wanted a hooky chorus for the song.

kajagoogoo tour

Nick: The desire to write a pop hit actually inspired it. It was rewritten and rewritten over six months. Even in the studio on the day of the final takes we were still working it out. It grew very naturally from session to session. I can remember taking the final mix next door to play to Thomas Dolby. He sat very still and listened to it intently. At the end he nodded his head. He later emulated the bridge bass section on “Dissidents”. I love that track!
Nick: Not really. But I remember thinking we had captured something of the time. We would have been happy with a Top 20 record.

kajagoogoo tour

Nick: It encapsulates the memory of a time for millions of people. That is what music should do.
Nick: Yes, naturally you can get sick of playing it. But that song and the Kajagoogoo catalog has fed five families and it still is. How can you knock that, even if you don’t like it? All I ever wanted to do was make a living as a player. 30 years on I’m happy to be doing so and thanks in part to “Too Shy”.

kajagoogoo tour

Nick: We had personal security men wherever we went in various cities. We had police escorts and VIP treatment invites anywhere we wanted. No, I was not really prepared for it and I didn’t much like it either. It doesn’t suit me.

kajagoogoo tour

Nick: That’s a good question and it was a difficult choice to make. But things had become unbearable. I feel that it would be ungentlemanly of me to go into too many details. Suffice to say things could not continue as they were.
Nick: No. The band told me that if I took over vocal duties they would have a Chapman Stick made for me to play on the next album, so I agreed.
Nick: Not really. The writing was on the wall because Frankie went to Hollywood. But I think we all enjoyed the recording process for those last two albums irrespective of their chart positions. We were happier for a while at least.

kajagoogoo tour

Nick: I have no desire to keep the '80s alive or in perspective. '70s Prog was, is, and always will be the music I value most of all. The '80s was the decade in which I became a professional player but I don’t have any great passion for the music.
Nick: He is a dear friend and someone who has taught me a lot about music, life and spiritual being. My experience with him is amongst the best I’ve ever had. He is someone I value very much in my life, even though we don’t see each other very much these days due to geography.

kajagoogoo tour

Nick: Martin Fry asked me to join ABC in 2002. I stayed with them for five years despite collapsing on stage one night and vomiting into a bucket due to a viral infection. Belinda Carlisle took me to Malibu to record her [1996] album A Woman and a Man. We spent a month there living in luxury during a spectacular recording session that included Brian Wilson and Isaac Hayes. It was very demanding playing for Go West as Peter Cox wanted every last note to be just so. Even though I had transcribed the parts, he was very detailed in what he wanted on top. He was quite amazing. I have a lot of respect for that guy. I had a band called Ellis, Beggs & Howard which toured with T’Pau in 1988. Later on, I played for Carol Decker on tour. Her voice can lift the roof off any venue. I played a session for Terry Briton on a track called “Something Beautiful Remains” by Tina Turner. I don’t think he liked what I contributed however and don’t even know if I ended up on the record. Tony Hadley and I go back a long way. Spandau Ballet and the Goo were always running into each other on the road. I played bass for Tony a couple of times live in later years. It’s a funny old world. I was Musical Director for Alphaville for a few weeks and would fly to Berlin to work with Marion Gold in preparation for a tour. However, when Belinda Carlisle asked me to join her band, I jumped ship. But the guy I put in my chair is still with them.

kajagoogoo tour

Nick: I’ve been with Kim for five years. She is like a sister to me. We have a lot of fun touring. I think I’ve had more fun with the Wilde Bunch than any other band I’ve toured with. Toooooo much fun!
Nick: Yes. Always. Always Always.
Nick: Mark King is a good pal of mine. His influence can never be overstated. Kajagoogoo played a tour with Level 42 back in 1984. Last year, we played two shows with the band again. It was like old times.

kajagoogoo tour

Nick: The very nature of bass dictates what the chord is, so for that reason it is a very important instrument. Good bass players usually have an original sound, so that is equally important in making a song sound good. But most of all I think you have to be prepared to take chances.
Nick: The industry has become more corporate on one hand. Margins are paramount. I worked as an A&R man for PolyGram Records for a while and saw just how it works on the inside. But that’s the same the world over. It will become harder and harder to make a living in the music industry. But the industry will have to adapt. There a lot of people who all want a bit of a tiny, tiny cake. And the cake is shrinking. The music business will need original thinkers.

kajagoogoo tour

Nick: It was the desire to work together again as we once did 28 years ago. I’m glad we did it. I have no regrets. It was fun once again. Now we are all on good terms. And that’s the way it should be.
Nick: I’ve written and illustrated a children’s novel which I hope to publish next year. I have a great literary agent. I’m playing for Steve Hackett [ex-Genesis guitartist] and touring with Steve Wilson of Porcupine Tree. Kim Wilde also has asked me to tour with her this December and March. In addition, I’m looking forward to presenting my own new band. It’s rather special. We are recording right now.

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Kajagoogoo

Kajagoogoo to reunite for comeback tour

Following the example of Led Zeppelin, Blur and just about every other band in musical history, 80s pop act Kajagoogoo have announced they are getting back together. All the original members of the group will re-form for 10 dates later this year, the first time the quintet have shared a stage in 25 years.

"It took us 25 years to grow up, basically," explained frontman Limahl, real name Christopher Hamil. The 50-year-old singer said: "All this silly stuff, 'if you want to talk to me, talk to my lawyer,' ... but now we're back together it's a relief."

The synth-pop act formed in 1979 and had their biggest hit with Too Shy in 1983. They achieved reasonable success with singles such as Hang On Now, but acrimony set in as the band's profile rose, culminating in the sacking of lead singer Limahl.

The group re-formed once before for the VH1 series Bands Reunited, a venture that did little to resolve the infighting which led to their split.

But Limahl and co have apparently put their differences aside this time round, with the frontman saying: "When you get to our age, you know you're half way through your life or more; you know this is not a rehearsal, it's the real thing." Bassist Nick Beggs, who is said to sport blond pigtails these days, added: "If it ain't fun, it ain't worth doing."

The group's publicist also promised (or should that be warned?) that they were "armed with new songs".

Kajagoogoo's tour begins on 17 September in Liverpool. For more details, visit the band's website .

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Limahl reunites with 80's pop band Kajagoogoo for a UK tour

May 26, 2009

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WHERE ARE THEY NOW? Kajagoogoo

They were too shy when they debuted, but it wasn’t long before Kajagoogoo were on top in the big apple!

Leighton Buzzard doesn’t have much to brag about. The Great Train Robbery took place outside the town in 1963 and in 1978 a new pop band, Kajagoogoo, were founded there. Unlike the train robbers, they made it to the top the clean way. Kajagoogoo came out of the band Art Nouveau, formed by Nick Beggs (b.1961), Steve Askew, Stuart Croxford-Neale and Jez Strode. They achieved limited success despite an airing on John Peel’s Radio 1 show and were not successful in being signed up. By 1981 they were advertising for a new lead singer. The man who won their attention was Lancashire lad Christopher Hamill (b.1958). Hamill used the stage name Limahl and it was at this time they renamed themselves Kajagoogoo, apparently it’s what babies say!

Kajagoogoo were signed to EMI Records the following year thanks to a chance meeting with Duran Duran ‘s Nick Rhodes and it was Nick himself that would produce their own self-penned debut single, “Too Shy”. Released in January 1983, “Too Shy” became an instant smash, getting into the top ten in over a dozen countries and going all the way in the UK, Germany and Ireland. The song became one of the biggest hits of the year shifting over four million copies. The track found success Stateside also where it went to No.5. Buoyed with this start, the group pressed out “Ooh To Be Ah” in March, ahead of their debut album, and the track made No.7 at home, although it was less popular across mainland Europe. The album, “White Feathers”, came the following month and would make the top five in the UK selling 100,000 copies while it made a small dent in the US chart at No.38.

Kajagoogoo released “Hang On Now” that Summer, which peaked at No.13 in the UK and No.78 in America, but not sooner had the boys found fame, it all started to go horribly wrong. Tensions rose within the group and shortly after “Hang On Now”, Limahl was dismissed after just three singles and one album. The remaining and original members of Art Nouveau decided to continue as a foursome again and not recruit a new singer, Nick Beggs taking that duty on from Limahl, but not aware that it was Limahl who was the selling point of the band. The remaining Kajagoogo swiftly started writing and recording new material and in late 1983, they put out “Big Apple”. The song made No.8 in the UK and was a top twenty hit elsewhere. 1983 may have been Kajagoogoo’s year, but 1984 would be anything but. A new album, “Islands”, was released that Spring but failed to emulate the success of their debut.

Equally, the two following singles, “The Lion’s Mouth” and “Turn Your Back On Me” were not crowd-pleasers, although the latter made No.2 on the US dance chart, that was really it. Jez Strode departed soon after with the remaining three members, lead by Beggs, pressing on under the new name of Kaja. They recorded and released the album “Crazy Peoples Right To Speak” in 1985, but it and the lone single, “Shouldn’t Do That”, both flopped big time and Kaja was done for. Limahl was enjoying himself, however. He had picked up his solo career when it had been put on temporary hold in 1981 and hit back with the single “Only For Love” in 1983, which made No.16 in the UK and No.51 in America. Far more successful was the Giorgio Moroder produced title song from the movie ‘The NeverEnding Story’, which Limahl took to No.4 and No.17 in the US. The song was also a chart topper around Europe and enjoyed sales matching only that of “Too Shy”.

Nick Beggs would form the band Ellis, Beggs and Howard with Simon Ellis and Austin Howard. They achieved two top 100 charting singles in the UK and recorded three albums between 1987 and 1994 before disbanding. Beggs remained mostly a solo artist and songwriter after that. Limahl himself never enjoyed greater success after “The NeverEnding Story”. He released a number of singles and three solo albums, but none were huge commercial hits. His most recent was “ One Wish For Christmas ” and “Still In Love” in 2020. Kajagoogoo have put their differences behind them on more than one occasion, reforming in 2003, twenty years after it all went wrong. As a trio, Beggs, Askew and Neale revived the Kajagoogoo name in 2007 and recorded a brand new album, “Gone To The Moon”, while the following year saw a full reunion with Jez Strode and Limahl himself all back and all friends again. The group went on tour and released the album “Too Shy – The Best Of Kajagoogoo & Limahl”, which features two new recordings.

In 2011, the ‘boys’ released the song, “Death Defying Headlines”, as a single, their first for 28 years as a full quintet, but after two years of non-stop touring, it was time to take a rest. To date (2022), there are no plans to pick things up and do it all again. But they’ve said that before!

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Stay in touch with Limahl/Kajagoogoo

Take a look at our other  Where Are They Now? posts or find out more  here .

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Kajagoogoo Concert Setlists & Tour Dates

Kajagoogoo at rewind festival england 2010.

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Kajagoogoo at Stables Theatre, Wavendon, England

  • Introduction
  • Interview Rooms
  • White Feathers
  • Hang on Now
  • Shouldn't Do That
  • The Lion's Mouth
  • Dreaming of the Same Thing
  • Ooh to Be Ah / Turn Your Back on Me
  • Only for Love
  • Space Cadet

Kajagoogoo at O2 Academy 2 Islington, London, England

  • Ooh to Be Ah
  • Turn Your Back on Me

Kajagoogoo at The Ferry, Glasgow, Scotland

  • Death Defying Headlines

Kajagoogoo at O2 Academy 2, Liverpool, England

Kajagoogoo at hobble on the cobbles 2009, kajagoogoo at hala stulecia, wrocław, poland.

  • The NeverEnding Story

Kajagoogoo at Alter Schlachthof, Dresden, Germany

Kajagoogoo setlists

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Most played songs

  • Too Shy ( 18 )
  • Big Apple ( 12 )
  • Hang on Now ( 12 )
  • Ooh to Be Ah ( 12 )
  • White Feathers ( 12 )

More Kajagoogoo statistics

Dread Zeppelin Gift Paul Gilbert Howard Jones Kajagoogoo & Limahl King Size Limahl The Molly Ringwalds Nite Wave The Reflexx Zyron

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46 people have seen Kajagoogoo live.

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kajagoogoo tour

Kajagoogoo

The original line-up of Limahl, Nick Beggs, Jez Strode, Steve Askew and Stuart Neale. Performing all the hits, including 'Too Shy', 'Never Ending more...

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IMAGES

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  2. Kajagoogoo announce reunion tour

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  4. Limahl and Kajagoogoo through the decades

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  6. Top Of The Pops 80s: Kajagoogoo White Feather Tour Programme 1983

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VIDEO

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  4. Obscure 80's Bands "National Pastime

  5. John Paul Jones Spaghetti Junction/Band Intros live Atlanta 3-20-2000 Zooma tour

  6. 🇰🇬 Каньон СКАЗКА / FAIRY TALE canyon. Кыргызстан

COMMENTS

  1. Kajagoogoo Concerts & Live Tour Dates: 2024-2025 Tickets

    Follow Kajagoogoo and be the first to get notified about new concerts in your area, buy official tickets, and more. Find tickets for Kajagoogoo concerts near you. Browse 2024 tour dates, venue details, concert reviews, photos, and more at Bandsintown.

  2. The official website of the singer, songwriter, and Kajagoogoo ...

    Analytics. Analytical cookies are used to understand how visitors interact with the website. These cookies help provide information on metrics the number of visitors, bounce rate, traffic source, etc. Advertisement.

  3. Kajagoogoo

    In August 2009, while in the middle of a tour, Kajagoogoo again took to the stage to headline the Hobble on the Cobbles music event in Aylesbury in Buckinghamshire. This was followed in September by a compilation CD/DVD, released by the band's original label EMI Records, titled Too Shy - The Best of Kajagoogoo & Limahl. It featured two newly ...

  4. Too Shy: The Story Behind Kajagoogoo's Definitive 80s Pop Song

    Kajagoogoo's Too Shy sold millions around the world, but as the band tell Dig!, the song's phenomenal success threatened to overwhelm them. ... In 2009, Kajagoogoo reunited for a few concert dates. "I have worked with a lot of producers and musicians over the years and the reunion felt like coming back home," says Limahl. "It felt ...

  5. Kajagoogoo Tickets

    The Kajagoogoo Concert Experience. Kajagoogoo has become one of the top Pop artists in the 2024 music scene, delighting fans with a unique Pop sound. Kajagoogoo tickets provide an opportunity to be there in person for the next Kajagoogoo concert. So experience it live and be there in person for a 2024 Kajagoogoo Pop concert.

  6. Kajagoogoomusic

    The Official You Tube Channel for the British Band, Kajagoogoo, who have reformed for the first time in 25 years.

  7. Kajagoogoo

    Recorded: 31 May 1983, UK.Music Air Networks - White Feathers Tour Concert - London Hammersmith Odeon.Tuesday 31st May 1983, Kajagoogoo played the second of ...

  8. Limahl

    www.limahl.com. Christopher Hamill (born 19 December 1958), known professionally as Limahl (an anagram of Hamill), is a British pop singer. He was the lead singer of the pop group Kajagoogoo beginning in 1982, before embarking on a solo career, garnering the 1984 hit "The NeverEnding Story", the theme song for the film The NeverEnding Story .

  9. Interview with Nick Beggs of Kajagoogoo

    Kajagoogoo, which also included Steve Askew (lead guitar), Stuart Neale (keyboards), Jez Strode (drums) and Limahl (lead vocals), was signed to a record label in July 1982 and their debut single, "Too Shy" was released in 1983 becoming a smash hit. In the U.S., the band is widely considered a one-hit wonder and originally split up back in 1986.

  10. Kajagoogoo Tickets, 2024 Concert Tour Dates

    Hard Rock Concerts. Seattle Concerts. Classical Concerts. San Francisco Concerts. SeatGeek /. Concert Tickets /. Kajagoogoo Tickets. Find Kajagoogoo tickets on SeatGeek! Discover the best deals on Kajagoogoo tickets, seating charts, seat views and more info!

  11. Kajagoogoo discography

    1983 - Kajagoogoo: White Feathers Tour (Picture Music International: VHS/Beta/Laserdisc/CED) ... 2009 - Too Shy: the Best of Kajagoogoo & Limahl (CD & DVD) [EMI] Notes. 1 - In the Netherlands, there are the catalogue rules in the albums chart from 2003. From this date, a back catalogue chart was established.

  12. Kajagoogoo to reunite for comeback tour

    Kajagoogoo's tour begins on 17 September in Liverpool. For more details, visit the band's website. Explore more on these topics. Pop and rock; news; Share. Reuse this content. Most viewed.

  13. Kajagoogoo

    Recording date: 29 October 1984, Nederlands.Broadcast date: 08 February 1985.TROS - Formule 1 in Concert.Hosted by Erik de Zwart.Backing singers: Annie McCai...

  14. Kajagoogoo

    Get the latest news on Kajagoogoo, including song releases, album announcements, tour dates, festival appearances, and more.

  15. WHERE ARE THEY NOW? Kajagoogoo

    The group went on tour and released the album "Too Shy - The Best Of Kajagoogoo & Limahl", which features two new recordings. In 2011, the 'boys' released the song, "Death Defying Headlines", as a single, their first for 28 years as a full quintet, but after two years of non-stop touring, it was time to take a rest.

  16. Kajagoogoo Tickets, Tour & Concert Information

    Find Kajagoogoo tickets in the UK | Videos, biography, tour dates, performance times. Book online, view seating plans. VIP packages available.

  17. Kajagoogoo Concert Setlists

    Get Kajagoogoo setlists - view them, share them, discuss them with other Kajagoogoo fans for free on setlist.fm! setlist.fm Add Setlist. Search Clear search text. follow ... Kajagoogoo Concert Setlists & Tour Dates. Aug 20 2010. Kajagoogoo at Rewind Festival England 2010. Artist: Kajagoogoo, Venue: Temple Island Meadows, Henley on Thames, England.

  18. Kajagoogoo

    Kajagoogoo - BBC In Concert [30th May 1983, Live At The Hammersmith Odeon]1 Kajagoogoo (Live In London '83) 3:532 Interview Rooms (Live In London '83) 3:33...

  19. Islands (Kajagoogoo album)

    Background. This was the band's first album without lead vocalist Limahl, who had been fired by the band in mid-1983 and went on to pursue a solo career. Bassist Nick Beggs, already the group's main background singer, took over lead vocal duties, and also wrote the lyrics. The album was co-produced by the band themselves, now a four-piece group ...

  20. Kajagoogoo tour dates & tickets

    Follow Kajagoogoo on Ents24 to receive updates on any new tour dates the moment they are announced... Follow. Be the first to know about new tour dates. Alerts are free and always will be. We hate spam and will never share your email address with anyone else. More than a million fans already rely on Ents24 to follow their favourite artists and ...

  21. Kajagoogoo

    Broadcast date: 24 August 2008, Poland.TVN - Sopot Festival.00:00 Limahl & Kajagoogoo: Too Shy (EMI, 1983);03:30 Limahl & Kajagoogoo: Interview Rooms (EMI, 1...

  22. Kajagoogoo

    Explore the tracklist, credits, statistics, and more for White Feathers Tour by Kajagoogoo. Compare versions and buy on Discogs

  23. Nick Beggs

    nickbeggs .co .uk. Nicholas Beggs (born 15 December 1961 [1]) is a British musician, noted for playing the bass guitar and the Chapman Stick; he is a member of the Mute Gods and Kajagoogoo, formerly also a part of Iona and Ellis, Beggs & Howard and plays in the band of Steven Wilson. He is known for modifying a Chapman Stick into a fully MIDI ...