Alan Merrill, the lead singer and co-writer of the first recorded version of “I Love Rock ‘N Roll” in 1975, died March 29, 2020, a victim of the Covid-19 virus. Merrill, 69, recorded the song with his band, the Arrows. In 1982, Joan Jett & the Blackhearts scored a #1 single with their version, which remained at the top of the U.S. chart for seven weeks.
Merrill lived in New York City. His current band, the Alan Merrill Extravaganza, were performing concerts in the NYC area as recently as the month in which he died.
Merrill was born Allan Sachs on February 19, 1951, in The Bronx, New York, the son of jazz vocalist Helen Merrill and jazz musician Aaron Sachs.
After starting to play in bands in Greenwich Village, Sachs eventually moved to Japan in his late teens. He started his professional career Tokyo-based recording group, The Lead, in 1968. It was then that his management changed his professional name to Alan Merrill.
When The Lead broke up, he went solo, recording two albums in the early ’70s, Merrill 1 and Alone in Tokyo. He is considered the biggest foreign pop star in Japan at the time, hosting his own segment on the popular TV show Young 720, with roles in a soap opera and in commercials.
Merrill grew tired of being a “teen pop idol” and began recording with a number of artists as a session musician. Anxious to get back on stage, he formed the hard-edged glam rock group Vodka Collins (as lead singer and guitarist) in 1972 with Hiroshi Oguchi. After a dispute with their manager in 1974, Merrill left Tokyo.
Relocated to London, Merrill formed his next band, the Arrows. As lead singer/bassist of that group, he had a Top 10 U.K. single, “Touch Too Much.” He also hosted a weekly U.K. TV series in 1976-77, The Arrows Show. While Jett was in England with the Runaways, she saw the Arrows perform their song, “I Love Rock ‘N Roll,” which Merrill wrote with bandmate Jake Hooker. The Arrows’ recording, produced by Mickie Most, was released in 1975. In interviews, Merrill has said that the song was inspired by the Rolling Stones’ 1974 hit, “It’s Only Rock ‘n Roll (But I Like It).”
Watch the Arrows perform their version
In 1979, Jett recorded the song with two of the Sex Pistols, Steve Jones and Paul Cook, and released it as the B-side of a single.
Two years later, her new band, the Blackhearts, recorded the song with producers Kenny Laguna and Ritchie Cordell for her 1981 album, I Love Rock ‘N Roll. The classic rock single was released in January 1982 and ultimately reached #1, where it stayed for seven weeks.
“I can still remember watching the Arrows on TV in London and being blown away by the song that screamed hit to me,” Jett wrote on her Facebook page. “With deep gratitude and sadness, wishing him a safe journey to the other side 🖤.”
Related: A wild tale of Jett and… Chuck Berry
When the new wave of punk rock swept the U.K. in ’77, the Arrows became suddenly unfashionable, and disbanded. Merrill returned to the U.S., and formed the band Runner with British musicians Steve Gould (Rare Bird) on guitar, Mick Feat (Van Morrison Band) on bass, and Dave Dowle (Whitesnake) on drums. They recorded an album titled “Runner” for Island Records in 1978. The group broke up in 1980.
In 1980-83, Merrill toured and recorded with Rick Derringer, and was a member of Meat Loaf’s touring band for four years. Merrill married the model, Cathee Dahmen, in the late 1970s. Dahmen died in 1997. Merrill was survived by his wife, Joanna Lisanti, and three children.
Watch the Alan Merrill Extravaganza perform his hit in Nov. 2019
On March 25, Merrill made a final post on his Facebook page, pictured with his dog: “Time to relax, stay home, read books, watch films and cuddle Lady Bea! Stay well, my friends!”
Related: Musicians we lost in 2020
6 Comments
First cousin to Laura Nyro. They grew up together and remained very close up to her death in 1997
He would be so pissed you put co-writer and that you gave such prominence to Joan Jett. Let her have her own obituary some time.. and Jake Hooker was someone he owed money to, Never wrote a thing
I was there at the beginning. 45 plus years ago Alan, Jake and Paul were all friends. We spent a long time on the road as I was their tour manager for RAK rocks Britain. England, Scotland and Wales and everywhere in between. It was a true RA&R adventure. Everyone with a great sense of humour, never a dull moment. Where the demo for I love Rock and Roll was being recorded in June Bolan’s living room I held the mike. Alan and I stayed in touch all these years poking fun and having a laugh. Alan was a brother to me. I so admired his endless talent and great mind, he was not just a pretty face. The Arrows due to the “business” was one of the great tragedies of the musical world, they had so much more to give. I’ll will miss my brother and friend.
Bought the I Love R&R record in 1975 in Ireland as a kid. Years later, back in Forest HIlls NY, Alan moved onto my block on Manse Street. Was surreal to see him and what a great guy – always stopped to chat and an honor to know him! RIP Alan!
It’s not at all true that “he would be so pissed” about this article, as another commenter has asserted. He and Joan and Kenny had a good professional relationship. He wrote one of the best, most iconic songs ever, and giving two short paragraphs out of 12 to its success isn’t unreasonable. Skipping it would ignore the lasting monumental impact Merrill had on the landscape.
He would have been pissed, trust me. Aside from any other reason, a whole mass of Joan Jett fans actually believed that it was she who had died, always a bad idea to feature another person in another’s obituary, All this time later there are still non english speaking JJ fans taking to Twitter in alarm, about this
and speaking as a personal friend of Alan Merrill’s I can assure you that your confident assertion may be based more on what you would like to think than on the truth. Alan famously, did not do very well from the Joan Jett cover of his song, but had to wait for the Britney Spears version before he saw much income from it