Jump to content

Rob de Nijs

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by KasparBot (talk | contribs) at 22:30, 2 May 2016 (migrating Persondata to Wikidata, please help, see challenges for this article). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Rob de Nijs
Rob de Nijs in 2008
Born
Robert de Nijs

(1942-12-26) December 26, 1942 (age 81)
NationalityDutch

Rob de Nijs (born December 26, 1942, Amsterdam) is a Dutch singer and actor, active since the 1960s.

Biography

Rob de Nijs (1969)

1962-68

De Nijs, backed by The Lords, won a talent-contest in 1962 and released his first single in 1962, Ritme van de Regen. In 1965 De Nijs split from The Lords because they signed their own record-deal at another label; he embarked on a joint circus-tour with Johnny Lion.

By 1967, De Nijs was a free agent; he performed at small venues and worked as a bartender for a living. His attempts to keep up with the zeitgeist, including Bye Bye Mrs. Turple, failed; he only made the headlines by marrying his girlfriend Elly in 1968[1] and landing into hospital through a carcrash of his own fault.[citation needed]

1969-72

In 1969 De Nijs took part in the Dutch heat of the Eurovision Song Contest and through musicals like Sajjuns Fiksjen he landed himself a role in children's TV-series Oebele. This was followed in 1972 by Hamelen in which he played Bertram Bierenbroodspot.

1973-79

Singer Boudewijn de Groot and songwriter Lennaert Nijgh helped De Nijs relaunch his singing career; in 1973 he was back in the charts with Jan Klaassen de Trompetter.

The hits continued through 1975-1976, notably Malle Babbe and Zet een Kaars voor Je Raam (a Dutch translation by Lennaert Nijgh of David McWilliams's Can I Get There by Candlelight?). In 1977 De Nijs released Tussen Zomer en Winter, a concept-album chronicling the change from a hot summer's day to a cold winter's night and featuring translations of Lou Reed's Perfect Day and The Beach Boys' Disney Girls (1957).

1980s

In 1980 De Nijs released Met Je Ogen Dicht (Eyes Wide Shut) which included the top 10-hit Zondag and became the country's best-selling album of the year. He met Belinda Meuldijk who gave up her own singing-career (after releasing a one-off single in 1979) to become his chief-songwriter and his second wife (they married in 1984). The first efforts of their collaboration were collected in 1981 on the album De Regen Voorbij (Past The Rain; a reference to his artistic growth).

In 1985 De Nijs had a Christmas #2-hit with the peace-anthem Alles Wat Ademt; the English version, Let Love Be The Answer, would also be recorded by US-exile singer Joe Bourne for his Bourne in Holland-album of translated covers. In 1986 De Nijs saw a dream-wish come true by releasing an album of covers from the 1950s/1960s-era; it included his version of Living Doll shortly after the Comic Relief-remake topped the charts.

In 1987 he celebrated his silver jubilee; he re-recorded Ritme van de Regen for a Best Of-album and made a guest-appearance in television-series De Band as himself, suggesting an onstage-jam with his chosen support-act.

In 1989 De Nijs released De Reiziger (Travelling Man) featuring the bilingual duet Ik Hou Alleen Van Jou. At the end of the year he resurrected his Bertram Bierenbroodspot-outfit for a reunion with the leading-actors of Hamelen.

1990s

In 1990 Stranger In Your Land was released, his first album of English originals plus translations of Zonder Jou (On My Own; 1981 duet with Demis Roussos), Bo (1983) and Toerist In Het Paradijs (1989) which became the title-track. The former ended up was the flipside of single Girls For Sale. In 1996 De Nijs scored his first #1-hit with a remix of Banger Hart.

2000-present

De Nijs entered the first decade of the 21st century with a knighthood and released albums with translations of meaningful Christmas-songs and French chansons (including This Melody for which Julien Clerc was flown in to sing the French parts). Meanwhile, he separated from Meuldijk after twenty years; he is a married man again and gets another child. His third, de Nijs is than 70 years old. In 2010 De Nijs released the back-to-basics-album Eindelijk Vrij (Free At Last)which he recorded in the States. In 2012 he embarked on his 50th anniversary tour.

Discography

Dit is Rob de Nijs, 1964

Rob en Trea (met Trea Dobbs), 1965

In de uren van de middag, 1973

Kijken hoe het morgen wordt, 1975

Tussen zomer en winter, 1977

Rob de Nijs, 1978

Met je ogen dicht, 1980

De regen voorbij, 1981

Roman, 1983

Pur Sang, 1984

Rock and romance, 1986

Vrije val, 1986

ZIlver, 1987

De reiziger, 1989

Stranger in your land, 1990

Hartslag, 1991

Tussen jou en mij, 1993

Iets van een wonder, 1994

De band, de zanger en het meisje, 1996

Overleven, 1997

Dansen, 1997

Tijdloos, 1999

Engelen uitgezonderd, 2001

Vanaf vandaag, 2004

Licht, 2005

Thuis met Kerstmis, 2006

Chansons, 2008

Eindelijk vrij, 2010

Nestor, 2011

Nieuwe ruimte, 2014

References