The “Golden Hits Of The 70s”
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SHOCKING BLUE
VENUS
(Robby van Leeuwen)
Colossus 108
No. 1 February 7, 1970
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Dark-haired, brown-eyed, and lovely lead singer Mariska Veres (b. 1949) is the daughter of Lajos Veres,
internationally known gypsy violinist. “I really enjoy myself when I’m performing,” she once told Hit
Parader magazine. “I love to smile. And I am very happy when people smile back at me.” As a little
girl, the half-Hungarian/half-German Mariska accompanied her father on the piano. She later played in
various nameless garage bands.
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Shocking Blue was a Dutch group founded by lead guitarist/sitarist Robby van Leeuwen (b. 1944).
Robby had been a member of the Motions, one of Holland’s leading beat groups, whose lone stateside
album, Electric Baby (1968), is sought after by vinyl collectors. In 1969, he lured drummer Cor Vander
Beek, bassist Klaasie van der Wal, and lead singer Fred de Wilde away from their band (Hu & The
Hilltops) to form Shocking Blue. Pink Elephant Records signed the group and issued their first disk,
“Lucy Brown Is Back in Town,” which went to number 21 on the Dutch Top 40.
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While attending a party given to honor Golden Earring’s first chart-topping homeland single, van
spotted Mariska, then singing with the Bumble Bees, the evening’s entertainment. That night, legend
has it, Fredde Wilde was asked to leave Shocking Blue, and Mariska was asked to join. The group’s
next single, “Send Me a Postcard Darling,” charted in Holland.
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When “Venus;’ their third single, was clocking in at number three on the Dutch listings, American record
producer Jerry Ross was there to sign Shocking Blue plus the George Baker Selection and the TEE SET–
to a U.S. distribution deal via his Colossus label. Considering the odds, it’s incredible that all three
Dutch acts charted in the States with their debut disks. Baker’s “Little Green Bag” (#21, 1970) and
“Paloma Blanda” (#26, 1975) both went Top 40, as did the Tee Set’s “Ma Belle Arnie” (#5, 1970).
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Despite her multi-charms, Veres and her band hit the American airwaves with only two more singles,
“Mighty Joe” (#43, 1970) and “Long and Lonesome Road” (#75, 1970), the former a global million-seller.
Ross continued to issue Shocking Blue sides in the States, although 45s like “Never Marry a Railroad
Man” usually did better overseas. The group’s lone stateside LP, The Shocking Blue (1970), sold a
respectable number of copies. In 1974, Shocking Blue disbanded, allegedly due to quarrels over van
Leeuwen’s inability to craft another “Venus:’
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