
Nick Gilder was born in London during 1951, and at age ten emigrated to Vancouver, Canada. His teenage years were spent attending a technical college, but a love of music saw Gilder move towards a career in a band. In 1971, he formed a band with friend and guitarist Jimmy McCulloch (not of Thunderclap Newman or Wings fame) under the cheeky title Sweeney Todd. The glam rockers enjoyed limited success in their native Canada, but in 1975 released their eponymous debut album (CA#14) on the London Records label. The release of the Sweeney Todd single, ‘Roxy Roller’ (written about groupies), initially met with little success. Around the same time both Gilder and McCulloch left Sweeney Todd, due to the well worn path of internal bickering, and the duo decided to try their lucky across the border in the U.S., setting up base in Los Angeles.


The song they chose was a sultry, slow burning pop-rock track whose subject matter was a lot darker than the mood of the track might suggest. Singer Nick Gilder explained the theme of the track ‘Hot Child In The City’ to Rolling Stone magazine. Essentially it told the tale of runaway teenage girls, sold into prostitution and drug use, as relayed from the seedy underbelly of Los Angeles night life, all told through the medium of ‘an innocent pop song’.

The success of ‘Hot Child In The City’ went further than a #1 hit, as at the time it became the biggest selling single in the U.S. for the Chrysalis label, and remained so until overtaken by Blondie’s ‘Call Me’ in 1980. It also went to #1 in Gilder’s home country Canada (OZ#18), but chart success eluded Gilder in his native Britain.
The follow up single (I’d like to see you follow that), ‘Here Comes The Night’ (CA#21/US#44) predictably made only a fraction of the chart ripple that its predecessor did. Gilder went back into the studio in early ‘79 to record his next album, but when ‘Frequency’ (CA#79) was released listeners had already tuned into another frequency. Although, the single ‘(You Really) Rock Me’ (CA#35, US#57, OZ#95) did rock the upper reaches of the charts, albeit fleetingly. Predictably, Gilder and his label Chrysalis parted ways following the lacklustre sales of his last album. Casablanca Records offered a recording lifeline in 1980, and the album ‘Rock America’ (co-produced by Gilder) surfaced later that year, along with the singles ‘Wild Ones (Feeling Electric)’ (CA#22) and ‘Catch 22’ (CA#26). Gilder recorded two more albums during the 80s, 1981’s ‘Body Talk Muzik’, and a 1985 eponymously titled set, which realised the last charting singles for Nick Gilder, ‘Let Me In’ (CA#50), and ‘Footsteps’ (CA#95), in his native Canada. Gilder continued to write and record music, and a number of his tracks have been recorded by artists such as Bette Midler and Pat Benatar. The 1984 hit ‘The Warrior’, recorded by Scandal featuring Patty Smyth (see previous post), was co-written by Gilder.