Louise Cordet was a phenomenon in English pop/rock for about two years, beginning when she reached number 13 on the charts with "I'm Just a Baby," released on English Decca in 1962. She was lucky enough to hit just as a new wave of British rock & rollers were coming to the fore, even though her sound was a little on the wimpy romantic side to fit in with British beat. As the daughter of a major television personality (and god-daughter of Prince Philip) with a convent school education, her origins were very different from the working class origins of most British rock & rollers, but she found an audience and held onto it, and for a time bidded fair to be Decca Records's answer to
Helen Shapiro. In 1963,
Cordet appeared in two movies, Just for You and Just for Fun; the latter, a follow-up to 1962's It's Trad, Dad, was particularly notable, presenting
Cordet performing "Which Way the Wind Blows," which many onlookers regarded as the best music clip in the movie and the highlight of the entire film. In some ways,
Cordet's career anticipated that of
Marianne Faithfull, as it took her from a convent school into a world of pop stars, London night spots, and concert tours with
the Beatles and
Gerry & the Pacemakers. Indeed, she is said to have taught
Paul McCartney a dance or two on his arrival in London, and
Gerry Marsden originally wrote "Don't Let the Sun Catch You Crying" as a number for
Cordet, before his group recorded it. Her final single, "Two Lovers," was a dazzling treatment of a Motown classic, drenched in heavy guitars and a great beat, and nearly as alluring as
the Beatles' cover of "You've Really Got a Hold on Me." By 1965, however,
Cordet had stopped recording and, ironically, became part of the cadre of hangers on surrounding
Marianne Faithfull, serving as French pronunciation advisor at
Faithfull's May 11, 1965 Decca Records recording session, and also doing her best in the press as a publicist for
Faithfull during this period.
–
Bruce Eder, Rovi