Like his great great
grandfather, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, the German poet
who penned "Faust", Bertie Higgins is a
storyteller. He was born Elbert Joseph Higgins of
Portuguese, Irish and German descent and raised in the
picturesque Greek community of Tarpon Springs, Florida.
Bertie is an intellectual romantic who loves to paint
story songs about living and loving in a tropical
paradise.
His love songs explore the efforts of man trying to
fathom the mystery and allure of woman. His fantasy songs
deal with the beauty and sensuality of the tropics and
his story songs combine past experiences and future
hopes. The resounding theme throughout Bertie's work:
"Make the best of today lest tomorrow never
comes".
Bertie, who once supported himself as a sponge diver,
began his career in show business at the age of twelve as
a ventriloquist. He won top prizes in local talent
contests and became a favorite at school assemblies and
clubs around Tampa Bay. Two years later, a battered set
of drums forced a career change and Bertie set off to
follow the back beat heard around the world -- Rock and
Roll.
His first band played proms, homecoming dances and sock
hops. After graduating Tarpon Springs High School, Bertie
enrolled in St. Petersburg Junior College to study
journalism and fine art, but the music continued to sing
in his heart. He eventually left college and became
drummer for the Tommy Roe band (Sheila, Dizzy), The
Roemans, During this period, the band toured the world,
opening shows for the likes of the Rolling Stones, The
Beach Boys, Tom Jones, Roy Orbison, Manfred Mann, Peter
and Gordon, The Dave Clark Five and many more. At the
height of Beatlemania, Bertie was playing with and
learning from the best.
Tiring of the rigors of the road and yearning to make his
own musical statement, Bertie left The Roemans and
returned home to Florida. He put down his drumsticks,
picked up a guitar and began crafting music and lyrics.
It was a time of great satisfaction and personal release.
Producers such as Bob Crewe (The Four Seasons), Phil
Gernhard (Lobo), and Felton Jarvis (Elvis) took an
interest and contributed to the growth of the young
songwriter. Bertie's talent flourished and he was in
demand to play venues throughout the state.
Gordon Lightfoot, Cat Stevens and Jimmy Buffet were
Bertie's primary sources of inspiration and he remains
friends with Gordon and Jimmy today. During this period,
he also met and became a protege of the late
actor/director, Richard Boone, who saw Bertie's writing
potential and tutored him in screen writing.
In 1980, Bertie moved to Atlanta and met record producer,
Sonny Limbo. Sonny had played a role in developing the
group Alabama and had been isntrumental in the careers of
several others. He arranged that fateful meeting between
Bertie and music publisher, Bill Lowery, whom Bertie had
known through Tommy Roe. The meeting of these three was
destiny waiting to happen.
Bertie had been working on a song about a personal failed
romance. He presented the rough cut to Bill and Sonny.
They helped him perfect the lyrics of the song that
became Key Largo. Bertie recorded the master and
presented it to Kat Family records, a newly formed CBS
distributing company. At first they rejected it. After
persistent badgering by Bertie, Bill and Sonny, Kat
Family finally agreed to release the single in 1981 and
pop music history was made.
Key Largo blew a hole in the U.S. charts. When it reached
number one in the nation, the world took notice and it
went on to become an international hit. Other hit singles
followed like Just Another Day in Paradise, Casablanca
and Pirates and Poets. Casablanca became Song Of The Year
in all of the pacific rim and the album hit double
platinum. Bertie Higgins became an international
recording star literally overnight.
For the past several years, Bertie and his excellent
group, "The Band of Pirates" have toured
extensively around the globe. He has received rave
reviews and accolades from the music industry and his
fans alike. He is named in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
in Cleveland and displayed in the Georgia Music Hall of
Fame in Macon. Besides being the consummate stage
performer, songwriter and vocalist, he is an accomplished
screenwriter/novelist and actor. Bertie has owned a
successful restaurant in the Florida Keys, written music
for David Letterman, Burt Reynolds and many others. He
has made numerous TV talk show and music variety show
appearances around the world and continues to be invited
back again and again. Besides maintaining a rigorous
schedule of one-nighters, he also makes regular
appearances on the fabulous Las Vegas strip.
Bertie seriously supports several national charity
organizations. Hospice, The American Cancer Society, The
Boys and Girls Clubs of America are just a few. He
regularly makes appearances and participates in several
charitable national golf tournaments and donates his time
and talent. He lives by the credo "you must give
some back", and takes the commitment very seriously.
An ongoing project in his homestate of Florida is the
preservation of fragile endangered wildlife,
particularily the brown pelican and other sea birds. He
works closely with zoologist, Ralph Heath of the Suncoast
Seabird Sanctuary in Redington Shores, FL, and has
organized and performed at several fund raisers to
benefit that great organization. He has also been
actively involved in preserving Florida's rapidly
deteriorating lighthouses and was instrumental in helping
restore the one on Anclote Key near his hometown of
Tarpon Springs.
Bertie is the father of three boys and one girl, and
lives with two of his sons, Julian and Aaron in Burbank,
CA. His eldest son, Damian, a graduate of the University
of Pittsburgh, is a world renowned recording artist in
his own right. He has attained a great deal of success
under the pseudonym, "Diesel Boy" and is
currently working on his ninth CD release. One of the top
junglist D.J.'s on the globe, he performs regularly from
London, Cape Town, Budaphest, Hong Kong, New York and all
points in between. He has graced the cover of several
national magazine publications and Bertie couldn't be a
prouder Dad. Julian is a college sophomore attending film
school in Hollywood learning to direct movies; Aaron is a
senior at Burbank High and Kimberly holds a postition
with Southwest Air, the greatest airline in the world.
Bertie is also the proud grandfather of Eli William
Dauser, Kimberly's young son.
Bertie personally manages his international fan club,
"The Boneheads" and he is endeared to each and
every member. He truly believes that they are just the
greatest group of people in the world and hovers over
them with a watchful, caring eye. Once annually they fly
into Florida from around the world to participate in
their "Pirates of the Caribbean" cruise. Always
a seven day adventure with a major cruise line, they hang
out, party, explore the Caribbean and meet 'n' greet each
other. 'Tis always a pillage and plunder and the next one
is soon forthcoming.
To be certain, it will always be just another day in
paradise for Bertie Higgins and he'll be waiting for you
under the next palm tree for years to come. This pirate
and poet continues to write and sing about turquoise
lagoons, golden sands and islands in the sun in a style
he affectionatly refers to as Trop Rock. |