Thursday, 18 July 2019

Dion DiMucci born 18 July 1939


Dion DiMucci (born Dion Francis DiMucci, 18 July 1939), better known as Dion, is an American singer-songwriter, now widely recognized as one of the top singers of his era, blending the best elements of doo-wop, pop, and R&B styles.

Dion was born to an Italian-American family in the Bronx borough of New York City. As a child, he used to accompany his father, a vaudeville entertainer, on tour, and developed a love of country music – particularly Hank Williams – and the blues and doo-wop stars he heard in local bars and on the radio. His singing abilities were honed on the street corners of Crotona Avenue, where he rounded up other local singers inventing acapella licks, and in local clubs.

In early 1957 he auditioned for Bob and Gene Schwartz, who had just formed Mohawk Records. They recorded him with a vocal group, The Timberlanes, and released a single "The Chosen Few", arranged by Hugo Montenegro, which became a minor regional hit.

Schwartz also signed up Dion's friends, The Belmonts, named after nearby Belmont Avenue. Their breakthrough together came in early 1958, when "I Wonder Why" made # 22 on the national US charts, followed up with "No One Knows" and "Don’t Pity Me" which were also chart hits.


Dion with Buddy Holly

This success won Dion and the Belmonts a place on the "Winter Dance Party" tour with Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens and the Big Bopper. On 2 February 1959, after playing at Clear Lake, Iowa, Dion decided that he could not afford the $36 cost of a flight to the next venue . The plane crashed, and Holly and the other stars were killed.


                               

In March 1959, Dion and the Belmonts’ next single, "A Teenager In Love", was released, making # 5 in the US pop charts and # 28 in the UK. Their biggest hit, "Where or When", was released in November 1959, and reached #3 on the US charts. However, in early 1960, Dion checked in to hospital for heroin addiction, a
problem he had had since his mid-teens. Further single releases for the group that year were less successful, there were musical and financial differences between Dion and members of the Belmonts, and in October 1960 Dion decided to quit for a solo career.

He moved from doo wop to more R&B/pop-oriented tunes with great success. He handled himself with a suave, cocky ease on hits like "The Wanderer," "Runaround Sue," "Lovers Who Wander," "Ruby Baby," and "Donna the Prima Donna," which cast him as either the jilted, misunderstood youngster or the macho lover, capable of handling anything that came his way (especially on "The Wanderer").

In 1963, Dion moved from Laurie to the larger Columbia label, an association that started promisingly with a couple of big hits right off the bat, "Ruby Baby" and "Donna the Prima Donna." By the mid-'60s, his heroin habit (which he'd developed as a teenager) was getting the best of him, and he did little recording and performing for about five years.

In 1968, Dion had what he would later describe as a powerful religious experience. He kicked heroin and re-emerged as a gentle folk-rocker with a number four hit single, "Abraham, Martin and John." Dion would focus upon mature, contemporary material on his late-'60s and early-'70s albums, which were released to positive 
critical feedback, if only moderate sales. The folk phase didn't last long; in 1972 he reunited with the Belmonts and in the mid-'70s cut a disappointing record with Phil Spector as producer. He recorded and performed fairly often in the years that followed (sometimes singing Christian music), to indifferent commercial results.

Dion continued to be active as the 21st century opened, releasing Déjà Nu in 2000, Under the Influence in 2005, and Bronx in Blue in 2006. His first major-label album since 1989's Yo Frankie, Son of Skip James was released by Verve in 2007, while 2008's Heroes: Giants of Early Guitar Rock saw him tackling 15 songs from the classic rock & roll era. 
Influenced by a conversation with rock critic Dave Marsh about his long and still relevant career, and a dare from his wife Susan to prove it, Dion cut Tank Full of Blues, producing and playing the guitars himself on the recording and writing or co-writing all but one track on the set. Issued on Blue Horizon, it is the final recording in the trilogy that began with Bronx in Blue.
  
Dion signed to Instant Records in 2015 and immediately set to recording a new studio album. Entitled New York Is My Home, its first single and title track -- a duet with Paul Simon -- was pre-released in November digitally and as a striking video. The album was issued in the winter of 2016.   (Edited from Wikipedia & All Music)

2 comments:

boppinbob said...

For “Dion & The Belmonts - Teenagers in Love 1957-1960” go here:
https://www.upload.ee/files/10236786/Dion___Belmonts_-_1957-1960.rar.html

Disc 1

1. THE CHOSEN FEW (Dion & The Timberlanes)
2. OUT IN COLORADO (Dion & The Timberlanes)
3. TEENAGE CLEMENTINE (The Belmonts)
4. SANTA MARGHERITA (The Belmonts)
5. TAG ALONG
6. WE WENT AWAY
7. I WONDER WHY
8. TEEN ANGEL
9. NO ONE KNOWS
10. I CAN'T GO ON (Rosalie)
11. DON'T PITY ME
12. JUST YOU
13. A TEENAGER IN LOVE
14. I'VE CRIED BEFORE
15. EVERY LITTLE THING I DO
16. A LOVER'S PRAYER
17. WHERE OR WHEN
18. THAT'S MY DESIRE
19. WHEN YOU WISH UPON A STAR
20. IN THE STILL OF THE NIGHT
21. LONELY TEENAGER (Dion)
22. LITTLE MISS BLUE (Dion)
23. WE BELONG TOGETHER (The Belmonts)
24. SUCH A LONG WAY (The Belmonts)

Disc 2

1. YOU BETTER NOT DO THAT
2. I GOT THE BLUES
3. WONDERFUL GIRL
4. A FUNNY FEELING
5. MY PRIVATE JOY
6. MY DAY
7. SWINGING ON A STAR
8. ALL THE THINGS YOU ARE
9. IT'S ONLY A PAPER MOON
10. FLY ME TO THE MOON
11. I'M THROUGH WITH LOVE
12. WHEN THE RED, RED ROBIN COMES BOBBIN' ALONG
13. SEPTEMBER SONG
14. FAITH
15. COME TAKE A WALK WITH ME
16. THAT'S HOW MUCH I NEED YOU
17. IT WAS NEVER MEANT TO BE
18. WILL YOU LOVE ME STILL
19. MY FOOLISH HEART (The Belmonts)

New Yorkers Dion & The Belmonts were arguably the finest white Doo-wop group of all. Sides like 'I Wonder Why', 'No One Knows', 'Don't Pity Me', 'Teenager In Love' and particularly 'Where Or When' are acknowledged as genre classics.

This compilation features everything they recorded together between 1957-1960 (nine singles, two LPs and various studio outtakes), plus Dion's first solo single and a rare 45 he recorded in 1957 with The Timberlanes, prior to forming The Belmonts. Several of these sides are collector's rarities, which are hard to find on CD. (Jasmine notes)
A big thank you to Mijas @ ACM2 for original post.

For “Dion Rocks” go here:

http://www.imagenetz.de/f3735cc6c/DDM-Rocks.rar.html

01 Run Around Sue
02 A Teenager In Love (Alt)
03 Little Miss Blue
04 I Wonder Why (Alt)
05 (I Was) Born To Cry
06 A Funny Feeling
07 After The Dance
08 My Private Joy
09 Sandy
10 Can't We Be Sweethearts
11 Come Go With Me
12 Dream Lover
13 Heaven Help Me
14 I Can't Go On Rosalie
15 It's Only A Paper Moon
16 Lonely Teenager
17 Lovers Who Wander
18 Queen Of The Hop
19 Ruby Baby
20 King Without A Queen
21 The Wanderer
22 This Little Girl
23 Swingin' On A Star
24 I Got The Blues
25 Kansas City
26 Gonna Make It Alone
27 The Majestic
28 The Twist
29 Donna The Prima Donna
30 Flim Flam
31 Drip Drop

A big thank you to Jake @ Jukebox City for Dion Rocks

Mickey Bitsko said...

I love the folk blues albums Dion has released in the past 15 or so years. And as a Bobble Head, I love his witty and wise comments about Dylan sprinkled in many of those records. And what a damn good guitar player Dion is!