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Luther Dixon

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Also known as
  
Barney Williams

Role
  
Songwriter

Name
  
Luther Dixon


Years active
  
1954–late 1960s

Origin
  
Brooklyn, New York

Plays
  
Baby It's You!

Luther Dixon wwwazquotescompublicpicturesauthors7826782

Born
  
August 7, 1931 Jacksonville, Florida (
1931-08-07
)

Occupation(s)
  
Songwriter, record producer, singer

Died
  
October 22, 2009, Jacksonville, Florida, United States

Genres
  
Rhythm and blues, Doo-wop, Pop music, Soul music, Rock and roll

Record labels
  
Scepter Records, Wand Records, Musicor Records

Associated acts
  
The Shirelles, The Four Buddies, The Platters

Similar People
  
Florence Greenberg, Mack David, Wes Farrell, Shirley Owens, Burt Bacharach

Luther dixon story on the chancellor of soul s soul facts show


Luther Dixon (7 August 1931 – 22 October 2009) was an American songwriter, record producer, and singer. Dixon's songs achieved their greatest success in the 1950s and 1960s, and were recorded by Elvis Presley, the Beatles, the Jackson 5, B.B. King, Jerry Lee Lewis, Dusty Springfield, Jimmy Reed and others. As a producer, Dixon helped create the signature sound of the girl group the Shirelles.

Contents

Elvis Rare Footage BIG BOSS MAN Remix, Jimmy Reed, Luther Dixon, Al Smith,


Early life

Dixon was born in Jacksonville, Florida, but his family moved to Brooklyn, New York, when he was young. He learned to sing in church.

Career

Dixon began his professional career in 1954 with the Four Buddies, a doo-wop group led by Larry Harrison, in which Dixon sang baritone and occasionally played guitar. The Four Buddies recorded for Savoy Records, but also as the Barons for Decca Records and as The Buddies for Glory Records. The group disbanded in 1955, but Dixon and Harrison continued writing songs together. Their biggest hit was "Why Baby Why", recorded by Pat Boone, which peaked at #5 in 1957.

Dixon and Billy Dawn Smith wrote the 1957 Perry Como song "Just Born (To Be Your Baby)", which reached #12. In 1958, Bobby Darin recorded "All the Way Home", written by Dixon and Otis Blackwell, which was released on Darin's 1960 album For Teenagers Only. Dixon and Clyde Otis wrote the song "Doncha' Think It's Time", recorded by Elvis Presley in 1958 and included on his famous 1959 album, 50,000,000 Elvis Fans Can't Be Wrong. Also in 1958, Dixon and Allyson Khent wrote "16 Candles", which was recorded by the Crests and reached #2.

In 1960, after being approached by Florence Greenberg of Scepter Records, Dixon began working with the Shirelles. The first song Dixon produced with the Shirelles was "Tonight's the Night", co-written by the group's lead singer Shirley Owens. The song reached #39 in 1960, and another recording of the song by the Chiffons reached #76. The Shirelles then reached #1 with "Will You Love Me Tomorrow" (written by Carole King and Gerry Goffin). Dixon wrote the B-side to that single, "Boys". The Shirelles' 1961 song "Baby It's You", co-written by Dixon under the pseudonym "Barney Williams", Burt Bacharach, and Mack David, reached #8. Both "Boys" and "Baby It's You" were later recorded by the Beatles on their debut LP, Please Please Me. The Shirelles' 1962 song "Soldier Boy", written by Dixon and Florence Greenberg, was their final song to reach #1.

Greenberg started a second record company, Wand Records, in 1961. Dixon wrote and produced many songs for the Wand and Scepter labels, including the 1961 Chuck Jackson single "I Don't Want to Cry", co-written by Jackson himself, which reached #36. Jimmy Reed's 1961 hit "Big Boss Man" was written by Dixon and Al Smith. This song was listed by the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as one of the 500 "Songs That Shaped Rock and Roll".

With these successes, Dixon was approached by Capitol Records to set up his own record label, Ludix Records, but Ludix was unsuccessful. In 1966, Dixon was producing the Platters for Musicor Records. Their songs "I Love You 1000 Times" (#31, 1966) and "With This Ring" (#14, 1967)—their biggest hits since leaving Mercury Records—were both produced and co-written by Dixon.

By the late 1960s, Dixon's style of music had greatly faded from popular music charts. He received a surge of popularity after "16 Candles" was used in the 1973 George Lucas film American Graffiti, and again when the 1984 John Hughes film Sixteen Candles included a performance of the song by the Stray Cats. "Boys" was included in the 2009 video game The Beatles: Rock Band. Dixon's song "Never Let Me Go" was performed by Jane Monheit in the film adaptation of Kazuo Ishiguro's novel with same title. Dixon was nominated for the Songwriters Hall of Fame one week before he died.

Personal life

Dixon was married to soul singer Inez Foxx, with whom he co-wrote "I Love You 1000 Times". They later divorced. Dixon died in his hometown of Jacksonville, Florida.

References

Luther Dixon Wikipedia