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Ron Dante

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Genres
  
Pop

Name
  
Ron Dante

Occupation(s)
  
Singer

Role
  
Singer · rondante.com

Instruments
  
Vocals

Associated acts
  
Years active
  
1960s–present


Ron Dante wwwrondantecomorangetux1jpg


Born
  
22 August 1945 (age 78) Staten Island, New York (
1945-08-22
)

Movies and TV shows
  
The Archie Show, The Dreamsters: Welcome to the Dreamery, Archie's Funhouse

Albums
  
Brings You Up (Digitally Remastered), Saturday Night Blast, California Weekend

Awards
  
Tony Award for Best Musical, Tony Award for Best Play

Similar People
  
Peter Link, CC Courtney, Emanuel Azenberg, Nell Carter, John Rubinstein

Ron dante and toni wine sugar sugar


Ron Dante (born Carmine John Granito on August 22, 1945, on Staten Island, New York) is an American singer, songwriter, session vocalist, and record producer. Dante is best known as the lead singer of the fictional cartoon band The Archies, as well as the group The Cuff Links. He is also well known as the co-producer of Barry Manilow’s first nine albums.

Contents

Ron Dante Ron Dante Rarities

Tracy ron dante


Career

Ron Dante The Showbiz Wizard The Archies RON DANTE

The Archies single “Sugar, Sugar,” written and composed by producer Jeff Barry with Andy Kim, was the number-one selling record of 1969 in the United States. Four years earlier, Dante had been a member of the parody group The Detergents, who recorded a novelty song called "Leader of the Laundromat." Concurrent with his work on the Archies project, Dante was also employed as a session singer and performed many television and commercial jingles.

Ron Dante Ron Dante OnLine PICTURE GALLERY

In 1969, Dante recorded an album under the group name of The Cuff Links, for his old Detergents songwriter-producers Paul Vance and Lee Pockriss. Providing both lead and background vocals through overdubbing, as he did with most of the male Archies's vocals, Dante hit the U.S. Top Ten with the single "Tracy," at the same time that "Sugar, Sugar" occupied the top of the chart. Dante was anonymous on both tracks. Contrary to popular belief, the lead verses of another Archies single, "Jingle Jangle" (portrayed as being sung by either Betty or Veronica), were not sung by a female vocalist, but rather by Dante using falsetto vocals.

Dante's first album release under his own name, which he recorded on Don Kirshner's label, was Ron Dante Brings You Up in 1970. In 1972, also under the supervision of Kirshner, Dante became lead vocalist for another cartoon group, The Chan Clan. He provided lead vocals to a number of songs on the 1972 LP "Spiderman : From Beyond the Grave, A Rockcomic" credited to The Webspinners. Ron Dante appeared on a 1975 CBS TV pilot show called Hip Patches. He is interviewed by a group of young musicians in a band named Silvermoon who were meant to be the stars of the show. On that show, he is introduced as the voice of "all five Archies" and explains to the kids what it takes to be a successful band.

In 1979, he recorded a disco album under the name Dante's Inferno for the short lived Infinity Records label, and in 1981 his second solo album Street Angel was released. Also in 1979, Dante performed the theme to the short-lived NBC television series $weepstake$: "Don't Be Afraid To Dream," whose lyrics were written by Norman Gimbel and whose music was composed by Charles Fox.

From 1973 to 1981, Dante was the record producer for singer Barry Manilow, and often sang backup on Manilow's recordings, including the 1974 #1 single "Mandy." Dante also continued to record sporadically during those years; in 1975, with Manilow as the producer, Dante released a dance version of "Sugar, Sugar" under his own name. In 1978, Dante produced the Tony Award-winning musical revue Ain't Misbehavin' on Broadway. During this same period, Dante, who was a Manhattan neighbor of George Plimpton, was invited to serve as the publisher of the Paris Review, as whose publisher he so served from 1978 to 1985.

As of late July 2016, Dante remained active as a singer, producer, and concert performer. An album, Favorites, was released in 1999, and another CD, Saturday Night Blast, was issued in 2004. The extended play California Weekend CD was released in 2006.

Dante's most recent high-profile appearance was with the CBS Orchestra on the Late Show with David Letterman on July 28, 2010.

References

Ron Dante Wikipedia