Dixon was born in Florida in 1931, but grew up in New York City. He was probably lucky his family made the move, since there was more economic opportunity for a Black man in a northern city back in that era of segregation. There were very few successful Black professional songwriters in the 1950s. But while Dixon started out as a member of a doo-wop group, he quickly discovered he preferred songwriting and producing to performing. His first big success was "Why Baby Why," a hit for Pat Boone in 1957.
However, the Beatles were also largely to blame for a drastic change in musical tastes away from his 1950s style, along with Bob Dylan and others. He did have some hits in the late 1960s and early 1970s, but few compared to what he'd accomplished before. He died in 2009 at the age of 78. Here's his Wikipedia entry if you want to know more about him:
Generally speaking, I included the original hit versions of each song, in rough chronological order. However, "Baby, It's You" was first a big hit for the Shirelles in 1961, but I already included that version on a Burt Bacharach and Hal David "Covered" album. So instead I used the version by Smith, which also was a big hit in 1969.
This album is 43 minutes long.
01 Why Baby Why (Pat Boone)
02 Sixteen Candles (Crests)
03 So Close (Brook Benton)
04 Lovin' Up a Storm (Jerry Lee Lewis)
05 Tonight's the Night (Shirelles)
06 Big Boss Man (Jimmy Reed)
07 A Hundred Pounds of Clay (Gene McDaniels)
08 Mama Said (Shirelles)
09 Irresistible You (Bobby Darin)
10 Soldier Boy (Shirelles)
11 Boys (Beatles)
12 Sha La La (Manfred Mann)
13 With This Ring (Platters)
14 Soul Serenade (Aretha Franklin)
15 Baby It's You (Smith)
16 I Don't Wanna Cry (Ronnie Dyson)
17 Funk Factory (Wilson Pickett)
https://pixeldrain.com/u/Hzg8N4eA
alternate:
https://bestfile.io/JUCGAftRRNsKQZT/file
I don't know when or where the cover photo is from. I was lucky to find a good photo of Dixon at all. But I'd guess it's from the 1950s or early 1960s. The original was in black and white, but I converted it to color with the use of the Palette program.
i beleive you mean SCEPTER records
ReplyDeleteThanks for catching that. I must have had Phil Spector on my mind.
Delete"Sha La La" is actually credited to Robert Mosely and Robert Taylor. Or is "Robert Taylor" a pseudonym for Dixon? Mosely wrote some other hits ("Big Cold Wind" by Pat Boone, "Goodbye My Love" for the Searchers) but as far as I know Taylor didn't write anything else of note, so I guess it could be a fake name. Dixon is credited as the producer of the Shirelles' version of "Sha La La".
ReplyDeleteI get "File not found"
ReplyDeleteThanks - another awesome post. I find the Covered series consistency great and eye opening.
ReplyDeleteYou should get an account at the internet archive. Lots of similar posters there and rarely does anyone have download problems 😉
ReplyDeleteI thought they have rules about no copyrighted material?
DeleteJust FYI, it wouldn't dl through Jdownloader but it dl would after going directly to the page and clicking through a number of ads.
ReplyDelete