Cross of Saint George

Anglobilia all about England

Cross of Saint George
Google
Anglobilia Web

Dusty Springfield

Dusty Springfield album
Dusty Springfield album
Dusty Springfield album
Dusty Springfield album
Dusty Springfield album
Dusty Springfield album
Dusty Springfield album
Dusty Springfield album
Dusty Springfield album

Famous English people

Dusty Springfield (1939 – 1999) was born in West Hampstead, London as Mary Isobel Catherine Bernadette O'Brien, and was a fan of American jazz and a great lover of pop singer Peggy Lee's music from an early age. The name "Dusty" was already given to her when she was a child, probably as she had been a tomboy in her early years.

Her first professional musical experience was with the group Lana Sisters, a British vocal group she joined in 1958 and recorded several singles with over the next two years. In 1960, she joined her brother Dion and Tim Feild, who were a double act under the name of "The Kensington Squares", to form The Springfields, a folk trio. They picked the band name when practising together in a field in Somerset in the spring of the same year. Mary took the name Dusty Springfield after forming the group. They signed their first contract with Johnny Franz at Philips Records, and their first single "Dear John" became number one on the BBC charts. Soon, the Springfields became popular in Britain with singles such as "Breakaway", "Bambino" and their biggest hit "Island of Dreams". By 1962, the Springfields had some success in the United States with "Silver Threads and Golden Needles" and they received the Emmy Award for the group of the year.

During a tour of the United States, The Springfields travelled to Nashville, Tennessee. Springfield became enamoured of the Motown sound she heard in the States, particularly girl groups like Martha & The Vandellas. She was keen to escape the controlling influence of her older brother and gain full command over her music, so in late 1963, she left The Springfields to establish herself as a soul singer.

Dusty's first solo single was "I Only Want to Be With You", a success in both Britain and the United States. This was followed by a series of classic and successful singles, including "Stay Awhile", "I Just Don't Know What to Do With Myself", and "Losing You". She recorded a number of Bacharach-David compositions, one of which was specifically written for her, "The Look of Love" (from the 1967 spoof Bond movie Casino Royale, which was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Song in 1967.) By 1964, Springfield was one of the biggest solo artists of her day. She created a controversy when she refused to play in front of a segregated crowd in South Africa. She was often a featured artist on the British music show Ready Steady Go!, produced by Vicki Wickham, who would later become her manager.

Springfield's huge UK success led to her starring in her own BBC television series, Dusty (1966-7), followed by an ITV series "It Must Be Dusty" in 1968. She returned to the BBC for her final series "Definitely Dusty" in 1969. Her shows featured many leading stars of the day as guests. One of the most memorable was Jimi Hendrix, who appeared in a duet with Springfield on the song "Mockingbird". Because of her interest in Motown music, Springfield was selected in 1965 to host The Sound of Motown, a Ready Steady Go! special which introduced Motown and American soul music to British audiences.

Dancing with DemonsDancing with Demons: The Authorized Biography of Dusty Springfield Penny Valentine, Vicki Wickham.

She also released such classic singles as "Losing You", "Your Hurtin' Kinda Love" and "In the Middle of Nowhere", culminating in her biggest hit, and her first (and only) UK #1 single, "You Don't Have to Say You Love Me". Springfield had heard the song at the San Remo Music Festival and obtained an acetate of the song, but didn't move to record it until nearly a year later, when she was recording new material. Her future manager, Vicki Wickham, and collaborator Simon Napier-Bell reportedly wrote English lyrics for the song in the back of a cab the night before the recording was due to take place. Like so many other solo singers who did not write their own material, Springfield's recording career was dependent on the quality of the material she could obtain, and by the end of the decade top-notch material was becoming harder to find -- Carole King, who had written two of her biggest hits, "Some of Your Lovin'" and "Goin' Back" , was embarking on a solo career, and the chart-busting Bacharach-David partnership was foundering.

Her status in the music industry was further complicated by the gradual fracturing of the formerly homogeneous "pop" market into many distinct musical genres in the late 1960s. She found herself becoming "unhip" at a time when hipness was crucial for musical success, and in addition her performing career was becoming hopelessly bogged down on the mudane UK touring circuit, which at that time largely consisted of working men's clubs and the hotel and cabaret circuit. Neither of these options provided an appropriate outlet for the wide range of material she wished to perform.

Hoping to revive her career and boost her credibility, she signed with Atlantic Records, home label of one of her idols, Aretha Franklin, and she began recording an album in Memphis, Tennessee with producers Jerry Wexler, Arif Mardin and Tom Dowd. The Memphis sessions were a challenge for Wexler, who was astounded by Springfield's infamous perfectionism, which she later attributed to her deep insecurity and her very real anxiety about being compared to the soul greats who had recorded there. In the end, the Memphis tracking sessions were completed without any major work being done on the vocals -- in fact almost all her vocals were cut some weeks later in at a studio in New York.

Despite the problems with its production, the album, Dusty in Memphis became her magnum opus and is still regarded as one of the best soul albums of all time; it has landed on several "best of all time" lists, including lists compiled by Rolling Stone magazine in the United States, and Q music magazine in Britain. The album is best known for "Son of a Preacher Man", which was a hit in both the United Kingdom and the United States, though the album itself was a commercial disappointment. The song enjoyed a significant revival in the 1990s thanks to its inclusion on the best-selling soundtrack for the Quentin Tarantino film Pulp Fiction (1994).

The Complete Dusty SpringfieldThe Complete Dusty Springfield Paul Howes. The most comprehensive book ever published on the Sixties pop star, including a complete discography and 75 photos. When shy convent girl Mary O’Brien reinvented herself as Dusty Springfield, one of the most glamorous and successful pop divas of the 1960’s was born. Her career began with The Lana Sisters and continued with folk group The Springfields before her first solo success in 1963 with the unforgettable “I Only Want to Be with You.” Subsequent million–sellers included “I Just Don’t Know What to Do with Myself,” “You Don’t Have to Say You Love Me,” and “Son of a Preacher Man.” As the 1960s came to a close, critical acclaim and a successful BBC television series couldn’t save Dusty’s career, and she slipped into obscurity. Following a self–imposed exile marred by alcohol and drug abuse, she re–emerged in 1987 to enjoy new success singing with the Pet Shop Boys. She finally lost her long battle with cancer in 1999, just short of her sixtieth birthday.

"Son of a Preacher Man" also encapsulates some of the ironies of Springfield's career, and how she perceived herself in comparison to other artists. It had initially been offered to Aretha Franklin, but she turned it down. Franklin later recorded the song, and Springfield felt Franklin's version was superior, especially Franklin's phrasing in the chorus. She thereafter always performed the song with the phrasing Franklin had used.

In the same year, A Brand New Me (1970) was just as unsuccessful commercially as Dusty in Memphis, although also a critical darling. It was one of the first works produced by the Gamble and Huff production team, who would go on to great success in the R&B genre. A third album for the Atlantic label, produced by Jeff Barry, was abandoned due to unsuccessful single releases. Similarly, her next album, See All Her Faces (1972), released in Britain, followed the same pattern. In 1973 Springfield signed to the ABC Dunhill Records label which resulted in the album Cameo in (1973).

The following year she began to record another album for the label titled Longing, to be produced by Brooks Arthur, who had produced several hit records by singer-songwriters like Janis Ian. During these sessions, Springfield cut a rendition of Ian's "In the Winter" that is among her most critically acclaimed recordings. Longing was eventually abandoned due to Springfield's failing mental health. Much of the material from Longing was later released on the 2001 compilation Beautiful Soul.

Springfield put her career on hold during the mid-1970s, though she did sporadic work with fellow artists like her friend Anne Murray and she also performed backing vocals on the Elton John hit "The Bitch is Back". She continued to release critically lauded but commercially unsuccessful albums and singles throughout the late 1970s for the United Artists Records label, resulting in the albums It Begins Again (1978) and Living Without Your Love (1979). During this time Springfield rarely charted and soon drifted from popular view. She ended this period by releasing two final singles for her British label Mercury Records. She was virtually forced to do so due to the lack of success of her previous albums. The singles were "Baby Blue", a disco number that charted in the top 70, and "Your Love Still Brings Me to My Knees", the singer's swan song for a company she had been with in various forms for 20 years.

In the 1980s, Springfield wanted to forget the 1970s and start afresh. She signed a deal with 20th Century Records, which resulted in a flop of a single, a cover of "It Goes Like It Goes" from Norma Rae. She then began to record an album for Casablanca entitled White Heat (1982). The album was a departure from Springfield's sound, and featured music and lyrics that were similar in style and substance to the New Wave genre. The album was critically acclaimed; however, the LP was put on limited release in the USA and Canada only. Springfield tried again in 1985 by signing to Peter Stringfellow's Hippodrome Records label, which resulted in a single called "Sometimes Like Butterflies" and a disastrous appearance on Stringfellow's live TV show. The song was released against Springfield's wishes with a practice vocal recorded while she had laryngitis. The singer left the label in response.

Springfield's fortunes finally changed in 1987, when she was approached by the British pop duo Pet Shop Boys to collaborate with them on a song called "What Have I Done to Deserve This?", which was a smash hit in Britain, USA, and around the world, bringing Dusty back into public view. Also in 1987, Springfield provided vocals on Richard Carpenter's single "Something In Your Eyes," which was a #12 Adult Contemporary hit in the U.S. A new greatest hits collection "The Silver Collection" was released in 1988 and charted on the strength of the renewed interest in her music. The following year she was approached once again by the Pet Shop Boys to sing the theme song from the film Scandal, about the 1960's British political scandal known as the Profumo Affair. That track, "Nothing Has Been Proved", was also a Top 20 hit in the UK and was followed by a further Top 20 single, the up-beat "In Private", also written and produced by the Pet Shop Boys. She capitalised on this success by recording an album in 1990, Reputation, which also reached the Top 20, with the single of the same name reaching number 38 in the charts.

These successes persuaded Dusty that the time was right to leave California and return to Europe, initially to Amsterdam (where animal quarantine restrictions are less stringent), and finally back to Buckinghamshire, England.

In 1993 she was invited to record a duet with her former 60's rival and friend Cilla Black ("Heart And Soul"), which appeared on Cilla's "Through the Years" album on the Sony label and was released as a single. This led to the offer of a recording contract with Sony Records and the making of what was to be her final album, "A Very Fine Love".

Before releasing what was to be her final album, A Very Fine Love, recorded in Nashville in 1994 for Sony Records, Springfield was diagnosed with breast cancer. She had felt unwell during recording and it was only when she returned home to England that she discovered she had the cancer. She received treatment and, for a time, the cancer was in remission. She was able to promote her new album and gave a particularly memorable live performance of one of its tracks, "Where is a Woman To Go?" on the BBC music show Later With Jools Holland, backed by Alison Moyet and Sinead O'Connor.

However, the cancer recurred in 1997 and Springfield lost her battle with the disease in March 1999 at the age of 59, just ten days before she was to be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and on the day she had been due to receive her OBE at Buckingham Palace. Shortly before she passed away, her manager Vicki Wickham had gone to St James Palace to collect the award in order to present it to Dusty in hospital with a small gathering of family and friends present. Her funeral was held at St. Marys in Henley on Thames, where she resided for the last few years of her life. A marker dedicated to her memory can be found outside the church.

Springfield had been raised as a strict Catholic and, despite her reported reluctance to participate in confession and Mass, she kept her faith in a higher being to the end of her life. The conflict between her conservative religious faith and her life was one that affected her deeply. Springfield's biographers and several journalists have suggested she had two personas: shy, quiet Mary O'Brien, and the persona she created in Dusty Springfield.

In all aspects of her career, but especially in the studio, Springfield was a notorious perfectionist. Some labelled her as "difficult". Much of this can now be seen as a reaction from male colleagues who, in a very male-dominated industry, were wholly unused to women taking control in the studio. She often produced her songs, but could not take credit for doing so, as it was seen as bad form to do so. Springfield's musical ear was very finely tuned and she was totally intolerant of anything less than perfection, which some session musicians did not appreciate. To add to the challenges, she did not read and write music as the session musicians did, making it even harder for her to communicate what she wanted. She was notorious for her agonisingly painstaking vocal sessions, during which she would often record short phrases or even single words or syllables, over and over again, to get the precise feeling and musical quality that she wanted.

Springfield's biographers attribute much of her "difficult" behaviour to her dysfunctional family background and her deep insecurity, which began in childhood. Her mother was prone to explosive rages and would often throw things to express anger -- a trait which Springfield herself soon adopted. Her accountant father, conversely, was quiet and withdrawn, and it is evident that, at least in part, her mother's violent "acting out" was an attempt to gain her husband's attention. Mary/Dusty's growing insecurity was heightened by her parents' blatant favouring of her older brother Dion (Tom).

Springfield identified herself as being bisexual or lesbian. She first broached this idea into the media mainstream in 1970 when she told Ray Connolly of The Evening Standard that "A lot of people say I'm bent, and I've heard it so many times that I've almost learned to accept it....I know I'm perfectly as capable of being swayed by a girl as by a boy." By 1970 standards, Springfield had made a very bold statement. The fact that she never married meant that the issue continued to be raised throughout her life from this point onwards, although she stated that she had enjoyed relationships with both men and women "and liked it".

In her early career much of her odd behaviour was carried out more or less in fun -- like her famous food fights -- and it was at the time dismissed as merely "eccentric". One story related in her biography tells how, when Springfield first performed in America, she was too nervous to meet the other performers on the bill, so she found a box full of crockery and hurled it down a flight of stairs in order to bring the other performers out of their dressing rooms.

But as the Springfield persona became more and more famous, she was indulged, pampered and spoiled, and plummeted into chronic drug and alcohol abuse. For much of the Seventies, living in Hollywood, Springfield alternately battled mental health and substance abuse issues. When her career imploded, she began to internalise her violent behaviour. The seriousness of her increasingly frequent acts of self-harm resulted in her being hospitalized on numerous occasions and she reportedly attempted suicide several times.

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Dusty Springfield".

Comments, Suggestions, contact info@twinisles.com