HAPPY BIRTHDAY Frederick James Freddie Perren May 15, 1943 – - TopicsExpress



          

HAPPY BIRTHDAY Frederick James Freddie Perren May 15, 1943 – December 16, 2004 was a songwriter, record producer, arranger, and orchestra conductor best known as co-songwriter and co-producer of such mega-hits as Boogie Fever by the Sylvers, I Will Survive by Gloria Gaynor, and Shake Your Groove Thing by Peaches & Herb. Perren was born on May 15, 1943, in Englewood, New Jersey, and graduated from Englewoods Dwight Morrow High School along with future songwriting partners Fonce & Larry Mizell in 1961.[Perren attended Howard University in Washington, D.C. graduating in 1966. It was here he would meet future Capitol Records R&B A&R executive Larkin Arnold. He met Christine Yarian in 1967, and they married in 1970. Shortly after moving to California from Washington, D.C., in 1968, Perren and bassist Mizell met guitarist Deke Richards. They started writing songs together. In 1969 Motown president Berry Gordy invited them to be part of his collective The Corporation, a collection of songwriters and record producers for The Jackson 5. I Want You Back was the first hit from this new collaboration, going to number one on the Hot 100 in early 1970. They would go on to write and produce more Jackson 5 hits such as ABC, The Love You Save, Mamas Pearl, and Maybe Tomorrow, among others. Perren and The Corporation continued their work for Motown on soundtracks such as Hell Up in Harlem and Cooley High, which featured Its So Hard to Say Goodbye to Yesterday (later a hit for Boyz II Men). Perren then moved into the disco arena with the hits Do It Baby and Love Machine for The Miracles. By 1976 Perren would leave Motown and head over to Capitol Records where another old college pal, Larkin Arnold, was now V.P. In the next two years Perren would have success with The Sylvers, producing their first two Capitol albums. They had two Gold singles, Boogie Fever & Hot Line, and top ten single High School Dance. Also successful collaborations for Perren were Tavares, for whom he would produce three albums—Sky High!, Love Storm, and Future Bound. Commercial highlights of his work with the group include co-writing and producing the number-one disco hits Dont Take Away The Music and Heaven Must Be Missing An Angel, and producing the groups take on The Bee Gees More Than A Woman. Both groups versions were featured in the landmark 1977 movie and soundtrack to Saturday Night Fever. The Bee Gees recorded another of their own compositions, If I Cant Have You, for the film and its soundtrack, but after hearing the Perren-produced version by Yvonne Elliman, preferred it to their own, which was relegated to a b-side. The Elliman production topped the Hot 100 and went Gold for U.S. sales over 1 million. The Saturday Night Fever soundtrack album would go on to sell over 15 million copies and in 1979 Perren received a Grammy Award for Album of the Year for his contribution, the first of two back-to-back Grammys he would earn. In 1978, Perren signed Peaches & Herb to his production company, MVP Productions. Through him, the duo inked a deal with Polydor Records. Their first Polydor album, 2 Hot, included the Gold single and Top Five pop and R&B hit Shake Your Groove Thing as well the number-one crossover smash Reunited and third single Weve Got Love. 2 Hot went Platinum on the strength of those three hits, occupying the number-two pop albums spot for six weeks in early 1979. Peaches & Herb follow-up Twice the Fire went Gold and yielded the singles, Roller Skate Mate (Part 1), and I Pledge My Love. He received his second accolade from the Recording Academy by winning the first Grammy Award for Best Disco Recording in 1980 for Gloria Gaynors I Will Survive. Gaynors recording went to number one in both the U.S. and the UK, eventually being certified Double Platinum by the RIAA for sales of over four million copies in the U.S. The song became a disco classic and has been recorded by dozens of artists in the decades since its debut including charting versions by Cake, Chantay Savage, and Diana Ross. However, the disco craze had been so overwhelming in some quarters that it caused a backlash so strong that the Recording Academy reacted by omitting the category before the following year; this, then, was the only Grammy ever specifically awarded for the disco genre. Perren last worked with New Edition in 1986 on their Under the Blue Moon album, but by the end of the decade he was largely inactive as a writer and producer. In the 1990s, Perren would experience a resurgence of success as the boyband phenomenon sought musical credibility and instant recognizability with covers of 1970s soul-disco hits. Boyz II Men eclipsed the success of the G.C. Cameron original with their cover of Perrens Its So Hard to Say Goodbye to Yesterday, hitting number two on the Hot 100 and the top spot on the Hot R&B Singles chart. The song was later covered by Irish boyband Westlife. In 1998, British boyband 911 took a cover of More Than A Woman that was faithful to the Tavares production to number two in the UK. In 1993, Perren suffered a massive stroke. He died 11 years later at the age of 61 in his home in Chatsworth, Los Angeles. He is interred in the Forest Lawn Memorial Park (Hollywood Hills).
Posted on: Sun, 15 Jun 2014 10:53:34 +0000

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