Roy Dea was a record producer He produced mainly Country artists which resulted in a good amount of hits. In his early period, he did produce some r&b recordings.
Roy Dea | |
---|---|
Born | 18 April 1940 Texas, United States |
Died | 18 August 1997 |
Occupation(s) | Record producer, music publisher |
Years active | 1960s - 1990s |
Background
editRoy Dea (second name pronounced Day[1]) was born in Texas on April 18, 1940.
Artists he worked with include, Johnny Rodriguez on his release, Pass Me By (If You're Only Passing Through)", Dickey Lee on his release, "9,999,999 Tears", Gary Stewart on his release, "She's Actin' Single (I'm Drinkin' Doubles)",[2] and Randy Gurley on her releases "Don't Treat Me Like a Stranger"[3] and "If I Ever".[4]
It was Roy Dea who was responsible for Gary Stewart to sign up with RCA Records in 1973. Stewart had recorded a demo tape of Motown songs in a country style. Dea found the tape and encouraged Stewart to sign with RCA.[5] With Stewart working with Dea, a series of good albums followed.[6]
Prior to coming on board with RCA, Dea was working for the Mercury label.[7]
Career
editRoy Dea produced the single, "The Hurt Won't Go Away" for Margie Hendrix which was released on Mercury in 1967.[8]
At some stage, Dea became unsatisfied with working for the Mercury label. He moved to Shreveport. In 1970, he returned to Music City and worked with Sun Records. It was his friend and fellow record producer Jerry Kennedy who convinced him to come back to Mercury.[9] This was reported in the March 14 issues of both Cash Box and Record World that Dea had joined the Mercury Record Corporation's A&R staff in Nashville.[10][11] According to Kennedy, Dea was one of the few people he felt he could trust to handle the artists in his name and would be involved in both signing and producing country and r&b acts for the label.[12] It was mentioned in the Record World article that Dea would be expanding the Mercury roster himself as well as taking on some of the production of the prformers that Kennedy was handling.[13]
Johnny Rodriguez was a guitarist in Tom T. Hall's band. It was around 1972 that Hall took Rodriguez to the office of Roy Dea and Jerry Kennedy to audition for the producers at Mercury's Nashville division. Rodriguez performed songs, "I Can't Stop Loving You" and "If I’d Left It Up to You". After hearing his renditions, Dea signed him up immediately.[14] According to the alancackett.com website, when Rodriguez was singing "I Can’t Stop Loving You", he broke into a Spanish verse which resulted in Dea being overcome by it.[15]
It was in the early to mid-1970s that Roy Dea was hired by Jerry Bradley as a producer. This happened when Bradley joined RCA.[16]
It was noted in the June 10, 1994 issue of Radio & Records that Roy Dea and Paul Randall of WSIX in Nashville had formed joint publishing companies, Blue Day Music (BMI) and Gray Music (ASCAP). The offices were located at 30 Music Square West, Ste, 155, Nashville, TN 37203.[17]
Dea produced Johnny Rodriguez' album You Can Say That Again that was released on HighTone Records HCD 8073 in 1996.[18]
Hit productions (selective)
edit- 1974 - "Drinkin' Thing" by Gary Stewart
- 1974 - "Out of Hand" by Gary Stewart
- 1975 - "She's Actin' Single (I'm Drinkin' Doubles)" by Gary Stewart
- 1975 - "Rocky" by Dickey Lee
- 1977 - "May the Force Be with You Always" by Tom T. Hall
- 1978 - "What Have You Got to Lose" by Tom T. Hall
- 1979 - "Don't Treat Me Like a Stranger" by Randy Gurley
- 1979 - "If I Ever" by Randy Gurley
- 1979 - "The Old Side of Town" by Tom T. Hall[citation needed]
Death
editRoy Dea suffered a heart attack in Nashville on August 18, 1997.[19] He died two days later on August 20 at age 57.[20][21]
Further reading
edit- hitparade.ch - Roy Dea Songs von Roy Dea
References
edit- ^ Phoenix New Times, January 15, 1992 - MUSIC NEWS, TIME IN A BOTTLEAFTER DECADES OF DRINKIN' AND THINKIN', HONDY-TONK MAVERICK GARY STEWART HAS TROUBLE GETTING MELLOW By Larry Crowley
- ^ Roland Note - Roy Dea, Apr 18, 1940
- ^ Cash Box, June 16, 1979 - Page 38 45 - REVIEWS - LP, RANDY GURLEY (RCA PB -11611) Don't Treat Me Like A Stranger
- ^ Billboard, September 29, 1979 - Page 71 Billboard's Top Single Picks, recommended, RANDY GURLEY-If I Ever
- ^ The Musical Divide, May 28, 2020 - The Unbroken Circle: Gary Stewart – “She’s Actin’ Single (I’m Drinkin’ Doubles) (1975) By Zackary Kephart
- ^ Dallas Observer, December 26, 1996 - Roadshows By Matt Weitz
- ^ Nu Country - DAVE'S DIARY - 21 DECEMBER 2003 - GARY STEWART - Q & A
- ^ Billboard, April 8, 1967 - Page 8 Merc. Push on For New Acts
- ^ The Tennessean, Fri Aug 22, 1997 - Page 6 Obituary for Roy Dea
- ^ Cash Box, March 14, 1970 - Page 50 Roy Dea Joins Merc In Nashville
- ^ Record World, March 14, 1970 - Dea Joins Merc A&R, Nashville
- ^ Cash Box, March 14, 1970 - Page 50 Roy Dea Joins Merc In Nashville
- ^ Record World, March 14, 1970 - Dea Joins Merc A&R, Nashville
- ^ Billy Bob's Texas - JOHNNY RODRIGUEZ, ABOUT JOHNNY RODRIGUEZ:
- ^ Alan Cackett - Johnny Rodriguez ('79), First published in Country Music People, August 1979
- ^ Phoenix New Times, January 15, 1992 - MUSIC NEWS, TIME IN A BOTTLEAFTER DECADES OF DRINKIN' AND THINKIN', HONDY-TONK MAVERICK GARY STEWART HAS TROUBLE GETTING MELLOW By Larry Crowley
- ^ Radio & Records, June 10, 1994 - Page 29 NASHVILLE THIS WEEK
- ^ Discogs - Johnny Rodriguez (4) – You Can Say That Again
- ^ Roland Note - Roy Dea, Aug 18, 1997
- ^ Roland Note - Roy Dea, Aug 20, 1997
- ^ The Tennessean, Fri Aug 22, 1997 - Page 6 Obituary for Roy Dea