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Ben E. King

 

Singer, songwriter

When film director Rob Reiner was putting together the soundtrack to his nostalgic 1986 film about a group of boys growing up in the early 1960s, he remembered a song that perfectly captured the atmosphere of that period: "Stand by Me," a stark, soulful ballad by the early 1960s pop star Ben E. King, who had all but disappeared from the music scene by the 1980s. Reiner eventually titled his film Stand by Me; both film and song benefiting immensely from their union, as Stand by Me became a hit for the fledgling director, and King’s "Stand by Me" enjoyed a huge resurgence in popularity on radio stations across America in 1986. A generation that had never heard of Ben E. King found themselves tapping their toes and humming the distinctive melody of the song some 16 years after it enjoyed its first success.

Born Benjamin Earl Soloman in Henderson, North Carolina, on September 28, 1938, King moved with his family at age 11 to New York City, where his father opened a luncheonette in Harlem. King had sung in church choirs throughout his childhood; at Harlem’s James Fenimore Cooper Junior High he eagerly set out to start his own singing group, which was dubbed the Four B’s, as all of its members’ names started with the letter B. Accounts vary as to how King’s professional career got started, but most agree that it began in his father’s restaurant, where King often sang as he worked. Somehow, his smooth tenor attracted an authoritative ear, and King was asked to join the singing group the Crowns, with whom he immediately began touring on the rhythm and blues circuit.

Also cutting a swath through that circuit was a group called the Drifters; popular throughout the 1950s, the Drifters had cut 11 albums by 1958 when, with record sales slumping, the group disbanded. But George Treadwell, the Drifters’ manager, was contractually obliged to deliver the group to audiences for years to come.

Scrambling to replace the old group, Treadwell discovered the Crowns and renamed them the Drifters, as he had retained legal use of the name. A complete overhaul was apparently just the ticket for the Drifters. Atlantic Records liked their new sound so much that its executives assigned ace producers Jerry Leiber, Mike Stoller, and Phil Spector to produce a string of new recordings. The new Drifters struck quickly with the Number Two hit "There Goes My Baby," which was sung and co-written by King, then only 20, and followed by "Save the Last Dance for Me"—with King again contributing lead vocals—which reached Number One on the pop charts in 1960.

Another 1960 release by the Drifters featured King singing lead over a background of Spanish guitars. The

sound intrigued Spector and Leiber so much that they decided to try King as a soloist on a similar number, "Spanish Harlem." The song soared up the charts and King soon found himself performing solo as one of America’s most favored balladeers. His eminence was cemented the following year when "Stand by Me"—his own composotion—made the Top Ten on the pop charts and Number One on rhythm and blues lists.

A versatile performer who seemed to please pop and R & B audiences equally, King became a headline act across the country in the mid-1960s, appearing at prestigious concert halls, on network television, and abroad. Among King’s string of 1960s hit singles were "Don’t Play That Song," "That’s When It Hurts," and "I (Who Have Nothing)," which British sensation Tom Jones turned into a platinum-seller when he recorded it in 1970.

By the late 1960s, however, King’s career seemed to have run its course; though he had earned so much respect and affection at Atlantic that the company may have carried him indefinitely, King left the his label in 1969. "I didn’t really want to leave Atlantic," the singer explained in Bill Millar’s book, The Drifters, as quoted in the Encyclopedia of Pop, Rock, and Soul. "But I find [performers and record] companies are like a husband and wife. Eventually you get to a point where there’s really very little you can do for each other.… And one has to leave. So I had to."

King laid low for a period, trying to revive his career with the Mandala and Maxwell labels; but by 1974 he had seen enough and returned to Atlantic, where his career briefly flowered again with the 1975 Top Ten hit "Supernatural Thing—Part 1." Two years later King collaborated with the Average White Band, whose members had long idolized him, on the LP Benny and Us, which enjoyed mild success. King’s later solo LPs, 1978’s Let Me Live in Your Life and 1981’s Street Tough, saw him regain a measure of prominence on the R & B charts, but he would never again see the tremendous crossover popularity he had enjoyed in his heyday—except, of course, when the impassioned and soulful simplicity of "Stand by Me" captivated late 1980s listeners with its infectious echoes of a simpler time.

Selected discography
Spanish Harlem, Atlantic, 1961.
Ben E. King Sings for Soulful Lovers, Atlantic, 1962.
Don’t Play That Song, Atlantic, 1962.
Greatest Hits, Atlantic, 1964.
Seven Letters, Atlantic, 1965.
Beginning of It All, Mandala, 1971.
Supernatural Thing, Atlantic, 1975.
Ben E. King Story, Atlantic, 1975.
I Had a Love, Atlantic, 1976.
(With the Average White Band) Benny and Us, Atlantic, 1977.
Let Me Live in Your Life, Atlantic, 1978.
Music Trance, Atlantic, 1980.
Street Tough, Atlantic, 1980.
Rough Edges, Maxwell.

Sources
Books
Futrell, John, The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Black Music, Harmony Books, 1982.
Hardy, Phil, and Dave Laing, Encyclopedia of Rock, Schirmer, 1982.
The Rolling Stone Encyclopedia of Rock, edited by Jon Pareles and Patricia Romanowski, Rolling Stone Press/Summit Books, 1983.
Stambler, Irwin, Encyclopedia of Pop, Rock and Soul, St. Martin’s, 1974.

Periodicals
People, February 3, 1986; September 14, 1987.
Rolling Stone, January 26, 1989.
Stereo Review, December 1980; August 1981; May 1986.
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  • Genres: Rhythm & Blues

Biography

From the groundbreaking orchestrated productions of the Drifters to his own solo hits, Ben E. King was the definition of R&B elegance. King's plaintive baritone had all the passion of gospel, but the settings in which it was displayed were tailored more for his honey smooth phrasing and crisp enunciation, proving for perhaps the first time that R&B could be sophisticated and accessible to straight pop audiences. King's approach influenced countless smooth soul singers in his wake and his records were key forerunners of the Motown sound.

King was born Benjamin Earl Nelson in Henderson, NC, in 1938, and sang with his church choir before the family moved to Harlem in 1947. In junior high, he began performing with a street corner doo wop group called the Four B's, which won second place in an Apollo Theater talent contest. While still in high school, he was offered a chance to join the Moonglows, but was simply too young and inexperienced to stick. He subsequently worked at his father's restaurant as a singing waiter, which led to an invitation to become the baritone singer in a doo wop outfit called the Five Crowns in 1958. The Five Crowns performed several gigs at the Apollo Theater along with the Drifters, whose career had begun to flounder in the years since original lead singer Clyde McPhatter departed. Drifters manager George Treadwell, dissatisfied with the group members' unreliability and lack of success, fired them all in the summer of 1958 and hired the Five Crowns to assume the name of the Drifters (which he owned).

The new Drifters toured for about a year, playing to often hostile audiences who knew they were a completely different group. In early 1959, they went into the studio with producers Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller to cut their first records. A song Nelson (still performing under his given name) co-wrote called "There Goes My Baby" became his first lead vocal and the lush backing arrangement made highly unorthodox (in fact, virtually unheard-of) use of a string section. "There Goes My Baby" became a massive hit, laying the groundwork for virtually every smooth/uptown soul production that followed. Over the next two years, Nelson sang lead on several other Drifters classics, including "Dance With Me," "This Magic Moment," "Save the Last Dance for Me," and "I Count the Tears."

In 1960, Nelson approached Treadwell about a salary increase and a fairer share of the group's royalties. Treadwell rebuffed him and Nelson quit the group, at this point assuming the more memorable stage name Ben E. King in preparation for a solo career. Remaining on Atlantic, King scored his first solo hit with the stylish, Latin-tinged ballad "Spanish Harlem," a Jerry Leiber/Phil Spector composition that hit the Top Ten in early 1961. The follow-up, "Stand By Me," a heartfelt ode to friendship and devotion co-written by King, became his signature song and an enduring R&B classic; it was also his biggest hit, topping the R&B charts and reaching the pop Top Five. King scored a few more chart singles through 1963, including velvety smooth pop-soul productions like "Amor," "Don't Play That Song (You Lied)," and the Italian tune "I (Who Have Nothing)." In the post-British Invasion years, King had a rough go of it on the pop charts but continued to score R&B hits. 1967's Southern-fried "What Is Soul?" was one of his last singles for Atco; seeking to revive his commercial fortunes, King departed in 1969.

A 1970 album on Maxwell, Rough Edges, failed to generate much attention, and King was forced to make a living touring the oldies circuit. In 1975, Atlantic president Ahmet Ertegun caught King's act in a Miami lounge and invited him to re-sign with the label. King scored an unlikely comeback smash with the disco track "Supernatural Thing, Part I," which returned him to the top of the R&B charts in 1975 and also reached the pop Top Five. While he was unable to duplicate that single's success, King recorded several more albums for Atlantic up through 1981, and also collaborated with the Average White Band in 1977 on the album Benny & Us. After leaving Atlantic a second time, King toured in a version of the Drifters beginning in 1982. In 1986, "Stand By Me" was prominently featured in the Rob Reiner film of the same name; re-released as a single, it climbed into the Top Ten all over again. In its wake, King returned to solo recording, issuing a new album every few years all the way up through the '90s. He also guested on recordings by Heaven 17 and Mark Knopfler, among others. King's 1999 album Shades of Blue (on Half Note Records) found him branching out into jazz territory, performing with a big band and guests like Milt Jackson and David "Fathead" Newman. 2006 saw the release of a brand new album, I've Been Around, on True Life Records. ~ Steve Huey, Rovi
Wikipedia on Answers.com:

Ben E. King

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Ben E. King

Ben E. King, 2006
Background information
Birth name Benjamin Earl Nelson
Also known as Benjamin Earl King
Born September 28, 1938 (1938-09-28) (age 73)
Origin Harlem, New York, New York, United States
Genres Soul, rhythm and blues
Occupations Singer, songwriter, record producer
Instruments Vocals, piano, keyboards
Years active 1958–present
Labels Atco Records
Atlantic Records
Associated acts The Drifters
The Five Crowns
Website www.beneking.info

Benjamin Earl King[1] (born September 28, 1938), better known as Ben E. King, is an American soul singer. He is perhaps best known as the singer and co-composer of "Stand by Me", a U.S. Top 10 hit in both 1961 and 1986 and a #1 hit in the UK in 1987, and as one of the principal lead singers of the R&B vocal group The Drifters.[2]

Contents

Early life

King was born Benjamin Earl Nelson on September 28, 1938 in Henderson, North Carolina,[2] and moved to Harlem, New York, at age 9.

In 1958, he joined a doo wop group called The Five Crowns.

Career

Later in 1958, The Drifters' manager fired the members of the original Drifters, and replaced them with The Five Crowns. He had a string of R&B hits with the group on Atlantic Records. Nelson co-wrote and sang lead on the first Atlantic hit by the new version of the Drifters, "There Goes My Baby" (1959). He also sang lead, using his birth name, on a succession of hits by the team of Doc Pomus and Mort Shuman, including "Save the Last Dance for Me", "Dance With Me", "This Magic Moment" and "I Count the Tears".[2] King only recorded 10 songs with The Drifters, including a non-single called "Temptation" (later redone by Drifters vocalist Johnny Moore).

Due to a dispute over his contract, including a salary increase and a fair share of royalties, King was never again given a chance by Drifters manager George Treadwell to perform with the group on tour or on television. After the dispute settled, King was hired only to sing until a replacement for him was found. On television, fellow Drifters member Charlie Thomas usually lip synched the songs that King had recorded with the Drifters.This end gave rise to a new beginning.

In May 1960, King left the Drifters,[2] assuming the more memorable stage name Ben E. King in preparation for a successful solo career. Remaining on Atlantic Records on its Atco imprint, King scored his first solo hit with the ballad "Spanish Harlem" (1961).[2] His next single, "Stand by Me", written with Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller, ultimately would be voted as one of the Songs of the Century by the Recording Industry Association of America. "Stand by Me", "There Goes My Baby" and "Spanish Harlem" were named as three of The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's 500 Songs that Shaped Rock and Roll and were all given a Grammy Hall of Fame Award, as well as "Save The Last Dance For Me". King's other well-known songs were "Don't Play That Song (You Lied)" (covered by Aretha Franklin in 1970), "Amor", "Seven Letters", "How Can I Forget", "On the Horizon", "Young Boy Blues", "I (Who Have Nothing)", "First Taste of Love", "Here Comes the Night", "Ecstasy", and "That's When It Hurts".

In the summer of 1963, King had a Top 30 hit with "I (Who Have Nothing)", which reached the Top 10 on New York's radio station, WMCA. The song has been covered many times, notably by Luther Vandross and Martha Wash, John Lennon, Shirley Bassey, Liquid Smoke, Tom Jones, Sylvester James, U2, Bruce Springsteen, Jedi Mind Tricks, and more recently by American Idol contestant Jordin Sparks. King's records continued to place well on the Billboard Hot 100 chart until 1965. British pop bands began to dominate the pop music scene, but King still continued to make R&B hits and minor pop hits, including "What is Soul?" (1967) and "Supernatural Thing" (1975). A 1986 re-issue of "Stand by Me" followed the song's use as the theme song to the movie Stand By Me.

In 1990, King and Bo Diddley, along with Doug Lazy, recorded a revamped rap version of The Monotones' 1958 hit song "Book of Love" for the soundtrack of the movie Book of Love. He also recorded a children's album, I Have Songs In My Pocket, written and produced by children's music artist Bobby Susser in 1998, which won the "Early Childhood News' Directors' Choice Award" and "Dr. Toy's/The Institute For Childhood Resources Award". King performed "Stand by Me" on the Late Show with David Letterman in 2007. Ahmet Ertegun said, "King is one of the greatest singers in the history of rock and roll and rhythm and blues."[3]

As a Drifter and as a solo artist, King had achieved five No. 1 hits: "There Goes My Baby", "Save The Last Dance For Me", "Stand By Me", "Supernatural Thing", and the 1986 re-issue of "Stand By Me". He also earned 12 Top 10 hits and 25 Top 40 hits, from 1959 to 1986. He was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a Drifter; he also had been nominated as a solo artist.

King's "I Who Have Nothing" was selected The Sopranos' Peppers and Eggs Soundtrack CD [2001].

Current activities

Currently, King is active in his charitable foundation, the Stand By Me Foundation and is also a founding Champion of the Global Village Champions Foundation along with Muhammad Ali, Gary US Bonds and Yank Barry.[4] He has been a resident of Teaneck, New Jersey since the late 1960s.[5]

King performed "Stand By Me" during a televised tribute to late comedian George Carlin, as he was one of Carlin's favorite artists.

On November 11, 2010, he performed "Stand By Me" on the Latin Grammys with Prince Royce.

King toured the United Kingdom, performing at venues in England, Scotland and Wales during 2011. For a full list of the tour dates, visit CanAm Entertainment.

King's album "Heart & Soul" released in 2010 on the CanAm Records label takes a page from The Great American Songbook and features contributions from various jazz greats. JazzTimes heralded King's new release for its emotional and musical impact.

Discography

Albums

Other albums

  • Benny and Us (1977) US: #33 (Average White Band & Ben E. King)
  • The Atlantic Family Live in Montreux (1977) (A recording involving the Average White Band and other artists)
  • Soul Meeting (1968) (as a member of the Soul Clan)

Singles with The Drifters

  • "There Goes My Baby" (1959) R&B: #1 US: #2 with The Drifters
  • "Oh My Love (1959) with The Drifters
  • "Dance With Me" (1959) R&B: #2 US: #15 UK: #17 with The Drifters
  • "This Magic Moment" (1960) R&B: #4 US: #16 with The Drifters
  • "Lonely Winds" (1960) R&B: #9 US: #54 with The Drifters
  • "Save The Last Dance For Me" (1960) R&B: #1 US: #1 UK: #2 with The Drifters
  • "Nobody But Me" (1960) with The Drifters
  • "I Count the Tears" (1960) US: #17 UK: #28 with The Drifters
  • "Sometimes I Wonder" (1962) with The Drifters

Solo singles

  • "Brace Yourself (1960, Atco)
  • "Show Me the Way" (1960, Atco)
  • "A Help Each Other (1960, Atlantic) with Lavern Baker
  • "How Often" (1960, Atlantic) with Lavern Baker
  • "Spanish Harlem (1961, Atco) R&B: #15 US: #10
  • "First Taste of Love" (1961) US: #53 UK: #27 (b-side of "Spanish Harlem")
  • "Stand by Me" (1961) R&B: #1 US: #4 UK: #27
  • "Amor" (1961) R&B: #10 US: #18 UK: #38
  • "Young Boy Blues" (1961) US: #66
  • "Here Comes the Night" (1961) US: #81 (b-side of "Young Boy Blues")
  • "Ecstasy" (1962) US: #56
  • "Don't Play That Song (You Lied)" (1962) R&B: #2 US: #11
  • "Auf Wiedersehen, My Dear (1962)
  • "Too Bad" (1962) US: #88
  • "I'm Standing By" (1962) US:#111
  • "Tell Daddy" (1962) US:#122 R&B: #29
  • "How Can I Forget" (1963) R&B: #23 US: #85
  • "I (Who Have Nothing)" (1963) R&B: #16 US: #29
  • "I Could Have Danced All Night" (1963) US: #72
  • "What Now My Love" US:#102 (1964)
  • "That's When It Hurts" (1964)
  • "What Can A Man Do" (1964) US:#113
  • "It's All Over" (1964) US: #72
  • "Around The Corner" (1964) US:#125
  • "Seven Letters" (1965) R&B: #11 US: #45
  • "The Record (Baby I Love You)" (1965) Pop: #84 R&B: #24
  • "She's Gone Again" (1965) US: #128
  • "Cry No More" (1965)
  • "Goodnight My Love" (1965) US: #91
  • "So Much Love" (1966) US: #96
  • "Get In a Hurry" (1966)
  • "I Swear By Stars Above" (1966) R&B: #35 (b-side of "Get in a Hurry")
  • "They Don't Give Medals to Yesterday's Heroes" (1966)
  • "What Is Soul?" (1966) R&B: #38 (b-side of "They Don't Give...")
  • "A Man Without a Dream (1967)
  • "Tears, Tears, Tears" (1967) R&B: #34 US: #93 (b-side of "A Man Without...")
  • "Katherine" (1967)
  • "Don't Take Your Sweet Love Away" (1967) R&B: #44
  • "We Got a Thing Goin' On" (1968) with Dee Dee Sharp US: #127
  • "Don't Take Your Love from Me" (1968) US: #117
  • "Where's the Girl" (1968)
  • "It Ain't Fair" (1968)
  • "Til' I Can't Take It Anymore" US: #134
  • "Hey Little One" (1969)
  • "I Can't Take It Like a Man" (1970, Maxwell)
  • "Take Me to the Pilot" (1972, Mandala)
  • "Into the Mystic" (1972)
  • "Spread Myself Around" (1973)
  • "Supernatural Thing, Part 1" (1975, Atlantic) R&B: #1 US: #5
  • "Do It in the Name of Love" (1975) R&B: #4 US: #60
  • "We Got Love" (1975)
  • "I Had a Love" (1975) R&B: #23 (b-side of "We Got Love")
  • "I Betcha you Didn't Know" (1976)
  • "Get It Up" (1977) with Average White Band
  • "A Star in the Ghetto" (1977) R&B: #25 with Average White Band
  • "Fool for You Anyway" (1977) with Average White Band
  • "I See the Light" (1978)
  • "Fly Away to My Wonderland" (1978)
  • "Music Trance" (1979) R&B: #29
  • "Street Tough" (1981)
  • "You Made the Difference in My Life" (1981)
  • "Stand By Me [re-issue]" (1986) US: #9 UK: #1
  • "Spanish Harlem [re-issue]" (1987)
  • "Save the Last Dance for Me" [re-recorded] (1987, EMI-Manhattan) UK: #69
  • "What's Important to Me" (1991, Ichiban)
  • "You've Got All of Me" (1992)
  • "You Still Move Me" (1992)
  • "4th of July" (1997, Right Stuff)[6]

References

  1. ^ "King, Ben E.". Veromi. http://www.veromi.net/Summary.asp?fn=Ben&mn=E&ln=King&dobmm=&dobdd=&doby=1938&city=&state=&age=&vw=&Search=&Input=&x=88&y=11. Retrieved 2010-03-05. 
  2. ^ a b c d e Strong, Martin C. (2000). The Great Rock Discography (5th ed.). Edinburgh: Mojo Books. pp. 531–532. ISBN 1-84195-017-3. 
  3. ^ Beneking.info
  4. ^ Benekingstandbyme.org
  5. ^ Beckerman, Jim. "Ben E. King can't stop the music", The Record (Bergen County), May 10, 2008. Accessed March 1, 2009.
  6. ^ a b c d Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 302. ISBN 1-904994-10-5. 

External links


 
 
Related topics:
The Best of Ben E. King & the Drifters [K-Tel] (1994 Album by Ben E. King And The Drifters)
Billboard Top R&B Hits: 1961 (1989 Album by Various Artists)
Child of a King (Album by The Harmonizing Four)

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