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Bill Danoff

 
Artist: Bill Danoff

Similar Artists:

Taffy Nivert, John Denver

Worked With:

Milton Okun, Taffy Danoff, Margot Chapman
  • Born: May 07, 1946, Springfield, MA
  • Genres: Rock
  • Instrument: Guitar, Vocals, Guitar (Acoustic)
  • Representative Albums: "Souvenir," "I Guess He'd Rather Be in Colorado," "Blasted in the Basement"

Biography

Despite his two Grammy Awards, a handful of award nominations, and his induction into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, Bill Danoff isn't quite a household name. John Denver, another singer/songwriter and a contemporary of Danoff's, is more widely known, thanks to a couple of Danoff's songs that helped make the folk-rock crooner from New Mexico the star that he became in the 1970s. Along with Denver and Taffy Nivert, Danoff wrote the song that would thrust Denver into the national spotlight and become his signature song, "Take Me Home Country Roads." The single rose to number one on the charts. "I Guess He'd Rather Be in Colorado," another song penned by Danoff and Nivert and sung by Denver, was adopted as the Centennial State's theme. Danoff also wrote another popular tune, "Baby You Look Good to Me Tonight."

Danoff first took up songwriting while he was a student at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C. He and Nivert, who would later become his wife, joined forces in a duo that was called Fat City. The duo later evolved into Bill and Taffy and toured with Denver in the early '70s. They took on a singer named Margot Chapman and a teenaged piano player and vocalist named Jon Carroll in 1974, and the quartet called itself the Starland Vocal Band. Danoff and his new group signed a deal with Windsong, a label established by Denver, and soon had a hit single from their eponymous first album in 1976. Thanks to the success of that first single, the Starland Vocal Band received a television series on the CBS network. After releasing four albums, the group members went their separate ways in 1980. Danoff's marriage to Nivert became a casualty of the band's breakup and they, too, split up.

Danoff continued in music as a solo performer. His later compositions include a pair of songs that hit the Top Ten, "Friends With You" and "Late Night Radio." Another song, "Potter's Wheel," is featured on Something Different from Denver. In 1998, Danoff helped produce a benefit concert called John Denver Remembered -- By the Old Cellar Door Gang, which included Denver's former bandmates. Three years later, Danoff received the John Denver Award from the World Folk Music Association. He owns and operates a restaurant named after his most popular band, Starland Express, located in Washington, D.C. ~ Linda Seida, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Bill Danoff
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Bill Danoff (born William Danoff, May 7, 1946, Springfield, Massachusetts) is an American songwriter and singer. His best known song as a performer is "Afternoon Delight", which Danoff performed as a member of the Starland Vocal Band. As a songwriter, he also wrote or co-wrote hits for John Denver, Emmylou Harris and Doug and the Slugs.

Biography

Danoff and his then-wife, Taffy Nivert, wrote "I Guess He'd Rather Be in Colorado" and "Take Me Home, Country Roads," both of which were hits for John Denver. The latter song is the de facto state song of West Virginia, although it has no official status as such (and was written in a house in the Georgetown neighborhood of Washington, D.C.) Denver recorded about a dozen Danoff compositions from 1972 through the end of his career.

On the strength of their track record as songwriters, Danoff and Nivert recorded several albums before forming a group called the Starland Vocal Band. It was this group which recorded "Afternoon Delight", a #1 hit in 1976. On July 4, 1976 "Afternoon Delight" was the number one hit on the Billboard Hot 100. Starland replaced Rhoda with a half hour weekly series that same summer. Danoff and Nivert were responsible for putting film director Robert Altman and producer Jerry Weintraub together for the film, Nashville.

Danoff also worked with Emmylou Harris co-authoring "Boulder to Birmingham" (one of Harris' better known compositions) with her. This track was recorded by The Hollies in 1976, and became a Top 10 hit in New Zealand. In 1982, Danoff and fellow Starland Vocal Band member Jon Carroll wrote "Who Knows How To Make Love Stay", a Top 40 Canadian hit for Doug and the Slugs.

Danoff is a graduate of Cathedral High School in Springfield, Massachusetts, and of Georgetown University. In 1976, at the height of Starland Vocal Band's and John Denver's popularity, they met with current Cathedral High students and appeared together (Starland Vocal Band opened for John Denver and they later performed together) that night at a concert at the Springfield Civic Center.

In the fall of 2007 Danoff taught a songwriters course at his alma mater, Georgetown University.

External links


 
 
Learn More
Afternoon Delight: The Best of the Starland Vocal Band (1995 Album by Starland Vocal Band)
Profile: Best of Emmylou Harris (1978 Album by Emmylou Harris)
Starland Vocal Band (Rock Band, '70s)

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Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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