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Dan Seals

 
Artist: Dan Seals
Dan Seals

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Diane Tidwell, Kyle Lehning, Shane Keister, John Ford Coley, Steve Gibson

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See Dan Seals Lyrics
  • Born: February 08, 1948, McCamey, TX
  • Died: March 25, 2009, Nashville, TN
  • Active: '70s, '80s, '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Country
  • Instrument: Vocals, Guitar
  • Representative Albums: "The Songwriter," "Rage On," "The Best of Dan Seals"
  • Representative Songs: "Bop," "Meet Me in Montana," "Three Time Loser"

Biography

After scoring several hits as part of the soft rock duo England Dan & John Ford Coley, Dan Seals reinvented himself as a country-pop singer and enjoyed a tremendous run of success during the latter half of the '80s. Born in McCamey, TX, in 1948, his brother was Jim Seals, later of another successful soft rock duo, Seals & Crofts. Both brothers played with their parents in the Seals Family Band, with Dan learning string bass; however, after their parents divorced, Dan spent several years moving around with his mother. They eventually settled in Dallas in 1958, and Seals spent his teen years playing in garage bands, where he first met John Ford Coley. They worked together in a band called the Shimmerers, which recorded some demos in 1965 and became the Southwest F.O.B. two years later, scoring a chart single with "The Smell of Incense." Seals and Coley left to form a duo in 1969 and kicked around for a while, landing an early-'70s deal with A&M that went sour. They finally hit big in the late '70s, with soft rock touchstones "I'd Really Love to See You Tonight" and "Nights Are Forever Without You" ranking as their best-known singles. Seals went solo in 1980, signing with Atlantic and keeping the name England Dan for his debut album, Stones. In 1981, he underwent a grueling battle with the IRS that cost him nearly everything he owned. His follow-up album, Harbinger, stiffed, and he turned his attention to country music, adapting his style to fit the demands of country radio while still keeping his signature soft sound. Signed to Liberty/Capitol, he scored a pair of Top Ten hits on the country charts in 1984 with "(You Bring Out) The Wild Side of Me" and "God Must Be a Cowboy." "My Old Yellow Car" and "My Baby's Got Good Timing" had similar success in 1985, and his next single, a duet with Marie Osmond called "Meet Me in Montana," went all the way to number one. It also kicked off a spectacular run of nine straight chart-toppers: 1986 brought "Bop" and "Everything That Glitters (Is Not Gold)"; 1987 saw "I Will Be There," "Three Time Loser," and "You Still Move Me"; 1988 featured "Addicted" and "One Friend"; and 1989 gave him one more in "Big Wheels in the Moonlight." Not only that, he managed two more number ones in 1990, thanks to "Good Times" and "Love on Arrival." However, the arrival of Garth Brooks abruptly changed the country landscape, and Seals found his style out of favor. He moved to Warner Brothers in 1991, without much success, and despite releasing a few recordings on smaller labels in the latter half of the '90s, he was effectively a touring artist for the remainder of the decade. ~ Steve Huey, All Music Guide
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Dan Seals

Background information
Birth name Danny Wayland Seals
Also known as England Dan
Born February 8, 1948(1948-02-08)
McCamey, Texas, U.S.
Died March 25, 2009 (aged 61)
Nashville, Tennessee, U.S.
Genres Country
Occupations Singer-songwriter
Instruments Vocals, guitar, saxophone
Years active 1971-2009
Labels Atlantic, Liberty, Capitol, Warner Bros., Intersound, TDC, Lightyear
Associated acts Jim Seals, John Ford Coley, Johnny Duncan, Brady Seals, Troy Seals
Website http://www.sealsandseals.com

Danny Wayland "Dan" Seals (February 8, 1948 – March 25, 2009) was an American musician. He first gained fame as the "England Dan" half of the soft rock duo England Dan and John Ford Coley, which charted nine singles between 1976 and 1980, including the #2 pop hit "I'd Really Love to See You Tonight". He was also the younger brother of Jim Seals from the duo Seals & Crofts.

After the duo disbanded, Seals began a solo career in country music. Throughout the 1980s and into the early 1990s, he released sixteen studio albums and charted more than twenty singles on the country charts. Eleven of his singles reached Number One: "Meet Me in Montana" (with Marie Osmond), "Bop" (also a #42 pop hit), "Everything That Glitters (Is Not Gold)", "You Still Move Me", "I Will Be There", "Three Time Loser", "One Friend", "Addicted", "Big Wheels in the Moonlight", "Love on Arrival", and "Good Times". Five more of Seals' singles also reached Top Ten on the same chart.

Contents

Background

Seals was born in McCamey, Texas to a music-oriented family. He was taught by his father to play the upright bass, and his brothers, Eddie Seals and Jim Seals, are recording artists in their own right. Dan moved to Dallas as a teenager. He graduated from Samuell High School in Pleasant Grove in 1966. He and classmate John Colley, who later changed the spelling of his last name to Coley, formed a group with three other Samuell students called the Playboys Five. The Seals brothers (Jim and Dan), as well as Crofts, are members of the Bahá'í Faith.[1] Seals' cousins include country music artists Johnny Duncan and Troy Seals, as well as Brady Seals, lead singer of the band Hot Apple Pie and ex-member of Little Texas.

Collaboration with John Ford Coley

Dan joined with fellow W.W. Samuell High School classmate and longtime friend John Ford Coley to perform first as part of Dallas pop/psych group Southwest F.O.B. (Freight on Board), whose material has been re-released on CD by the Sundazed label. As England Dan & John Ford Coley – Seals using a childhood nickname he'd gained from his affected English accent and love of The Beatles[2] – the two men would have several pop hits in the second half of the 1970s. "I'd Really Love To See You Tonight" was the pair's biggest hit, reaching #2 in the second half of 1976 and becoming their only gold single. Their other hits include "Nights Are Forever Without You" (#10 in 1976-77); "It's Sad to Belong" (#21) and "Gone Too Far" (#23), both in 1977; "We'll Never Have to Say Goodbye Again" (#9 in 1978); and their last top-40 hit, "Love Is the Answer" (#10 in May 1979). After seven LPs, they disbanded in 1980 and Seals reinvented himself as a solo country-pop artist, signing with Atlantic Records in 1980.

Stones and Harbinger

He kept the name England Dan for his debut album, Stones. Although no single charted on the country charts, his first single ever as a solo artist "Late at Night" did peak at #57 on the US Hot 100. Other than that, it was unsuccessful. In 1981, he lost nearly everything that he had in a battle with the Internal Revenue Service.[citation needed] His next album, Harbinger, was unsuccessful commercially. None of its singles charted, and he turned his attention to country music, adapted his style to fit country radio's demands while still keeping his signature soft sound. He signed to Capitol Records in 1983.

Rebel Heart

1983's Rebel Heart, his first album for Capitol, was much more successful than his first two albums. The first single "Everybody's Dream Girl" reached the top 20, peaking at #18. The next single "After You", however, charted lower, at #28. "You Really Go For the Heart", was even less successful, but still managed to crack the top 40, reaching #37. The album's last single, "God Must Be a Cowboy" was much more successful than the album's first three singles, becoming his first top 10 hit in early-1984, at #10. The album peaked at #40 on the country albums chart, his first album to enter Top Country Albums

San Antone

His 1984 album San Antone was even more successful. "(You Bring Out) The Wild Side of Me", the album's first single, reached #9. The next single "My Baby's Got Good Timing" became his first Top 5, at #2. In early-1985, the album's third and final single "My Old Yellow Car" peaked at #9. This album peaked at #24 on the country albums chart.

Won't Be Blue Anymore

His 1985 album Won't Be Blue Anymore became his most successful studio album, reaching #1 on the country albums chart and earning RIAA gold certification. "Meet Me in Montana", a duet with Marie Osmond, became his first number-one hit in 1985 and the first of nine straight number-ones.[3] Written by Paul Davis[4], the single won the artists the Vocal Duo of the Year Award at the CMA awards in 1986. The album's next single "Bop", also co-written by Paul Davis, with Jennifer Kimball, became his first solo number-one and was named Single of the Year at 1986's CMA awards.[3] After it came "Everything That Glitters (Is Not Gold)", was about a rodeo cowboy having to cope with single parenthood and was written by Seals and fellow Texan Bob McDill.[5]

On the Front Line

On the Front Line reached #12 on the country albums chart. The three singles from this album all reached number-one in 1987[3]: "You Still Move Me", "I Will Be There" and "Three Time Loser".

The Best

Dan Seals released his first compilation album The Best in 1987. All of the songs included on this album were all top ten hits. The lone new track "One Friend", which was originally included on 1984's San Antone, was re-recorded for this collection and continued his number-one streak. This album peaked at #7 and was certified platinum.

Rage On

1988 saw the release of Dan Seals' Rage On album. The first single, "Addicted", not only became a number one country hit but also got its writer, Cheryl Wheeler, a contract with Capitol Records in 1989.[6] The next single "Big Wheels in the Moonlight" was released in late-1988, and reached number-one in early-1989, becoming his ninth number-one single in a row. This streak was broken when the album's third and final single "They Rage On" peaked at #5. This album peaked at #6 on the Country albums chart, and is the second highest peaking of his albums.

On Arrival

Dan Seals began the 1990s with his eighth album, On Arrival. The first single "Love on Arrival" reached number-one in 1990, and stayed there for three weeks. After it came a cover of the Sam Cooke standard "Good Times". This cover was not only his last Number One, but also his last Top 40 hit, as the album's next two tracks ("Bordertown" and "Water Under the Bridge") failed to reach the top 40 in the United States, although they reached the top 40 in Canada.

Greatest Hits

Dan Seals' second compilation album, titled Greatest Hits was released in 1991. It contained his hits from the albums Won't Be Blue Anymore, Rage On, and On Arrival, along with a new track, "Ball and Chain", which was not released as a single.

Walking the Wire

By this time, artists such as Garth Brooks had changed the country music landscape abruptly, and Dan Seals found his style out of favor. He moved to Warner Bros. Records in 1991, and released Walking the Wire. Only three of the five singles released from this album, "Sweet Little Shoe", "Mason Dixon Line", and "When Love Comes Around the Bend" actually charted, but none of them reached top 40. Two other singles, "Good Goodbye", and "We Are One," failed to chart. Additionally, the album failed to crack the top country albums chart.

Later albums, career and death

Although Dan Seals was a touring artist for the rest of the 1990s, he did release a few more albums on smaller labels throughout the decade, such as Fired Up in 1994, his final album for Warner Bros. He signed to Intersound and released In a Quiet Room, comprising acoustic versions of his earlier hits in 1995. He then switched to TDC and released In a Quiet Room II in 1998, followed by Make It Home in 2002.[7]

In 2008, Seals completed radiation treatments for mantle cell lymphoma at Vanderbilt in Nashville and M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston and received a stem cell transplant in December of that year at NIH in Maryland. Seals died at the age of 61, on March 25, 2009, at his daughter's home following those treatments.[8]

Discography

Studio albums

Compilation albums

  • The Best (1987)
  • Greatest Hits (1991)
  • The Best of Dan Seals (1994)
  • Certified Hits (2001)
  • The Best of Dan Seals (2005)

References

  1. ^ Dan Seals has found a sense of hope since embracing Faith by Frank Roberts, August 17, 1994, The Virginian-Pilot, Copyright (c) 1994, Landmark Communications, Inc.
  2. ^ http://www.classicbands.com/england.html
  3. ^ a b c Whitburn, Joel (1996). The Billboard Book of Top 40 Country Hits, p.284. ISBN 0-8230-7632-6.
  4. ^ Whitburn, Joel (1991). The Billboard Book of Number One Country Hits, p.432-433. ISBN 0-8230-7553-2.
  5. ^ Whitburn, Joel (1991). The Billboard Book of Number One Country Hits, p.458. ISBN 0-8230-7553-2.
  6. ^ Whitburn, Joel (1991). The Billboard Book of Number One Country Hits, p.531. ISBN 0-8230-7553-2.
  7. ^ "CMT.com : Dan Seals : Biography". CMT. http://www.cmt.com/artists/az/seals_dan/bio.jhtml. Retrieved 2009-01-06. 
  8. ^ Seals and Seals - Dan Seals Memorial
  • Lomax III, John (1998). "Dan Seals". In The encyclopedia of Country Music. Paul Kingsbury, Editor. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 474–5.
    • Granberry, Michael. "Dan Seals, Pleasant Grove youth who grew up to be music star, dies at 61". The Dallas Morning News. Friday March 27, 2009.

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