|
Daryl Hall (born Daryl Franklin Hohl on October 11, 1946 Pottstown, Pennsylvania) is an American singer and songwriter best known as half of the music duo Hall & Oates (with music partner John Oates).
Starting his career as a teenager on the streets of Philadelphia, Hall quickly formed creative affiliations with such artists as Smokey Robinson, the Temptations and many other top soul singers of the ‘60s. He began his recording career with Kenny Gamble and Leon Huff, working as both an artist and session musician.
In 1967 he met John Oates and embarked on a 30-odd year creative journey. According to Daryl Hall they met when "We got in the middle of a fight at a record hop - I have no idea what the fight was about. I guess the Greek letters on one gang`s jackets didn`t appeal to the other gang. We both beat it out the back and met on the elevator while leaving the place rather quickly." In addition to his work with Oates, he has made music as a solo artist as well as recording with Robert Fripp in the late ‘70s, producing the much-acclaimed Sacred Songs as well as working on Fripp’s critically praised Exposure.
After almost 30 years with Sara Allen, his longtime girlfriend and musical collaborator, (made famous by the song "Sara Smile"), the couple decided to end their on again/off again relationship for good in 2001.[citation needed]
Hall restores and preserves historic homes in both the United States and England. According to the Associated Press,[citation needed] he is the new owner of a 345 year old John Bray House in Maine. He also has restored a Georgian home in London, England, first built in 1740, one of only 50 houses with direct waterfront access to the River Thames. He is currently restoring two homes, one built in 1771 the other in 1780, both now located on the same property in Dutchess County, New York. After he moved them together, he discovered both homes, by coincidence, were connected to the same family.
Signed to Atlantic by Ahmet Ertegun and managed by Tommy Mottola in the early 1970’s, Hall & Oates have sold more albums than any other duo in music history.[citation needed] Their second album, Abandoned Luncheonette, produced by Arif Mardin and released in 1973, yielded the single “She’s Gone”, which went to #7 in the U.S. Top 10 on re-release in 1976 after reaching #1 on the R&B charts when it was covered by Tavares. The duo recorded one more album with Atlantic, War Babies(produced by Todd Rundgren), before they were dropped and promptly signed to RCA. During their tenure at RCA the duo catapulted to international superstardom.
From the mid-1970s to the mid-1980s, Hall & Oates would score six U.S. #1 singles, including "Rich Girl" (also #1 R&B), "Kiss on My List", "Private Eyes", "I Can’t Go For That (No Can Do)" (also #1 R&B), "Maneater" and "Out of Touch" from their six consecutive multi-platinum albums: Bigger Than Both of Us (1976), ’80’s Voices (1980), Private Eyes (1981), H2O (1982), Rock N Soul, Part I (1983) and Big Bam Boom (1984). The era would also produce an additional five U.S. Top 10 singles, "Sara Smile", “One on One," "You Make My Dreams", "Say It Isn’t So", and "Method of Modern Love".
In 1985, he participated in the historic We Are the World session as well as closing the Live Aid show in Philadelphia. He also made an album with Dave Stewart that year, Three Hearts in the Happy Ending Machine. He has recorded such solo works as Soul Alone in 1993 and C
Biography Credit: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daryl_Hall
|
Comments
Submit a Comment