Michael Lloyd (music producer)

Michael Lloyd
Birth name Michael Jeffrey Lloyd
Born (1948-11-03) November 3, 1948
New York City, United States
Occupation(s) Record producer, musician, songwriter, music supervisor
Instruments Piano, guitar, others
Years active 1962 present
Associated acts West Coast Pop Art Experimental Band
The Osmonds
Cotton, Lloyd and Christian
Shaun Cassidy
Leif Garrett
others

Michael Jeffrey Lloyd (born November 3, 1948) is an American record producer, arranger, songwriter and musician. After working with Mike Curb, Kim Fowley and others in the mid and late 1960s on musical projects including the West Coast Pop Art Experimental Band, and Steven Spielberg's first short film, Amblin', he became a highly successful producer of teen idol pop stars including The Osmonds, Shaun Cassidy, and Leif Garrett in the 1970s. During the 1980s, he supervised the music soundtrack for the movie Dirty Dancing, and produced the hit "(I've Had) The Time of My Life", as well as working with Belinda Carlisle, Barry Manilow, and many others. By his own account, he has gained over 100 gold and platinum records.[1]

Early life and musical career

Born in New York City, Michael Lloyd learned classical piano and guitar as a child. By the age of 13, he formed his own band in high school, at the same time as continuing to take lessons in music theory and composition. He also started writing songs and pitching them to record labels in Los Angeles, including Tower Records, a subsidiary of Capitol. According to Lloyd's own account, Eddie Ray, the head of A&R at Tower, suggested that the teenage Lloyd work with Mike Curb, and the pair began collaborating on songs and record production.[2] Other sources suggest that Lloyd and Curb were introduced to each other by Kim Fowley, who had signed Lloyd to a song publishing deal. Lloyd also recorded surf music as a member of the New Dimensions, a group that included Jimmy Greenspoon, later of Three Dog Night.[3]

Around 1964, Lloyd began performing with brothers Shaun and Danny Harris, who attended Hollywood Professional School with Lloyd. Together they formed a group initially called the Rogues, later renamed the Laughing Wind, and recorded demos with Fowley. He then introduced them to Bob Markley, a law graduate and aspiring performer who had already had his own TV show in Oklahoma. With Fowley's support and Markley's financial backing, Lloyd became a member of the West Coast Pop Art Experimental Band with the Harris brothers, Markley, and drummer John Ware, releasing an album, Part One in 1967. Fowley also released some of the Laughing Wind's demos, with other tracks featuring Markley, as Volume One, credited to the West Coast Pop Art Experimental Band. Lloyd left the band shortly afterwards, but returned to contribute to their 1969 album, Where's My Daddy?.[4]

In 1967, Lloyd wrote songs and produced Fowley's solo album Love Is Alive And Well: Sounds & Scenes of the Flower Love Generation, with Fowley referring in the liner notes to Lloyd as an "..18 year old arranger and engineer who owns his own recording studio, plays 9 instruments and is lead singer and leader of The Laughing Wind, a Tower recording group." Curb allowed Lloyd to use the his Hollywood Boulevard Studios, and together with musicians Stan Ayeroff and Steve Baim (who were also members of Max Frost and the Troopers) Lloyd wrote and produced an album, The Smoke, which Curb released on his own Sidewalk label in 1967.[5] Lloyd and Fowley co-produced the only album by Los Angeles psychedelic rock band, St. John Green, released in 1968, and the same year Lloyd arranged and produced the self-titled album by another band, October Country. Lloyd also provided the music for Steven Spielberg's first short film, Amblin',[6] and worked with Curb on other movie soundtracks, including The Devil's 8 (1969).[7]

The 1970s

By late 1969, Mike Curb had become president of MGM Records, and appointed Lloyd, then aged 20, as vice-president in charge of A&R. Among the artists Lloyd signed to the label was Lou Rawls, whose 1971 hit single and album, A Natural Man, he produced. As Curb purged the label of artists associated with drug use, Lloyd moved into more mainstream pop music, initially as the producer of several of The Osmonds' hits, including "Down by the Lazy River" and "Crazy Horses" in 1972. He also wrote and produced tracks on Donny Osmond's solo album Portrait of Donny, as well as later singles and albums by Donny and Marie, The Osmonds, and Engelbert Humperdinck.[6] Lloyd later said:[2]

"A publisher had a song he wanted Lou Rawls to sing. I could sign acts at MGM. Lou had been dropped by Capitol Records already and his career was over. But this publisher was really bright. He figured if he could get somebody to sign Lou Rawls, then Lou Rawls would have a deal and he could cut his song. So he hammered me and he hammered me to do this. Finally I said yes, and that record won a Grammy and all this kind of crazy stuff. And then—and here's where the other opportunity comes along—I had been resistant. I didn't want to do it; I had no idea what to do. But that record becomes successful, and then we sign the Osmonds, and Mike Curb says to the Osmonds, "This is Michael Lloyd, who just had a big hit record with Lou Rawls. Then the Osmonds go, "Ooh," right? If he had just introduced me as Michael Lloyd, a talented guy he knew, they would have gone, "Oh," right? I mean, it's a superficial business. So if I hadn't done the Lou Rawls record, he wouldn't have been able to introduce me to the Osmonds on that level, and I probably wouldn't have recorded their records."

Lloyd also continued to perform, initially as a member of a vocal group, Friends, and then forming a trio, Cotton, Lloyd and Christian with Australian Darryl Cotton and Texan Chris Christian in 1975. The trio's version of the Del Shannon song "I Go to Pieces" - a 1965 hit for Peter and Gordon - became a #66 hit on the Billboard Hot 100,[8] and the group released an album, Cotton Lloyd & Christian. Although the album was not successful in the US, its tracks were repackaged by Curb and Lloyd in 1976, and used as the music soundtrack of a movie, The Pom Pom Girls. A second Cotton, Lloyd and Christian album, Number Two, was issued in 1977.

Lloyd began working with teen idol Shaun Cassidy in 1975, producing his debut single in Europe, "Morning Girl", as well as subsequent singles including his 1977 breakthrough US #1 hit "Da Doo Ron Ron". He also produced Cassidy's albums, Shaun Cassidy (1976), Born Late (1977), Under Wraps (1978), and Room Service (1979). Over the same period, Lloyd worked with rival teen star Leif Garrett, and played on and produced his 1976 debut hit "Surfin' U.S.A." and his 1977 debut album. He also produced Garrett's later albums Feel The Need (1978), and Same Goes For You (1979), and both wrote and produced Garrett's hit song "I Was Made For Dancin' ". He also worked with Debby Boone, producing several tracks on her album You Light Up My Life (but, contrary to some sources, not its title track).[6]

Later career

In 1986, Lloyd arranged and produced the debut album by Belinda Carlisle, Belinda, including the hit single "Mad About You". The same year, he was responsible as music supervisor for the soundtrack of the film Dirty Dancing, and for producing the tracks "(I've Had) The Time of My Life", by Bill Medley and Jennifer Warnes, and "She's Like the Wind", performed by Patrick Swayze. The song "(I've Had) The Time of My Life" was an international hit, reaching #1 on the Billboard pop chart in November 1987, and won the Academy Award for Best Original Song, and a Grammy Award for Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals. Lloyd wrote and produced the Latin music used in the movie, which was issued on the LP More Dirty Dancing.[2] He also worked as a film producer, on movies including Lovelines (1984), The Garbage Pail Kids Movie (1987), and Frankie and Johnny (1991).[7] He also began to produce musical arrangements and write songs for Kidsongs, the number one American live-action videos for children of all ages.

He arranged and produced several tracks on Barry Manilow's self-titled 1989 album. He also worked on several albums, including Great Songs of Christmas, with Bobby Vinton. Other musicians with whom Lloyd has worked include Dionne Warwick, The Monkees, The Bellamy Brothers, Sammy Davis Jr., Maureen McGovern, and Frank Sinatra. In more recent years, Lloyd worked as producer with Kimberley Locke, the first performer to have three consecutive #1 Christmas songs, "Up on the Housetop" (2005), "Jingle Bells" (2006) and "Frosty the Snowman" (2007).[1]

Lloyd has continued to work as music supervisor and producer on movie soundtracks, including Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer: The Movie, and the 1998 movie Godzilla, as well as on animated TV series.[1] He established Studio M in 2000, as an independent national music video network, becoming its President.[9][10] He also actively supports various children's charities.[1]

Personal life

Michael Lloyd married Patricia Ann Varble in 1980; they have four children.[7]

References

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