Printer-friendly copy Email this topic to a friend
Lobby The Lesson topic #2655591

Subject: "From The People Magazine Archive (swipe):" Previous topic | Next topic
Dr Claw
Member since Jun 25th 2003
132214 posts
Tue Feb-14-12 11:54 AM

Click to send email to this author Click to send private message to this authorClick to view this author's profileClick to add this author to your buddy listClick to send message via AOL IM
68. "From The People Magazine Archive (swipe):"
In response to In response to 0


  

          

I found this Googling the other day. I dig the one passage about Ray's early years of the L.A. lifestyle. Was cool to hear that Boz Scaggs gave him a gold record for playing on his album (I think he mentioned that in Unsung).

LINK: http://www.people.com/people/archive/article/0,,20082783,00.html

August 02, 1982
Vol. 18
No. 5

After Years of Behind-the-Scenes Hits, Ray Parker Jr. Scores on His Own with the Other Woman

By Salley Rayl


At 28, Ray Parker Jr. has 19 years of performing under his belt. The Detroit-born guitarist-singer-songwriter-producer has had a hand in some 500 Top 40 singles and maybe 10,000 songs, working behind and alongside stars such as Stevie Wonder, Diana Ross, the Rolling Stones, Marvin Gaye, Boz Scaggs, Aretha Franklin and Tom Jones. Parker also has spun out four gold albums and 12 hit singles with his essentially one-man studio "group," Raydio.

But as prolific as he is, until four months ago Parker had never released a single under just his name. Then came his first solo album, The Other Woman. It went Top 20 within 10 weeks. Its title track hit the Top 5 on both the pop and R&B charts.

The Other Woman is about a man coping with two lovers. Most Parker songs are thematically based on man-woman relationships because "that's what everybody wants to hear," he explains. "But I try to write something that someone else wouldn't have the nerve to say." Last year his A Woman Needs Love became a hit for Raydio. Its feminist message made Parker an instant hit with liberated females—a kind of Alan Alda with soul. "The men called me a traitor," he says. "But there were girls hanging around my studio all day. They took the song personally and every woman was thinking, 'I know he takes good care of his women.' "

Parker's own relationships so far are still centered on his longtime girlfriend from Detroit, insurance agent Debbie Peek. By mutual agreement, she maintains her own apartment, even though Parker, in another reflection of his recent success, recently purchased his second home. His Beverly Hills mansion, once owned by actress Polly Bergen, is next to one owned by Frank Sinatra. And it's a long way removed from the tough Motor City neighborhood where as a boy, Parker recalls, "I was too tall, my head was too big, and I wore big white socks. I was just not hap'nin' as a kid." He had to pay off bullies and played clarinet in the school band to avoid getting knocked around in the alternative to music, gym class. At 7, he and two others formed a combo called the Stingrays, and five years later Parker switched from clarinet to guitar. By 14, he was in a band which owned a gun to collect its fees from slow-paying club owners. At 15, he did his first Motown session work, behind Marvin Gaye, and he soon bought a new Lincoln Continental.

He finished his first year of college at the Lawrence Institute of Technology near Detroit but dropped out to join Stevie Wonder's band on the Rolling Stones' 1972 comeback tour, making $600 a week.

A year later Parker headed for L.A., which he learned to love watching TV's The Beverly Hillbillies and Leave It to Beaver. "Whenever I saw those shows," he remembers, "it looked as if everybody was in sunshine."

He eventually learned that L.A. wasn't all TV sweetness and light when a neighbor in an elevator in his posh condo complex suggested he didn't know where the service entrance was. He was soon able to rebuke her indirectly when Arista Records bought a Sunset Boulevard billboard to advertise Raydio's Rock On LP.

But then, Parker has always been nothing if not confident about his talents. "I looked at Stevie and he was playing all the instruments on his records and writing songs, and I felt that I could do it too," Parker says. He had been in Los Angeles three months when he finagled an introduction to singer-songwriter Barry White, who later recorded Parker's Always Thinkin' of You. Parker soon began picking up jobs as a studio musician, earning double scale doing session work for people ranging from Helen Reddy to Dizzy Gillespie. He became so popular, he tried turning down gigs unless performers would agree to use songs he'd written. It worked.

Chaka Khan and Rufus did his first hit, You've Got the Love, in 1974. The rewards since have been vast (Parker now grosses millions of dollars annually), but he's never completely satisfied. "Of the hundreds of gold records I've written, produced or played on, only Boz Scaggs gave me one when they were given out. Lawyers, deejays and people in the company get them, but not the musicians."

A 1977 meeting with Clive Davis of Arista netted Parker a recording contract and an upfront $100,000 check he used to bolster a bank account depleted by investments in his own studio—where he cut the first Raydio album in that same year. Parker has essentially been the group, dubbing vocal tracks and five instruments on some tunes, with studio musicians filling in. Then he got his first full solo shot this year.

"I've never been one of those star-type people," he says. "Nothing like that ever really concerned me—except getting paid." But his admitted ego has hardly submerged. His next career step, he hopes, will be films. As an actor? Writer? Director? "All of it," he says, smiling.


  

Printer-friendly copy | Reply | Reply with quote


Ray Parker Jr. appreciation post. [View all] , Sleepy, Mon Jan-30-12 01:45 PM
 
Subject Author Message Date ID
That track is a total Funkadelic rip, though
Jan 30th 2012
1
It is...but it's still pretty good.
Jan 30th 2012
3
He actually jacked Temperton twice on that album
Jan 30th 2012
5
Jack & Jill, backup harmonies are ridiculous. Especially............
Jan 30th 2012
7
*cosby*
Jan 30th 2012
10
      what's that mean ? lol !!!
Jan 30th 2012
11
           http://cache2.artprintimages.com/LRG/37/3778/NW1IF00Z.jpg
Jan 30th 2012
14
                Ah, gotcha. lol
Jan 30th 2012
eh...you could go through a lot of albums from that era
Jan 31st 2012
26
Bustin' makes me feel good
Jan 30th 2012
2
two places at the same time was my shit
Jan 30th 2012
4
man... Raydio was the shit
Jan 30th 2012
6
Doc, you need to peep that "Woman Out Of Control" album. It was
Jan 30th 2012
8
      Oh yeah, wasn't that the 2nd album w/'Invasion' on it?
Jan 30th 2012
22
So, he's up next, after full force, right ? or is it Millie Jackson ?
Jan 30th 2012
9
I actually prefer the original version of Mr Telephone Man
Jan 30th 2012
12
Hey man, how you feeling ? And yes, this is very beige, as you...
Jan 30th 2012
13
Finally getting my voice back
Jan 30th 2012
16
      take your time, and get your "boss" voice back, playa.
Jan 30th 2012
17
           Thanks
Jan 30th 2012
18
                yeah, i clicked in my brain, what you meant after i posted. lol !!!
Jan 30th 2012
19
                     About to get on yahoo messenger in a minute.... you on?
Jan 30th 2012
20
                          Yeppers.
Jan 30th 2012
21
that record right there...
Feb 09th 2012
36
A few of my favorite Ray produced cuts
Jan 30th 2012
15
Great cuts...
Jan 30th 2012
24
of course I'd be remiss without making note of these here:
Jan 30th 2012
23
Rock On is one of my favorite albums ever...
Jan 31st 2012
25
yes, sir
Jan 31st 2012
27
lol..see man...when R&B got too smoothed out
Jan 31st 2012
28
RE: yes, sir
Feb 10th 2012
50
I'm right there with you WC
Jan 31st 2012
32
      RE: I'm right there with you WC
Feb 10th 2012
51
I Don't Think That Man Should Sleep Alone....LOL
Jan 31st 2012
29
I've accepted it over the years
Jan 31st 2012
33
      The funny thing was that I felt it was a sort of a return to form
Feb 09th 2012
37
RE: Ray Parker Jr. appreciation post.
Jan 31st 2012
30
he was playin in the band...
Feb 14th 2012
80
one of the baddest Cats Ever
Jan 31st 2012
31
It's a shame most folks don't know this
Jan 31st 2012
34
      and to add on
Jan 31st 2012
35
Did every/anybody know that he wrote You Make Me Feel Like Dancin?
Feb 09th 2012
38
For real?
Feb 09th 2012
39
yeah, that's definitely very much a Ray change
Feb 09th 2012
40
      I see Ray played on that album
Feb 09th 2012
41
           yeah, Ray and Ollie were doing all kinds of session work
Feb 09th 2012
42
                Only thing I could find was this
Feb 09th 2012
43
                ha... oh yes, that is unmistakable! nm
Feb 09th 2012
44
                RE: yeah, Ray and Ollie were doing all kinds of session work
Feb 10th 2012
52
holy crap...
Feb 09th 2012
45
had no idea he worked with Leo Sayer...
Feb 09th 2012
47
yep and he said he got hustled out of the paper
Feb 09th 2012
48
this is definitely on the 'Beige' side of things
Feb 09th 2012
46
one of the things I'm looking forward to from this show
Feb 10th 2012
49
That sounds dope...
Feb 10th 2012
53
Damn...
Feb 10th 2012
54
naw he wasn't Forrrest Gump of R&B because he didn't
Feb 11th 2012
57
I don't know as much about Ray Parker Jr. as I should.
Feb 10th 2012
55
Thanks to YALL for puttin me on to Raydio
Feb 10th 2012
56
The lyrics to "Bad Boy" are some of the corniest I have ever heard
Feb 11th 2012
58
oh, Ray as a solo artist had some painful lyrics
Feb 11th 2012
59
Ray parker Jr wrote classics period
Feb 11th 2012
60
You want to talk about corny lyrics...
Feb 14th 2012
62
Now that the Unsung has premiered...
Feb 14th 2012
61
it was a good profile though
Feb 14th 2012
63
      Damn I thought I was the only one
Feb 14th 2012
66
      Yeah
Feb 14th 2012
67
           And the other line...
Feb 14th 2012
73
                Yep, he had no problems being 'himself' on that record
Feb 14th 2012
75
      well " i don't think Man should sleep alone" was a Nod to
Feb 14th 2012
70
Unsung was pretty cool...
Feb 14th 2012
64
it was a good show and Ray being a Session cat easily
Feb 14th 2012
71
The unsung special has made me go back and listen to Raydio's catalog
Feb 14th 2012
65
Ray did alot of things
Feb 14th 2012
72
What I find interesting........
Feb 14th 2012
74
      This is a major point.
Feb 14th 2012
76
           well Ray Himself said that the success of Rick James and
Feb 14th 2012
77
                That's funny because listening to Ray's first solo album
Feb 14th 2012
78
                     Appollonia first arrived on the scene back in 1979
Feb 14th 2012
79
Much respect to Ray
Feb 14th 2012
69

Lobby The Lesson topic #2655591 Previous topic | Next topic
Powered by DCForum+ Version 1.25
Copyright © DCScripts.com