Richard Fagan (Richard Fagan)
Richard Fagan learned basic guitar skills as a young child and began to refine those skills and singing do-wop in Philadelphia as a teenager. According to Richard’s account, he encountered two other people singing in the Junior High lunch room, suggested some changes while joining along and immediately had new friends and singing companions. After being drafted into the Army and serving a year in Vietnam, Fagan returned to Philadelphia where, for a while, he was homeless. He married and had a son, but divorced in 1975. Tom Oteri discovered Fagan’s songwriting talents and invited him to a recording-studio audition. In 1976 Oteri recorded five of Fagan’s songs and sent them to various producers but because the recordings did not identify an address or phone number they never received any response. Bob Gaudio, Neil Diamond’s producer, heard one of the songs and hired an ex-FBI agent as a private detective to find the song’s author. In 1978 Bob Gaudio acquired Richard Fagan’s song, “The Good Lord Loves You.” The song finally appeared three years later on Diamond’s “September Morn” album. Gaudio also managed to get Fagan signed with Mercury Records and produced his first album. Fagan relocated to Los Angeles, learned to play piano and recorded the tracks for his first album, “Richard Fagan” which was released the last week of 1979 just about the same time that “September Morn” was released. Fagan’s album received critical acclaim and he recorded the tracks for a second album, “Jiver”, but Mercury never released it.
Richard Fagan’s initial success was not achieved again until he relocated from Los Angeles to Nashville, Tennessee in January 1986. Within a week of his relocation, he had one of his songs, “Blue Suede Blues”, recorded by Con Hunley. The song reached number 49 on the Billboard Country charts in 1986. That same first week in Nashville Fagan had another song accepted – “Americana” – by Moe Bandy, which was released in 1988. In March it reached number 8 on the Billboard Country charts. and was quickly adopted by George H. W. Bush as a theme song for his Presidential Campaign. Richard Fagan’s songs have appeared on the soundtracks of five Hollywood feature films. He has written a network television theme song, a Presidential campaign song, a national sports anthem, show tunes, gospel songs, comic numbers and a Billboard Country Single of the Year. Working with a variety of collaborators, he has been responsible for such unforgettable hits as “Sold,” “Only on Days That End in Y,” “I Miss You a Little,” “Overnight Male” and “Be My Baby Tonight.” Albums containing Fagan songs have sold more than 25 million copies. “God has always given me a pot of gold,” says Richard Fagan. “I think there’s a reason for it all. And I guess my being naïve helped me to succeed in Nashville. I didn’t know it at the time, but my timing was great.”
Born
- April, 24, 1947
- USA
- Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Died
- August, 05, 2016
- USA
- Nashville, Tennessee
Cause of Death
- pneumonia