28-441: Don Black may refer to: Don Black (lyricist) (born 1938), English lyricist Don Black (white supremacist) (born 1953), American white supremacist activist Don Black (baseball) (1917–1959), American baseball player Don Black (tennis) (1927–2000), Rhodesian tennis player See also [ edit ] Donald Black (disambiguation) [REDACTED] Topics referred to by
56-400: A song-plugger . He also had a brief spell as a comic . He was personal manager to the singer Matt Monro for many years and also provided songs for him (usually writing English language lyrics to continental songs). These included "Walk Away" and "If I Never Sing Another Song" (music: Udo Jürgens ) and "For Mamma" (music: Charles Aznavour ). Black's first film work was the lyrics for
84-486: A Broadway production starring Bernadette Peters , for which she won a Tony award as Best Actress in a Musical . Sarah Brightman performed for a video recording of the show at the end of its West End run and also released " Unexpected Song ", from that musical, as a single. With Geoff Stephens he produced a concept album of a "revuesical" entitled Off The Wall . In 2002, he worked with the Indian composer A. R. Rahman on
112-533: A garment presser and his mother in a clothes shop and during his childhood the family lived in a council flat in Tornay House, Shore Place, South Hackney . He attended Cassland Road School and enjoyed visits to the Hackney Empire , which was then a music hall and to the cinema to watch James Cagney films. He began his music industry career as an office boy with a music publishing firm, and later worked as
140-539: A selection of guest artists. The evening, hosted by Michael Parkinson and recorded for broadcast by BBC Radio 2 , included an exclusive performance of two songs from Black's new musical, The Count of Monte Cristo . The concert included contributions from Lee Mead , Gary Barlow , Elkie Brooks , Craig David , Maria Friedman , Joe Longthorne , Lulu , Peter Grant , Raza Jaffrey , Matt Rawle, Ryan Molloy , Marti Webb , Jonathan Ansell , Hayley Westenra , Phil Campbell and Mica Paris . The singers were accompanied by
168-498: A song plugger. Later, the term was used to describe individuals who would pitch new music to performers, with The New York Times describing such examples as Freddy Bienstock performing a job in which he was "pitching new material to bandleaders and singers". In 1952 , Life writer Ernest Havemann noted the following: There are about 600 song-pluggers in the U.S.; they have their own union ; they are powerful enough to bar all outsiders; and they command fees up to $ 35,000
196-441: A year [worth $ 401,579 today] plus unlimited expense accounts. Their job is to persuade the record companies to use songs, put out by their publishing houses, and the radio station disk jockeys to play the records." Song pluggers remain a part of the music industry, serving a similar function to a professional manager by promoting new music to recording artists and record labels. They are often hired on retainer, and can work for
224-743: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Don Black (lyricist) Donald Blackstone CBE (born 21 June 1938), known professionally as Don Black , is an English lyricist. His works have included numerous musicals, movie, television themes and hit songs . He has provided lyrics for John Barry , Charles Strouse , Matt Monro , Andrew Lloyd Webber , Quincy Jones , Hoyt Curtin , Lulu , Jule Styne , Henry Mancini , Meat Loaf , Michael Jackson , Elmer Bernstein , Michel Legrand , Hayley Westenra , Ennio Morricone , A. R. Rahman , Marvin Hamlisch and Debbie Wiseman . AllMusic stated that "Black
252-563: Is perhaps best-known for his collaborations with Andrew Lloyd Webber, and for the James Bond theme songs he co-wrote with composer John Barry: Thunderball , Diamonds Are Forever and The Man with the Golden Gun ." He was born Donald Blackstone in London, the youngest of five children of Russian Jewish immigrants from Ukraine, Morris and Betsy (née Kersh) Blackstone. His father worked as
280-820: The National Theatre in London . In 2011, Black wrote the lyrics alongside composer Frank Wildhorn for the 2011 Broadway production of Bonnie & Clyde , which premiered at the Gerald Schoenfeld Theatre on 22 November 2011 and closed four weeks later due to poor ticket sales, despite the general public giving the show high praise for its score and the lead actors Jeremy Jordan (as Clyde Barrow ) and Laura Osnes (as Bonnie Parker ). The cast recording, however, became one of Wildhorn and Black's most successful musical scores. In 2013, he again worked with Christopher Hampton and Andrew Lloyd Webber on Stephen Ward
308-504: The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra , led by Mike Dixon and with guest conductors Michel Legrand and David Arnold . In October 2013, a special concert to celebrate Black's work was held at London's Royal Festival Hall , featuring a lengthy interview with the composer by Michael Grade , interspersed by performances of his songs by artists such as Michael Ball , Maria Friedman , Katie Melua , and Marti Webb . The concert
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#1733105877840336-559: The title song of 1966's Born Free , which won the Oscar for Best Song and provided a hit for Matt Monro. Pianist Roger Williams made the US Top 40 with an instrumental version. The song was nominated for Song of the Year at the 1967 Grammy Awards . The movie's producer, Sam Jaffe, was not impressed with the song, fearing that Black had made too much of a political comment in the lyric, and initially had
364-455: The title song of the 1972 film Ben , a US No. 1 hit for Michael Jackson, which Black had written with Walter Scharf . Further Oscar nominations came for "Wherever Love Takes Me" (music: Elmer Bernstein), from 1974 film Gold , and "Come to Me" (music: Henry Mancini ) from 1976's The Pink Panther Strikes Again . In addition, Black teamed with Charles Strouse on the songs "Growing Up Isn't Easy" and "Anything Can Happen on Halloween" for
392-514: The 1986 HBO film The Worst Witch , based on the children's book by Jill Murphy . Walt Disney commissioned him to write songs for the direct-to-video film Beauty and the Beast: The Enchanted Christmas . In July 2023, it was announced that Black would collaborate with film composer David Arnold and singer-songwriter Sophie Ellis-Bextor for the track to Channel 4 and Universal Pictures film, Mog's Christmas , based upon
420-577: The 20th century, paid a weekly tribute to Matt Monro, whom he managed, and included many of his showbiz encounter stories. He took over this slot from David Jacobs . In November 2020 BBC Sounds published a podcast titled "The Sanest Guy in the Room: A Life in Lyrics". Don Black writes about his life, his songs and working with some of the biggest names in showbiz. (See External links.) In 1993, Play It Again released Born Free – The Don Black Songbook , which remains
448-552: The Musical . In 2015, he wrote the lyrics for Mrs Henderson Presents , with George Fenton and Simon Chamberlin composing the music. In 2019, he collaborated with David Arnold on the music for a television version of The Tiger Who Came to Tea . In 2020, he was reported to be working on a musical version of The Third Man , and reworking the show Feather Boy . Black presented a Sunday night show on BBC Radio 2 from 2013 to 2020, which featured classic songs and songwriters of
476-412: The children's book series by Judith Kerr . The track, titled "As Long As I Belong", is about "the importance of belonging". Black's stage credits include the musicals Billy (music: John Barry), Bar Mitzvah Boy (music: Jule Styne ), Dear Anyone (music: Geoff Stephens ), Budgie (music: Mort Shuman ) and several Andrew Lloyd Webber shows: the 1979 song-cycle, Tell Me on a Sunday , which
504-516: The film To Sir, with Love to No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 . Black received his second Oscar nomination for Best Song with the title theme, written with Elmer Bernstein, of the 1969 John Wayne western , True Grit . That same year, he partnered with Quincy Jones for the theme song of the Michael Caine film, The Italian Job , "On Days Like These". He received a third Oscar nomination for
532-535: The film printed without it on the soundtrack. When it became a US hit, he relented and had the film reprinted, commenting to Black, "It grows on you," after the song won the Oscar . Black later collaborated with Barry on The Tamarind Seed , Out of Africa , Dances with Wolves , and an ill-fated Broadway musical, The Little Prince and the Aviator . In 1967, Lulu took the Black- Mark London title song of
560-533: The musical Bombay Dreams . In 2004, Black's second musical collaboration with Hampton, Frank Wildhorn 's Dracula, the Musical , debuted on Broadway. He also collaborated with John Barry once more, on the musical Brighton Rock . Based on the Graham Greene novel , it debuted at the Almeida Theatre , London, in 2004. In 2006, Black created the lyrics for the musical adaptation of the book Feather Boy , for
588-633: The only album to date which consists solely of songs co-written by the lyricist. In 2007, Black was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame . That same year, Black was credited on " Sexy Lady ", the 2007 debut single and hit for rapper Yung Berg , which sampled the Black-Barry theme for Diamonds Are Forever . On 17 August 2008, the tribute concert Lyrics by Don Black was held at the London Palladium , featuring performances of Black's songs by
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#1733105877840616-445: The role has evolved as advances in music technology changed the music industry over the course of the 20th and 21st centuries. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, a song plugger was a vocalist or piano player employed in the early 20th century by department stores , music stores and song publishers to promote and help sell new sheet music. Prior to high-quality recorded music on phonograph records , sheet music sales were
644-402: The same term This disambiguation page lists articles about people with the same name. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Don_Black&oldid=986548910 " Category : Human name disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description
672-844: The sole measurement of a song's popularity. Music publisher Frank Harding has been credited with innovating the sales method. Typically, the pianist sat on the mezzanine level of a store. When patrons wanted to hear the music before buying, a clerk would send the music up to the demonstrator to be played. Although the terms are often used interchangeably, those who worked in department and music stores were most often known as "song demonstrators", while those who worked directly for music publishers were called "song pluggers." Notable musicians and composers who had worked as song pluggers included George Gershwin , Ron Roker , Jerome Kern , Irving Berlin , Lil Hardin Armstrong , Irving Mills , and Cole Porter . Film executive Harry Cohn had also been
700-510: The theme of the James Bond feature Thunderball (1965). His association with the Bond series continued over several decades, with Diamonds Are Forever and The Man with the Golden Gun , in collaboration with John Barry, and Surrender for Tomorrow Never Dies and The World Is Not Enough , in collaboration with David Arnold . Black's film work culminated when he collaborated with Barry on
728-461: Was performed by Marti Webb (whom Black also managed for a time); Aspects of Love , which propelled Michael Ball to stardom; and, together with Christopher Hampton , the musical adaptation of the Billy Wilder film Sunset Boulevard . The latter brought Black and Hampton a Tony Award for Best Book . Tell Me on a Sunday was incorporated into Song and Dance . This was later adapted for
756-576: Was recorded for television and first shown on BBC Four in early January 2014. Black was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 1999 Birthday Honours , and promoted to Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 2024 New Year Honours , for services to music. Black lives in London, England. His wife of nearly 60 years, Shirley, died in March 2018. In May 2020, he
784-473: Was treated in hospital for COVID-19 . Black's elder brother, Michael Black, a showbusiness booking agent, was married to singer Julie Rogers until his death in November 2018. Song-plugger A song plugger or song demonstrator is an individual who promotes music to musicians , record labels , and customers. Song pluggers work for a music publishing company or operate independently. The function of
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