Henry Gross
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Henry Gross | |
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Born | April 1, 1951 |
Origin | Brooklyn, New York, U.S. |
Genre(s) | Rock Pop |
Occupation(s) | Singer, Songwriter, Label Executive |
Instrument(s) | Vocals, Guitar, Ukulele, Electric Sitar, Percussion |
Years active | 1965 - present |
Label(s) | Zelda Records (presently) |
Associated acts | Sha Na Na |
Website | http://www.henrygross.com/ |
Henry Gross (born April 1, 1951, Brooklyn, New York), is an American singer-songwriter best known for his hit song, "Shannon".
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[edit] Early years
Henry Gross's mother, Zelda’s, lifelong love of music, encouraged his pursuit of a performing career. It was such a strong force that by age 14 Henry was playing regularly in local clubs all over the New York area and spending his summers playing at Catskill Mountain resort hotels.
At age 18, Henry was a founding member of the world famous rock ‘n’ roll revival group Sha Na Na, playing guitar & wearing on-stage the "greaser" clothes he wore in high school. The group’s popularity took a giant step after legendary performances at the Fillmore auditoriums in New York and San Francisco and the Woodstock Festival.
[edit] Going solo
Henry Gross broke from the band Sha Na Na to be a solo singer/song writer in 1970. Henry Gross signed a record deal with ABC Dunhill Records in 1971. The album had very little commercial success. He continued to play at clubs and colleges until in 1973 he was signed with A&M Records.
His first A&M album, self-titled Henry Gross, sold very well and had several large regional hits including "Simone", "Come On Say It", "Skin King" and a near gold cover of Lindisfarne's European hit "Meet Me On The Corner". Henry's second A&M album Plug Me Into Something, sold just short of gold. He began to achieve national recognition in Rolling Stone Magazine and The New York Times as a great Rock & Roll guitarist.
[edit] "Shannon"
After that Henry went to Lifesong Records to make his new album. He produced a single, "Shannon", a song written about the passing of Beach Boy Carl Wilson's Samoyed (dog) of the same name. The single went gold and became a worldwide hit, reaching #6 on the USA charts in 1976. After this single's success, Henry released an album called "Release". His 2nd single, "Springtime Mama", sold just short of gold & reached #37 in the USA. On his next album, "Show Me to the Stage", Henry mixed Rock & Roll songs with Phil Spector and Brian Wilson influences. While the album sold very well, it had no hit singles. He also recorded the Beatles song "Help!" for the documentary All This and World War II; both occurred in 1976. Henry's recording career slowed but he continued recording. With CBS Records he made " Love is the Stuff" and with Capitol Records, in 1981, along with The Bobby Colomby produced the, "What's in a Name" LP.
In the 1980s Henry performed in the road company production of "Pump Boys and Dinettes," with a cast featuring Jonathan Edwards, and Nicolette Larson. Henry moved to Nashville, Tennessee in 1986 and signed a publishing deal with Pic-A-Lic Music, a company owned by legendary songwriter Roger Cook and the multi talented Ralph Murphy.
[edit] Current
Henry continued his song writing and recording career in Nashville, Tennessee. In 1993 he released a CD of twenty-two songs, called "Nothing But Dreams." For this album his record company was his own independent label, Zelda Records, named after his mother.
[edit] The Casey Kasem incident
"Shannon" is remembered for being the subject of a profanity-laced tirade by American Top 40 radio show host Casey Kasem while recording an episode of the show in 1985. A listener had requested "Shannon" as a "Long Distance Dedication" (a regular feature of the show) to his own recently-deceased dog. Kasem was upset that the show's producers had placed the dedication immediately following the Pointer Sisters' hit "Dare Me", an up-tempo song that Kasem considered a poor lead-in to a sad song like "Shannon".
[edit] Trivia
Trivia sections are discouraged under Wikipedia guidelines. The article could be improved by integrating relevant items and removing inappropriate ones. |
- Henry's mother, Zelda, was in the Metropolitan Opera Chorus for a brief period.
- Henry's sister got him started on the path of Rock and roll.
- Sha Na Na appeared in the movie Woodstock and subsequently gained worldwide fame.
- Henry released two self-titled albums, each at a different record company.
- Henry also had an Irish Setter by the name of Shannon.
- Henry wrote the song "Shannon" while Latin music was blasting from the apartment above him.
- In 1995, Henry and his longtime friend Henry Paul, of Blackhawk and Outlaws fame, co- wrote Blackhawk's top fifteen country hit, Big Guitar.
- Henry's best-of album, One More Tomorrow, came out in 1996.
[edit] Albums
- Henry Gross (1972) ABC Dunhill Records
- Henry Gross (1973) A&M Records
- Plug Me Into Something (1975) A&M Records
- Release (1976) Lifesong Records
- Show Me To The Stage (1977) Lifesong Records
- Love Is The Stuff (1978) Lifesong Records
- What's In A Name (1981) Capitol Records
- I Keep On Rockin' (1987) Sonet Records
- She's My Baby (1989) Capitol Records
- Nothing But Dreams (1992) Zelda Records
- One More Tomorrow (1996) Varese Sarabande Records
- I'm Hearing Things (2000/2001) Zelda Records
- One Hit Wanderer (2006) Zelda Records