Mark Radice

Mark Radice
Born November 23, 1957 (1957-11-23) (age 54)
Newark, NJ, USA
Occupations Musician, Songwriter, Producer
Instruments keyboards, guitar, vocals
Years active 1964-present
Website http://markradice.150m.com/

Mark Radice is an American singer/musician and producer, who has worked with a variety of different artists and achieved minor success with his own material in the 1970s. Having worked with Jim Henson on several tunes for The Muppets TV show in the mid-1980s, he has recently been more associated with Sesame Street, as he has been writing and recording material for this series.

Contents

Biography

Mark Radice has been a professional musician and songwriter since 1964. From a very young age, he has provided keyboards, vocals, guitars, production and songs for himself as well as many well known artists. With well over 4,000 original songs to his credit, he is one of the most prolific songwriters alive.

Mark's father, Gene Radice, was a well known recording engineer who worked with artists such as Jimi Hendrix, Velvet Underground, Lovin' Spoonful, Janis Ian, the Four Seasons, Cowsills, Mamas & the Papas, The Tokens, Vanilla Fudge and many more.

In 1964 at age 7, Mark was signed to RCA Records. His single "Natural Morning" was later covered by Frankie Valli. In 1967 while signed to Decca Records he released "10,000 Year Old Blues" which featured 20 year old Steven Tyler. Mark later toured and recorded with Aerosmith in 1978. Mark released his first full length LP in 1971 with Paramount Records. The song "Hey My Love" was later covered by Dion. In 1973 Mark was asked to back Donovan on his "7 Tease" tour.

In 1976, through United Artists Records, he released Ain't Nothin' But A Party which featured Brass Construction and included the hit single "If You Can't Beat 'Em Join 'Em."

As a writer for EMI Publishing he collaborated with artists such as Michael Bolton, Eddie Money, Dave Edmunds, Barbra Streisand, Barry Manilow, Johnny Mathis, Helix, Cheap Trick, Aldo Nova, Deodato, Phyllis Hyman, Jetboy, Box of Frogs, Gene Simmons, Shark Island, Jennifer Rush, and The Muppets.

After touring with Cheap Trick in 1985, Mark was introduced to Jim Henson and collaborated on many songs for The Muppets. Mark collaborated with the group Vesica Piscis (band) and producer Jack Douglas and Engineer Jay Messina (Aerosmith, John Lennon, Kiss, etc.).

Recently, Mark has self-produced several albums which include a variety of previously unreleased material. With a catalog of over 3000 songs that are still unreleased, you can expect to see more of such albums. Mark also currently writes and records for Sesame Street. He was nominated for an Emmy in 2008 for his work with the Elmo character [1]. In 2008 Mark also collaborated with the Septimus Orion project.

Discography

Albums

45's

"Natural morning" / "You Took the Words Right Out of My Mouth" (1968) Decca 32349
"10,000 Year Old Blues" / "Three Cheers (for the Sad Man)" (1968) Decca 32411
"Richest Man in the World" / "Girl by the Meter" (1969) Decca 32525
"Save Your Money" / "Wooden Girl" (1972) RCA 47-9420
"Your Love is Like Fire" / "Hey My Love" (1972) Paramount 0170
"Hey My Love" / "Your Love is Like Fire" (1972) Paramount PARA 3024 (UK)
"New Day" / "Take Me to the Park" (1972) Paramount PARA 3025 (UK)
"If You Can't Beat 'em, Join 'em" / "The Whole Wide World Ain't Nothin' But a Party" (1976) United Artists UA-XW840[1]
"The Answer is You" / "Monkey See Monkey Do" (1976) United Artists UA-XW897-Y
"It's You My Love" / "Love is Free" (1977) United Artists 5C 006-60377 (Holland)

References