Jackie DeShannon

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Jackie DeShannon, real name Sharon Lee Myers (born August 21, 1944, is an American singer/songwriter with a string of hit song credits from the 1960s onwards. She was one of the first female singer-songwriters of the rock 'n' roll period.

Sharon Myers adopted the name Jackie DeShannon, believed to be an Irish ancestor. Executives at Liberty Records thought the name Sharon Myers wouldn't sell records. (She once reported that record executives added "Shannon" to "Jackie Dee," one of the names under which she recorded, to create her name.)

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Jackie DeShannon was born Sharon Lee Myers in Hazel, Kentucky. The daughter of musically inclined farm parents, Sandra Jean and James Erwin Myers, DeShannon was introduced to singing country tunes on a local radio show at the age of six. By the age of eleven, DeShannon was already hosting her own radio program. When life on the farm became too difficult, the family moved to Aurora, Illinois, her mother's home town, and her father resumed his other career as a barber. After a year, they moved up the Fox River to Batavia, Illinois, where Sharon attended high school.

Recording under various names such as Sherry Lee, Jackie Dee, and Jackie Shannon, she had little success. However, her interpretations of country songs "Buddy" and "Trouble" gained the attention of Eddie Cochran who arranged for her to travel to California and meet singer-songwriter Sharon Sheeley, who formed a writing partnership with DeShannon in 1960. The partnership produced hits such as "Dum Dum" for Brenda Lee and "I Love Anastasia" for The Fleetwoods. The latter was named after one of her good friends in high school.

In 1962, DeShannon signed with Liberty Records and recorded "Faded Love," "Needles and Pins," and "When You Walk in the Room", all reaching the lower rungs of the U.S. pop charts. ("Needles and Pins," and "When You Walk in the Room" later became bigger US and UK hits for The Searchers.) She recorded many other singles that encompassed teen pop, country ballads, rockabilly, gospel, and Ray Charles-style soul that didn't fare as well on the charts. During these years it was her songwriting and public profile rather than her singing that kept her contracted to Liberty Records. DeShannon dated Elvis Presley and formed friendships with The Everly Brothers and Ricky Nelson. She also co-starred and sang with Bobby Vinton in the teen surf movie Surf Party.

DeShannon's biggest break came in February 1964 when she supported The Beatles on their first US tour, and formed a touring band with guitarist Ry Cooder. DeShannon also wrote "Don't Doubt Yourself Babe" for the debut album by The Byrds. Her music at this stage was heavily influenced by the American West Coast sounds and folk music. Staying briefly in England in 1965, DeShannon formed a songwriting partnership with Jimmy Page, which resulted in the hit singles "Dream Boy" and "Don't Turn Your Back On Me." Page and DeShannon also wrote material for singer Marianne Faithfull, including her Top Ten UK and US hit "Come and Stay With Me." DeShannon also appeared on the television show Ready Steady Go!

Moving to New York, DeShannon co-wrote with Randy Newman producing such songs as "She Don't Understand Him" and "Did He Call Today Mama?" as well as writing "You Have No Choice" for Delaney Bramlett. In March 1965, DeShannon recorded Burt Bacharach and Hal David's "What the World Needs Now Is Love," which provided her first Number 1 hit and regular appearances on television shows and club tours. (DeShannon's recording of the song was subsequently used in the 1969 film Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice.) She appeared in the 1967 film C'mon Let's Live a Little, with Bobby Vee, as a folk singer. DeShannon continued writing and recording but it wasn't until 1968 that she scored her next biggest smash single and album, both entitled Put A Little Love In Your Heart. The single "Love Will Find A Way" from the same album was also a moderate hit. Switching to Atlantic Records in 1970 and moving to Los Angeles, DeShannon recorded the critically acclaimed albums Jackie and Your Baby Is A Lady, but they failed to produce the same commercial success as previous releases. In 1973, she was invited by Van Morrison to sing on his Hard Nose The Highway album.

"Put A Little Love In Your Heart" was performed as the closing number at the Music for UNICEF Concert, broadcast worldwide from the United Nations General Assembly in 1979.

While DeShannon has not produced any further Top Ten singles of her own, her songs have been covered by other artists who have in turn converted them into hits. In 1975 with Donna Weiss, she composed "Queen Of The Rodeo" and "Bette Davis Eyes" for her album New Arrangement. The song "Bette Davis Eyes" later became a world-wide Number 1 single for singer Kim Carnes in 1981. It earned DeShannon the 1982 Grammy Award for Song of the Year.

The songs "Breakaway" recorded by Tracey Ullman in 1983 and "Put A Little Love In Your Heart" recorded by Annie Lennox and Al Green in 1988 also became huge hits, the latter of which Dolly Parton also covered in 1993. Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers and Stevie Nicks had a Top 40 US hit in 1986 with a cover of "Needles And Pins." A version of "When You Walk In The Room" by Pam Tillis in 1994 topped the country charts. Another recent cover of "When You Walk In The Room" was by ex-ABBA vocalist Agnetha Fältskog, both in her comeback album My Colouring Book and as a UK and European hit single.

Jackie was portrayed by singer Liz Phair in an episode of the NBC period drama American Dreams.

DeShannon is married to singer/songwriter and film music composer Randy Edelman. Her first husband was Irving "Bud" Dain, to whom she was married on January 29, 1966.

  • Jackie DeShannon (1963)
  • Breakin' It Up on the Beatles Tour (1964)
  • Don't Turn Your Back on Me (1964)
  • Surf Party (1964) (soundtrack)
  • This Is Jackie DeShannon (1965)
  • In the Wind (1965)
  • You Won't Forget Me (1965) (compilation)
  • C'Mon Let's Live a Little (1966) (soundtrack)
  • Are You Ready for This? (1967)
  • New Image (1967)
  • For You (1967)
  • Me About You (1968)
  • What the World Needs Now Is Love (1968)
  • Lonely Girl (1968) (compilation)
  • Laurel Canyon (1969)
  • Put a Little Love in Your Heart (1969)
  • To Be Free (1970)
  • Songs (1971)
  • Jackie (1972)
  • Your Baby Is a Lady (1974)
  • New Arrangement (1975)
  • The Very Best of Jackie DeShannon (1975) (compilation)
  • You're the Only Dancer (1977)
  • Quick Touches (1978)
  • Together (1980) (soundtrack)
  • Pop Princess (1981) (compilation)
  • Jackie DeShannon (1985) (compilation)
  • What the World Needs Now Is ...: The Definitive Collection (1987) (compilation)
  • Good as Gold! (1990) (compilation)
  • The Best of Jackie DeShannon (1991) (compilation)
  • Trouble With Jackie Dee (1991)
  • The Early Years (1998) (compilation)
  • Come and Get Me: Best of 1958-1980 (2000) (compilation)
  • You Know Me (2000)

  • "Faded Love" #97, February 1963
  • "Needles and Pins" #84, May 1963
  • "When You Walk in the Room" #99, January 1964
  • "What the World Needs Now Is Love" #7, May 1965
  • "A Lifetime of Loneliness" #66, October 1965
  • "Come and Get Me" #83, May 1966
  • "I Can Make It With You" #68, September 1966
  • "The Weight" #55, August 1968
  • "Put a Little Love in Your Heart" #4, June 1969
  • "Love Will Find a Way" #40, November 1969
  • "Brighton Hill" #82, March 1970
  • "You Keep Me Hangin' On" and "Hurt So Bad" #96, May 1970
  • "It's So Nice" #84, August 1970
  • "Vanilla Olay" #76, June 1972
  • "Don't Let the Flame Burn Out" #68, October 1977
  • "I Don't Need You Anymore" #86, March 1980 (from the movie Together?)

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