musicNEWS:
Jan Berry of 'Jan & Dean' Dead at 62
03-28-04
Keavin
.
Surf rock pioneer Jan Berry of Jan &
Dean passed at away in a Los Angeles hospital on Friday at the age of
62. Berry was one half of the surf rock duo that topped the charts in the
mid sixties with hits like "Surf City," "Deadman's Curve" and "Little Old
Lady from Pasadena," until their career was cut short by an auto accident
in 1966 where Berry suffered brain damage and was partially paralyzed.
Berry was also known as a gift producer
and worked closely with the Beach Boys Brian Wilson prior to the car crash.
Berry met his musical partner Dean Torrence
at University High School in West Los Angeles, where they were both members
of the football team. They first teamed up musically in the doo wop group
The Barons. It was also during that early period that Berry began learning
his way as a producer with a studio he set up in his garage. The
Barons parted ways but Berry kept at it. He began working on a song with
Torrence and another member of the The Barons, Arnie Ginsburg, in 1958
called Jennie Lee."
Joe Lubin of Arwin Records heard the song
and offered to buy it.
Torrence was called up to serve in the
Army so it fell on Berry and Ginsburg to record the song for Arwin Records.
The single was release in 1958 and was credited to Jan & Arnie. It
shot to No. 8 on the charts and earned the duo a spot on American Bandstand.
When two follow up singles failed to have as much success, Ginsburg quit
the duo and that was where Torrence reentered the picture as his six months
of Army service was drawing to an end. The first single, "Baby Talk," from
the new duo, Jan & Dean, hit No. 10 on the charts and started slow
their climb to stardom.
The climb finally hit full stream in the
mid sixties as the duo produced a string of hits but just as they were
climbing to the heights of their fame, ready to transform their fame onto
the big screen and film a television pilot, tragedy struck. In April 1966,
Berry was driving his Corvette Stingray when he hit a parked truck. The
accident was so severe that the first police on the scene believed that
Berry was dead. He suffered major brain damage and was left partially paralyzed.
His road to recovery was a slow one, he
had to learn how to walk and talk all over again, but he eventually was
able to return to composing and singing.
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