| Dusty Springfield |

Dusty
Springfield c. 1969
|
| Background information |
| Birth name |
Mary Isobel Catherine Bernadette
O'Brien |
| Born |
April 16, 1939 |
| Origin |
West Hampstead, London |
| Died |
March 2, 1999 (aged 59) |
| Genre(s) |
Pop music |
| Years active |
1958-1990s |
| Label(s) |
Philips
Records, Atlantic Records |
Dusty Springfield OBE (16 April 1939 - 2 March 1999) was a popular English singer whose
career spanned four decades. She achieved her most notable success
during the 1960s,
with a successful comeback in the late 1980s.
|
Contents
- 1 Biography
- 1.1 Early
life and group career
- 1.2 Solo
success
- 1.3 The
Seventies and Eighties
- 1.4 A
return to popularity
- 1.5 Death
- 2 Career
challenges and personal struggles
- 3 Sexuality
- 4 Legacy
- 5 Posthumous
- 6 Trivia
- 7 Discography
- 8 External
links
- 9 References
|
Biography
Early life and group career
Mary Isobel Catherine Bernadette O'Brien,
(born April
16, 1939 in West
Hampstead, London,
England),
was brought up in the west London borough of Ealing. She was of
Irish heritage. The name "Dusty" was given to her when she was a child,
probably as she had been a tomboy in her early years. As a child, she
was a fan of American
jazz and also pop singer Peggy Lee's
music. At age 11, she went into a local record shop in Ealing and made
her first record, an amateur imitation of Peggy Lee
singing the Irving Berlin song "When
The Midnight Choo Choo Leaves For Alabam'".
Springfield's first professional musical experience was with
the British
vocal
group The
Lana Sisters, which she joined in 1958; the group recorded several singles with
over the next two years. In 1960, she joined her brother Dion
O'Brien and Tim Feild, who were a double
act under the name of "The Kensington Squares", to form The
Springfields, a folk trio. According to Tim
Feild, they picked the name when practising in a field in Somerset in
the spring that year. Mary took the name Dusty Springfield after
forming the group, and her brother Dion
took the name Tom Springfield. They
signed their first contract with Johnny Franz at Philips
Records. After Tim Feild left the group, he
was replaced by Mike Hurst and the trio became even more
successful. Soon, The Springfields became a
very popular act in Britain with singles such as
"Breakaway", "Bambino" and their biggest hit "Island of Dreams". By 1962, The
Springfields had had some success in the United
States with "Silver Threads and Golden Needles". Pre-Beatles, this
was a very unusual achievement for a British act.
Intent on producing an authentic American
recording, the band travelled to Nashville,
Tennessee
to begin work on an album. During a stopover in New
York City, Springfield first heard "Tell Him" by The
Exciters and was immediately smitten and inspired by its sound. She
later become obsessed with the Motown sound, particularly girl
groups like Martha & The
Vandellas and The Shirelles. She was keen to gain
full command over her music, so in late 1963, she left The
Springfields to establish herself as a solo singer. Her brother and Mike Hurst
both gave up performing and moved into production. Dion
O'Brien scored major hits in the UK, USA
and Australia
as producer (and also primary songwriter)
for the UK-based
Australian
folk-pop
band The
Seekers. Hurst achieved success as producer for Cat
Stevens, Manfred Mann, The
Move, Spencer Davis Group, Showaddywaddy
and The
Four Tops and others.
Solo success
Springfield's first single came just three weeks after her
departure from the Springfields. The
song, "I Only Want To Be With
You", became a success in both Britain and the United
States. This song was a "sure shot" on WMCA in New York, even before the station started
playing the Beatles, they thought so
highly of its release. "I Only Want To Be With
You" was ultimately a top 10 hit in New York, and reached #12 on the
national U.S. charts. It was followed by a series of successful
singles, including "Stay Awhile", "I Just
Don't Know What to Do with Myself", "All Cried Out" and "Losing You".
Springfield maintained that she became a Burt
Bacharach fan upon hearing "Don't Make Me Over" in
1962, and with that, she recorded a number of Bacharach-David
compositions, including "Wishin' and Hopin'", which was a top ten hit
for her in 1964. Another Bacharach-David song, which was noteworthy,
"The Look of Love" (from the 1967 spoof Bond movie Casino Royale,
nominated for the Academy Award for Best
Song in 1967.) While Springfield's original hit the top 10 on radio
stations like KGB in San Diego and KHJ in Los Angeles in 1967, the
version of the song by Sergio Mendes and Brazil 66, from 1968, became a
bigger hit, reaching the national Top Ten.
By 1964,
Springfield was one of the biggest solo artists of her day. Other
popular Springfield singles included "Your Hurtin' Kinda Love" and "In
the Middle of Nowhere", culminating in her biggest hit, and her first
(and only) UK #1 single, "You Don't Have to Say You Love Me".
Springfield had heard the song at the San Remo Music Festival and
obtained an acetate of the song, but didn't move to record it until
almost a year later. Her future manager, Vicki
Wickham, and collaborator Simon Napier-Bell
reportedly wrote English lyrics for the song in the back of a cab the
night before the recording was due to take place. The song also reached
#4 in the American charts.
Early in her career, Springfield created a controversy when
she refused to play in front of a segregated crowd in South
Africa. She had a clause written into her contract that specifically
stated she would perform only before mixed audiences. She performed two
concerts thus, and was promptly asked by the South African government
to leave the country. She stated that she didn't intend her insistence
on the clause to be any sort of social statement, but rather that she
felt anyone should be able to listen to her music.
Springfield was often a featured artist, and also, the first
guest on the British music show Ready
Steady Go!, produced by Vicki
Wickham, who would later become her manager. Because of her interest in
Motown music, Springfield was selected in 1965 to host The Sound of Motown,
a Ready Steady Go! special that introduced Motown and American soul
music to British audiences. In the 1994 video biography, Dusty
- Full Circle, several of the musicians who participated,
most notably Martha Reeves, credited the media
exposure, and Springfield's advocacy of the music, with helping them to
break into the British pop charts.
Springfield's UK success led to her starring in her own BBC
television series, Dusty (1966-7),
followed by an ITV series "It Must Be Dusty" in 1968. She returned to
the BBC for her final series "Definitely Dusty" in 1969. Her shows
featured many leading stars of the day as guests. One of the most
memorable was Jimi Hendrix, who appeared in a duet
with Springfield on the song "Mockingbird". The master videotape of
this appearance was later erased, although a brief fragment of
Hendrix's performance on the show, filmed directly off the TV screen by
a fan, has survived.
Like many other solo singers who did not write their own
material, Springfield's recording career was dependent on the quality
of the material she could obtain, and by the end of the decade,
top-notch material was becoming harder to find: Carole
King, who had written two of her biggest British hits, "Some of Your
Lovin'" and "Goin' Back", was embarking on a singing career, and the
chart-busting Bacharach-David partnership was foundering. Her status in
the music industry was further complicated by the gradual fracturing of
the formerly homogeneous "pop" market into many distinct musical genres
in the late 1960s.
Springfield's music was coming to be seen as "unhip" at a time when
hipness was necessary for musical success, and in addition, her
performing career was becoming bogged down on the UK touring circuit,
which at that time largely consisted of Working Men's clubs and the
hotel and cabaret circuit.
Hoping to reinvigorate her career and boost her credibility,
she signed with Atlantic Records, home label of one
of her idols, Aretha Franklin, and began recording
an album in Memphis, Tennessee with producers
Jerry
Wexler, Arif
Mardin and Tom
Dowd. The Memphis sessions were a challenge for Wexler, who was not
used to working with an artist with Springfield's reported penchant for
perfectionism, which she later attributed to her deep insecurity and
her very real anxiety about being compared with the soul greats who had
recorded there. In the end, the Memphis tracking sessions were
completed without any major work being done on the vocals; almost all
her vocals were cut some weeks later in at a studio in New York.
Cover of Springfield's 1969 album Dusty
in Memphis.
Despite the problems with its production, the album, Dusty
in Memphis is considered Springfield's
definitive work; it has appeared in several "best of all time" lists,
including those compiled by Rolling
Stone magazine in the United States, and Q
music magazine in Britain. The album is best known for "Son
of a Preacher Man", which was a hit in both the United Kingdom and the
United States, though the album itself was a commercial disappointment.
The song enjoyed a significant revival in the 1990s thanks to its
inclusion on the best-selling soundtrack for the Quentin Tarantino film
Pulp Fiction
(1994).
"Son of a Preacher Man" also encapsulates some of the ironies
of Springfield's career, and how she perceived herself in comparison
with other artists. It had initially been offered to, and turned down
by, Aretha Franklin. Franklin later
recorded the song, and Springfield felt Franklin's version was
superior, especially Franklin's phrasing in the chorus. She thereafter
always performed the song with the phrasing Franklin had used.
The Seventies and Eighties
The same year, From
Dusty With Love (1970) was just as unsuccessful commercially as Dusty
in Memphis. It was one of the first works produced by Gamble
and Huff productions, who would go on to great success in the
R&B genre with their "Philadelphia sound". This particular
album was released in the U.S. as "A Brand New Me" and yielded the top
25 single of the same name. Gamble and Huff themselves wrote all the
songs, however, production is anonymously credited to "Staff". A third
album for the Atlantic label, produced by Jeff Barry
was abandoned because of unsuccessful single releases (including the
intended title track (I'll Be) Faithful).
The masters were later destroyed in a fire, but Barry reportedly kept
copies of the intended final mixes, and most of the material was
released on the 1999 American deluxe reissue of "Dusty In Memphis" on Rhino
Records. Her next album, See
All Her Faces (1972) was released only in Britain, a mix of
tracks recorded between 1969 and 1971, which resulted in a lack of the
cohesive feeling that her previous two albums possessed. In 1973 Springfield
signed to the ABC Dunhill Records label, and
the resulting album Cameo
(released the same year), was released with a minimum of publicity. It
remains the hardest to find of Springfield's official discography. The
album's producers (Lambert & Potter) went on to a
string of hits with the Four Tops and Glen
Campbell, amongst others.
The following year she began to record another album, with the
working title of Elements. It was later re-titled Longing,
and was to have been produced by Brooks Arthur, who had produced
several hit records by singer-songwriters such as Janis Ian.
During these sessions, Springfield cut a rendition of Ian's "In the
Winter" that is among her most critically acclaimed recordings. (Ian is
on record as saying that, in comparison to Springfield's version, she
"could no longer do the piece justice".) Longing
was eventually abandoned due to Springfield's problematic personal life
at the time, but much of the material from it was later released on the
2001
compilation Beautiful Soul.
Springfield put her career on hold during the mid-1970s, though she
did sporadic work with fellow artists like Anne
Murray and she also performed backing vocals on the Elton
John hit "The Bitch is Back". She continued to work on
material for new albums throughout the late 1970s for the United Artists Records label,
resulting in the albums It Begins Again
(1978) and Living Without Your Love
(1979). Both
were critically lauded, but commercially unsuccessful; only It
Begins Again charted on either side of the Atlantic, and only
briefly made the British charts. During this time Springfield had very
few charting singles and soon drifted from popular view.
She then endured a string of bad luck with record companies.
She released two final singles for her British label Mercury
Records. The first was "Baby Blue", a disco-influenced single which reached #61 in
Britain. The other was "Your Love Still Brings Me to My Knees", which
was the singer's final single for Phonogram: a company she had been with in
various forms for 20 years. She signed a deal with Twentieth
Century Fox Records, which resulted in an unsuccessful single, a cover
of "It Goes Like It Goes" from Norma Rae.
She then began to record an album entitled White
Heat (1982). The label was then bought by a group
which owned Casablanca, and Springfield was
switched to that label. The album was a departure from Springfield's
sound, and featured music and lyrics similar in style and substance to
the New
Wave genre. The album was critically acclaimed; however, the LP was put
on limited release in the USA and Canada only, due to the shuffling of
artists between labels by the record company, as well as Casablanca
having no distribution in the UK. Not long after its release, the Casablanca
Records label also folded, and "White Heat" was eventually absorbed
into the Universal Music Group along
with Dusty's Phonogram recordings, keeping a good number of her
important works together. Springfield tried to revive her career again
in 1985 by
signing to Peter Stringfellow's Hippodrome
Records label, which resulted in a single called "Sometimes Like
Butterflies" and a disastrous appearance on Stringfellow's live TV
show. The song was released against Springfield's wishes with a
practice vocal recorded while she had laryngitis. The singer left the label in
response.
A return to popularity
Springfield's fortunes finally changed in 1987, when she was
approached by the British pop duo Pet
Shop Boys to collaborate with them on a song called "What Have I Done
to Deserve This?", which was a huge chart success in Britain (#2), the
USA (also #2), and around the world, helping to bring Springfield back
into public view. The song subsequently appeared on the Pet Shop Boys'
album Actually
and both of their greatest hits compilations, as well as Dusty's
first-ever U.S. anthology, titled The Dusty Springfield
Anthology in 1997. Springfield and the band performed the
song at the BRIT Awards in 1988. Much later, as part
of the 1999 Pet Shop Boys tour to support their album Nightlife,
the band's singer and lyricist, Neil Tennant, sang the song
again with Springfield (after her death), with her parts synchronised
to a video backdrop of the song, featuring excerpts of her singing in
the video for the song as well as clips of 1960s performances. This was
later released on the Pet Shop Boys DVD Montage.
Also in 1987, Springfield provided vocals on Richard Carpenter's
single "Something In Your Eyes," which was a #12 Adult
Contemporary hit in the U.S. It was released on the album "Time."A new greatest
hits collection The Silver Collection was released
in 1988 and charted on the strength of the renewed interest in her
music. The following year she was approached once again by the Pet Shop
Boys to sing the theme song from the film Scandal,
about the 1960s British political scandal known as the Profumo
Affair. That track, Nothing Has Been Proved, was
also a Top 20 hit in the UK and was followed by a further Top 20
single, the up-beat In Private, also written and
produced by the Pet Shop Boys. She capitalised on this success by
recording an album, released in 1990, Reputation,
which also reached the Top 20, with the single of the same name
reaching number 38 in the charts. The album was partially written and
produced by the Pet Shop Boys (In Private and Nothing
Has Been Proved being included on the album) as well as other
contributors such as Dan Hartman.
These successes persuaded Springfield that the time was right
to leave California and return to Europe, initially to Amsterdam (where
animal quarantine restrictions were less stringent), and finally back
to Buckinghamshire, England. In 1993, she was invited to record a duet with her
former '60s professional rival and friend Cilla
Black (Heart And Soul), which appeared on Cilla's Through
the Years album on the Sony label and was released as a
single. This led to the offer of a recording contract with Sony
Records and the making of what was to be her final album, A
Very Fine Love. Though Springfield was emphatic
that A Very Fine Love was not a country
album, it did include several songs by well-known Nashville
songwriters, and arrangements typical of the genre. Springfield's last
ever recording would be a rendition of Someone To Watch Over
Me. It was intended for use in an insurance ad campaign, and
saw release on Simply Dusty, an extensive anthology
of her career which she had helped to plan but would not live to see
released.
Death
Before releasing what was to be her final album, A
Very Fine Love, recorded in Nashville in 1994 for Sony
Records, Springfield was diagnosed with breast
cancer. She had felt unwell during recording and it was only when she
returned home to England that she discovered she had the cancer. She
received treatment and, for a time, the cancer was in remission. She
was able to promote her new album and gave a particularly memorable
live performance of one of its tracks, "Where is a Woman To Go?" on the
BBC music show Later With Jools Holland, backed by Alison
Moyet and Sinéad O'Connor.
However, the cancer recurred in 1997 and Springfield lost her battle with the
disease and she died on 2 March 1999 at the age of 59. It was the day she had
been due to receive her OBE
at Buckingham Palace, and just ten
days before she was to be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of
Fame. Shortly before her death, her manager Vicki Wickham had gone to St
James's Palace to collect the award in order to present it to Dusty in
hospital with a small gathering of family and friends present. Attended
by hundreds of fans as well as by celebrities such as Elvis
Costello, Lulu, and The
Pet Shop Boys, her funeral took place at St. Mary the Virgin
Church in Henley-on-Thames, where she had lived for the last few years
of her life. A marker dedicated to her memory can be found outside the
church. Springfield was cremated, and some of her ashes were buried
at Henley, and the rest were scattered by her brother, Tom
Springfield at the Cliffs of Moher, County
Clare, Ireland.
Career challenges and personal
struggles
Springfield had been raised as a strict Catholic
and, despite her reported reluctance to participate in confession
and Mass,
she kept her faith in a Higher Being to the end of her life. The
conflict between her conservative religious faith and her life was one
that affected her deeply. Springfield's biographers and several
journalists have suggested she had two personas: shy, quiet Mary
O'Brien, and the persona she created in Dusty Springfield.
In all aspects of her career, but especially in the studio,
Springfield was a notorious perfectionist. Some labeled her as
"difficult". Much of this can now be seen as a reaction from male
colleagues who, in a very male-dominated industry, were wholly unused
to women taking control in the studio. She often produced her songs,
but could not take credit for doing so, as it was seen as bad form.
Springfield's musical ear was very finely tuned and she was totally
intolerant of anything less than perfection, which some session
musicians did not appreciate. To add to the challenges, she did not
read and write music as the session musicians did, making it even
harder for her to communicate what she wanted. She was notorious for
her agonisingly painstaking vocal sessions, during which she would
often record short phrases or even single words or syllables, over and
over again, to get the precise feeling and musical quality that she
wanted. She was not alone in this practice: many of the Motown artists
in the 1960s had wrecked the nerves of recording engineers by
insistently punching in vocal phrases (a practice
which overwrites the recorded vocal but in the 1960s could have ruined
an entire recording if anything went wrong). Springfield's version of
this technique was decidedly extreme by all accounts.
Springfield's biographers attribute much of her "difficult"
behaviour to her dysfunctional family background and her deep
insecurity, which began in childhood. Her mother was prone to explosive
rages and would often throw things to express anger -- a trait which
Springfield herself soon adopted. Her accountant father, conversely,
was quiet and withdrawn, and it is evident that, at least in part, her
mother's violent "acting out" was an attempt to gain her husband's
attention. Mary/Dusty's growing insecurity was heightened by her
parents' blatant favouring of her older brother Dion (Tom).
In her early career much of her odd behaviour was carried out
more or less in fun -- like her famous food fights -- and it was at the
time dismissed as merely "eccentric". One story related in her
biography tells how, when Springfield first performed in America, she
was too nervous to meet the other performers on the bill, so she found
a box full of crockery and hurled it down a flight of stairs in order
to bring the other performers out of their dressing rooms.
But as the Springfield persona became more and more famous,
she was indulged, pampered and spoiled, and plummeted into chronic drug
and alcohol abuse. For much of the Seventies, living in Hollywood,
Springfield alternately battled mental health and substance abuse
issues. When her career imploded, she began to internalise her violent
behaviour. The seriousness of her increasingly frequent acts of self-harm
resulted in her being hospitalised on numerous occasions. Though she
reportedly attempted suicide several times, it was later realized that
she was battling with the mental health problem of cutting.
Sexuality
Throughout much of Springfield's career, her sexuality was a
matter of speculation. In 1970, she disclosed that she was bisexual when
she told Ray Connolly of The
Evening Standard during an interview that "A lot of people say I'm
bent, and I've heard it so many times that I've almost learned to
accept it....I know I'm perfectly as capable of being swayed by a girl
as by a boy." By 1970 standards, Springfield had made a very bold
statement. The fact that she never married meant that the issue
continued to be raised throughout her life from this point onwards,
although she stated that she had enjoyed relationships with both men
and women "and liked it".
There is some debate among friends and fans regarding this
issue; Springfield was intensely private about her personal life, and
after the 1970
interview, she seldom directly addressed the issue or made a definitive
statement regarding her sexuality in the press and questions of a
certain nature were prohibited in press interviews. However,
Springfield occasionally made subtle references and openly appreciated
her gay audience. For example, during a 1979 concert at Royal
Albert Hall in London,
her last large scale concert in the UK, Springfield noted the number of
obviously gay men in the front rows and made a comment that she was
"glad to see that the royalty wasn't confined to the box", making a
play on the term "queens" as it can be used to refer to gay men. Princess
Margaret was the member of the Royal Family who was in the box and she
was apparently unintentionally offended by the remark and Dusty was
sent a letter to be signed, apologising for insulting the monarchy -
although she still eventually received her OBE.
Several biographies about Springfield have touched on the
issue of Springfield's sexual orientation. Lucy O'Brien's biography, Dusty
(Sidgwick & Jackson, 1989) mentions the rumours in passing.
Penny Valentine's 2000
book Dancing with Demons, which included
significant contributions by Springfield's friend and manager Vicki
Wickham, identifies Springfield as a lesbian, indicating Springfield never had a
relationship with a man, except when she had wanted to make a lover
jealous. Singer-songwriter Carole Pope of the Canadian band Rough
Trade disclosed in her 2001 book Anti-Diva that she
and Springfield had a relationship and lived together in Toronto when
Springfield worked with her (Pope wrote the song "Soft Core" which
appeared on "White Heat").
Legacy
Springfield is widely regarded by many as one of the finest soul
singers of all time, an accomplishment made even more notable by the
fact that she was a "blue-eyed soul" singer - a
Caucasian singer who sang material in a way normally associated with African-American
singers.
It is also notable that she was held in high esteem by many black singers (such as
Aretha
Franklin and Martha Reeves) whom she, in turn, also
emulated and idolised. Aside from her contemporaries, many other
artists have cited her as an influence or have cited their love of her
music, including Neil Tennant, Elvis
Costello, Beth Orton, Annie
Lennox and Elton John. The diversity of
music - jazz,
R&B, pop, rock, show
tunes, country, electronica,
and even rap
(in her song "Daydreaming") - and the authority with which she sang in
those genres is often mentioned. Springfield was among few singers in
the Rock
Music genre known for their interpretive prowess. In her 2005 list for iTunes, Carole
King accompanied her inclusion of "Son Of a Preacher Man" with
the comment "there is a hole in music where Dusty Springfield used to
be", and elaborated that Springfield was indeed a unique and respected
talent (and premised the statement authoritatively by citing
Springfield's many recordings of Carole King songs).
Posthumous
Springfield's work has continued to draw attention after her
death, and the critical acclaim for Dusty
in Memphis has kept her in the spotlight.
- In what was considered a very rare departure from royal
protocol, Queen Elizabeth said she was
'saddened' to learn of Springfield's death.
- In November 2006 Springfield was inducted into the UK
Music Hall of Fame; "You Don't Have To Say You Love Me" was performed
by singer Patti LaBelle and "Son Of A Preacher
Man" was performed by Joss Stone.
- In Australia, a hit musical based on Springfield's life - Dusty
The Original Pop Diva premiered in January 2006 to wide
acclaim and sold-out performances. The musical starring Tamsin Carroll
as Springfield, won a 2006 Helpmann Award for Carroll as Best
Female Actor in a Musical. Deni Hines plays Reno, an imaginary
character who represents Springfield's bisexual relationships and the
prejudice of the time.
- Currently, there are several movie projects in the works
based on Springfield's biographies. One project is slated to have
Broadway actress Kristin Chenoweth portraying
Springfield.
Trivia
- Springfield had a great love for animals,
particularly cats,
and was an advocate for several humane groups.
- She recorded a version of the theme song for Growing
Pains, "As Long as We've Got Each Other," with BJ Thomas.
This version of the theme song was used from the fourth season of the
show on until it went off the air.
- Parts of her song "Bits and Pieces" are used
twice in Richard Rush's Oscar
nominated film The Stunt Man.
Its tune bears a resemblance to one of the film's musical
themes composed by Dominic Frontiere.
- UK jazz-pop duo Swing
Out Sister covered two of the same songs as Dusty
Springfield: "The Windmills of Your
Mind" (1989) and "Am I The Same Girl?" (1992).
They have also performed the track "Where Am I Going?" live.
- Springfield was mentioned as being a favorite
singer of the fictional Dempsey sisters in romantic comedy writer
Jennifer Crusie's 2000 novel "Welcome to Temptation".
Dusty recorded an alternate opening theme song
for "The Six-Million Dollar Man" series in 1974 but it was replaced
with the opening credits that became the staple for the series..."Steve
Austin....astronaut..".http://youtube.com/watch?v=FLSdwg35RnU
- A sample from "Son of a Preacher Man" was used
on Cypress Hill's cult classic stoner culture song, "Hits From The
Bong" on their "Black Sunday" Album
Discography
-
For
more details on this topic, see Dusty Springfield
discography.
External links
No current external links meet the required
criteria.
References
-
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/67646.stm
-
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/67646.stm
-
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1589/is_1999_April_27/ai_54492600
| v • d • e Dusty
Springfield |
| Discography |
|
Original studio albums: A
Girl Called Dusty (UK) (1964) ·
Stay Awhile/I
Only Want To Be With You (US) (1964) ·
Dusty (US)
(1964)
Ooooooweeee!!!
(US) (1965) ·
Ev'rything's Coming Up
Dusty (UK) (1965) ·
You Don't
Have to Say You Love Me (US) (1966)
Where Am I Going?
(UK) (1967) ·
The Look
of Love (US) (1967) ·
Dusty... Definitely
(UK) (1968) ·
Dusty in Memphis
(1969)
From Dusty With Love
(UK) (1970) ·
A Brand New Me
(US) (1970) ·
See All Her Faces
(UK) (1972) ·
Cameo (1973) ·
Longing
(1974)
It Begins Again
(1978) ·
Living Without Your Love
(1979) ·
White Heat
(1982) ·
Reputation
(UK) (1990)
A Very Fine Love
(1995)
|