Songwriter Dallas Frazier, a multi-Grammy winner who is enshrined in the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame, died on Friday, according to a report. He was 82.
Frazier built a career on his notable songwriting ability, creating hits like Hollywood Argylesβ 1960 hit βAlley Oopβ, The Oak Ridge Boysβ 1981 classic βElvira,β and the 1971βs Jack Greene-recorded βThere Goes My Everything.β
βDallas Frazier is among the greatest country songwriters of all time,β said Kyle Young, CEO of the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, Billboard reported.
Frazier, who was born in Spiro, Oklahoma, also co-wrote numerous No. 1 hits with A.L. βDoodleβ Owens, including 1969βs βAll I Have to Offer You (Is Me),β which was Charley Prideβs first No. 1 Billboard Hot Country Songs hit.
Pride scored two other No. 1 country hits alongside Frazier and Owens, including β(Iβm So) Afraid of Losing You Again,β in 1969, βI Canβt Believe That Youβve Stopped Loving Me,β in1970, and βThen Who Am I,β in 1974. (Pride died in 2020 to COVID-19-related complications).
βHe could convey infectious fun with βElvira,β and then write something as stunningly sad and true as βBeneath Still Waters,ββ Young added. βHis songs helped Connie Smith to become a member of the Country Music Hall of Fame. He was a man of kindness, generosity, and faith, who overcame a hardscrabble upbringing to offer smiling gifts to all of us. He lived a beautiful life of a beautiful mind.β
In 1976, Frazier was inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame, and he continued producing top hits.
Frazier wrote βBeneath Still Watersβ for Emmylou Harris in 1980, which became a No. 1 country hit. He also co-wrote Tanya Tuckerβs βWhatβs Your Mamaβs Name?β which became her first No. 1 hit, Billboard reported.
Frazierβs applauded writing ability created a magical feel to listeners, he said in an interview in 2018 with journalist Tom Roland.
βIβve noticed this all my life in writing songs, thereβs a thing called feel, and itβs magic when you get ahold of it,β Frazier said. βIt can make or break a record. You can have a great song and all, but if it doesnβt have that feel, it just doesnβt do anything. βElviraβ had the feel. And The Oaks, what a tremendous cut. With Richard Sterban doing his thing on it and the horns just making it first classβ¦it had so much magic in it, itβd just raise the hair on your arms.β
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Dallas Frazier dead; writer of Oak Ridge Boys hit ‘Elvira’ was 82 – S.G.E