Songwriter Dallas Frazier, known for penning hits including
The Oak Ridge Boys‘ 1981 classic “Elvira,” and Gene Watson‘s “Fourteen Carat Mind,”
died Friday (Jan. 14). Frazier was 82.
Frazier was born in Spiro, Okla., on Oct. 27, 1939, and raised in Bakersfield, California.
At age 12, he was already writing songs and won a talent competition hosted
by Ferlin Husky. By age 14, Frazier was recording for Capitol Records.
In 1960, Frazier had his first success as a songwriter,
when “Alley Oop” became a pop hit for the Hollywood Argyles.
Three years later, he moved to Nashville.
In 1967, the Frazier-penned “There Goes My Everything,” recorded by Jack Greene,
was named song of the year by the Country Music Association.
Frazier also found success co-writing songs with A.L. “Doodle” Owens, including Charley Pride‘s
first No. 1 Billboard Hot Country Songs hit, 1969’s “All I Have to Offer You (Is Me).”
Pride also had No. 1 country hits with the Frazier/Owens collaborations “(I’m So) Afraid of Losing You Again,”
“I Can’t Believe That You’ve Stopped Loving Me” and “Then Who Am I.”
Connie Smith and George Jones were also among those who recorded several of Frazier’s hits,
such as Jones’ 1967 hit “If My Heart Had Windows.” (Jones also recorded an
entire album of Frazier’s songs on Sings the Songs of Dallas Frazier.) Among the Frazier-penned
Smith recordings are “Ain’t Had No Lovin’,” “Run Away Little Tears,” “Ain’t Love a Good Thing”
and more.
Another’s of Frazier’s best-known songs, “Elvira,” was previously recorded
by Rodney Crowell before it became a smash hit for the Oak Ridge Boys in 1981.
The group’s recording of the song earned the Country Music Association’s single of
the year honor.
“I’ve noticed this all my life in writing songs, there’s a thing called feel,
and it’s magic when you get ahold of it,” Frazier told journalist Tom Roland
in a 2018 interview. “It can make or break a record. You can have a great song
and all, but if it doesn’t have that feel, it just doesn’t do anything. ‘Elvira’ 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 class…it had so much magic in it, it’d just raise the
hair on your arms.”
During his career, Frazier earned three Grammy nominations, for his work
on “There Goes My Everything,” “All I Have To Offer You (Is Me),” and “Elvira.”
In 1980, Frazier’s “Beneath Still Waters” became a No. 1 country hit for
Emmylou Harris, and Frazier also co-wrote Tanya Tucker‘s
first No. 1 hit, “What’s Your Mama’s Name?”
Frazier was inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1976.
“Dallas Frazier is among the greatest country songwriters of all time,” said Kyle Young,
CEO of the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum. “He could convey infectious
fun with ‘Elvira,’ and then write something as stunningly sad and true
as ‘Beneath Still Waters.’ His 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.”
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