Your source for the biggest names in entertainment!

Dion

Use the Booking Entertainment.com agency to book Dion for your corporate event, private party, public concert, fundraiser, college, fair or festival. Submit an Entertainment Request Form and an agent will reply within 24 hours. Booking Dion is that easy...

Entertainment Request Form

Bridging the era between late-'50s rock and the British Invasion, Dion DiMucci (b. July 18, 1939) was one of the top white rock singers of his time, blending the best elements of doo wop, teen idol, and R&B styles. Some revisionists have tried to cast him as a sort of early blue-eyed soul figure, although he was probably more aligned with pop/rock, at first as the lead singer of the Belmonts, and then as a solo star. Drug problems slowed him down in the mid-'60s, yet he made some surprisingly interesting progressions into blues-rock and folk-rock as the decade wore on, culminating in a successful comeback in the late '60s, although he was unable to sustain its commercial and artistic momentum for long.

When Dion began recording in the late '50s, it was as the lead singer of a group of friends that sang on Bronx street corners. Billing themselves as Dion & the Belmonts (Dion had released a previous single with the Timberlanes), their first few records were prime Italian-American doo wop; "I Wonder Why" was their biggest hit in this style. His biggest single with the Belmonts was "A Teenager in Love," which pointed the way for the slightly self-pitying, pained odes to adolescence and early adulthood that would characterize much of his solo work.

Dion went solo in 1960 (the Belmonts did some more doo wop recordings on their own), moving from doo wop to more R&B/pop-oriented tunes with great success. He handled himself with a suave, cocky ease on hits like "The Wanderer," "Runaround Sue," "Lovers Who Wander," "Ruby Baby," and "Donna the Prima Donna," which cast him as either the jilted, misunderstood youngster or the macho lover, capable of handling anything that came his way (on "The Wanderer" especially).

In 1963, Dion moved from Laurie to the larger Columbia label, an association that started promisingly with a couple of big hits right off the bat, "Ruby Baby" and "Donna the Prima Donna." By the mid-'60s, his heroin habit (which he'd developed as a teenager) was getting the best of him, and he did little recording and performing for about five years. When he did make it into the studio, he was moving in some surprisingly bluesy directions; although much of it was overlooked or unissued at the time, it can be heard on the Bronx Blues reissue CD.

In 1968, he kicked heroin and re-emerged as a gentle folk-rocker with a number four hit single, "Abraham, Martin and John." Dion would focus upon mature, contemporary material on his late '60s and early '70s albums, which were released to positive critical feedback, if only moderate sales. The folk phase didn't last long; in 1972, he reunited with the Belmonts, and in the mid-'70s cut a disappointing record with Phil Spector as producer. He's been recording and performing fairly often over the last two decades (sometimes singing Christian music) to indifferent commercial results. But his critical rep has risen steadily since the early '60s, with many noted contemporary musicians showering him with praise and citing his influence, such as Dave Edmunds (who produced one of his periodic comeback albums) and Lou Reed (who guested on that record).

Related 50's and 60's Bands, Musians, and Artists

Ben E. King

Beverly Lees Shirelles

Bill Haleys Comets

Billy J. Kramer

Bo Diddley

Bobby Vinton

Chuck Berry

Danny & the Juniors

Davy Jones

Dion

Donny Osmond

Earl Lewis & the Channels

Elsbeary Hobbs Drifters

Felix Cavalieres Rascals

Frankie Avalon

Frankie Ford

Gary Puckett

Gary US Bonds

Gene Duke of Earl Chandler

Hermans Hermits featuring Peter Noone

Jerry Lee Lewis

Joe Billingslea and the Contours

Joey Dee & The Starlighters

John Kay & Steppenwolf

Johnny Maestro & The Brooklyn Bridge

Lionel Richie

Little Anthony & The Imperials

Lloyd Price

Martha Reeves

Mitch Ryder & The Detroit Wheels

Richie Havens

Sha Na Na

The Association

The Box Tops

The Buckinghams

The Chantels

The Friends of Distinction

The Grass Roots

The Ink Spots

The Original Tymes

The Platters

The Searchers

The Spencer Davis Group

The Turtles

Read about us

BookingEntertainment is featured in magazines:




BookingEntertainment.com Entertainment booking agents and management to plan or book the entertainment services of any top band, musician, comedian or celebrity for corporate events, concerts, private parties, special events, festivals, trade shows, fund raisers or galas. Services include corporate entertainment, event planning, talent agency, entertainment agency, private parties, concert booking, fund raisers, comedy or music booking and special events.

Our booking entertainment agents can book directly or through relationships the artists management / booking agencies to book artists, bands, musician, comedians or celebrities for entertainment at your next corporate event, concert, private party, special event, festival, trade show, fund raiser or gala.

Entertainment Agency | Booking Agent | Booking Agency | Booking Agents | Booking Agencies | Entertainment Agents | Entertainment Agencies | Celebrity Entertainment | Corporate Entertainment | Corporate Booking Agency | Corporate Comedy | Event Planning | Meeting Planning | Party Planning | Entertainment Agencies | Booking Agencies | Booking Agent | Entertainment Agent | Booking Agency | Corporate Event Ideas | Entertainment Booking Agent | Entertainment Booking Agency | Booking Corporate Entertainment | Corporate Events | Celebrity Entertainers | Corporate Booking Agency | Booking Entertainment | Talent Agent | Talent Agency | Booking a Celebrity | Corporate Events | Booking Corporate Entertainment | Artist Booking Agent | Booking Talent | Talent Booking Agent | Talent Booking Agency | Music Booking Agent | Music Booking Agency | Entertainment Booking Agencies | Corporate booking Agencies