Everything about Van Mccoy totally explained
Van Allen Clinton McCoy (
January 6,
1940 –
July 6,
1979) was a
music producer,
musician,
songwriter, and
orchestra conductor most famous for his massive 1975
disco hit "
The Hustle", which is still played on dance floors today, nearly 30 years after his death. He is also notable for producing such recording artists as
Gladys Knight and the Pips,
The Stylistics,
Aretha Franklin,
Brenda & The Tabulations,
David Ruffin and
Peaches & Herb,
Zulema and
Stacy Lattisaw.
Biography
McCoy was born on
January 6,
1940, in
Washington, D.C. the second child of Norman S. McCoy, Sr. and Lillian Ray, and grew up there. He sang with the Metropolitan Baptist
Church choir as a kid, and was writing his own songs in addition to performing in local amateur shows alongside older brother, Norman Jr., by the time he was 12. The two formed a
doo-wop combo called the Starlighters with two friends while in high school, and issued the single
The Birdland, a novelty dance record, in 1956, gaining some interest that led to their touring with drummer Vi Burnsides. The Starlighters cut three singles for End in 1959. Marriage and other things would eventually cause the group to disband in the mid-'50s. He also sang with a group called the Marylanders.
McCoy entered
Howard University to study
psychology some time later, only to drop out after two years to move to Philadelphia, where he formed his own label
Rockin' Records, and released his first single
Hey Mr. DJ in 1959. This single gained the attention of
Scepter Records owner Florence Greenberg, who hired McCoy as a staff writer and A&R Representative. As a writer there, McCoy penned his first hit
Stop the Music for the female vocal group
the Shirelles in 1962. He also ran Vando and Share and owned Maxx during the '60s, supervising such artists as
Chris Bartley,
Gladys Knight & The Pips and
the Ad-Libs. However he didn't really come into his own until signing on with producers
Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller as a writer with their Tiger and Daisy labels. McCoy would go on to write a string of hits as the '60s progressed with them. He also penned
Giving Up for
Gladys Knight & The Pips, later a hit for
Donny Hathaway,
The Sweetest Thing This Side Of Heaven for
Chris Bartley,
When You're Young And In Love for
Ruby and the Romantics,
Right On The Tip Of My Tongue for
Brenda & The Tabulations, and
I Get the Sweetest Feeling for
Jackie Wilson during this period. He wrote or produced most consistently for
The Presidents (
5-10-15-20 (25 Years of Love)),
The Choice Four (
The Fingerpointers, Come Down To Earth),
Faith, Hope & Charity (
To Each His Own) and
David Ruffin (
Walk Away From Love).
In 1966, McCoy recorded a solo
LP for
Columbia Records entitled
Nighttime Is a Lonely Time, and, a year later, started his own short-lived label
Vando, as well as his own production company
VMP (Van McCoy Productions). In the early-'70s, McCoy began a long and acclaimed collaboration with songwriter and producer Charles Kipps, and arranged several hits for the soul group
the Stylistics before releasing the solo LP
Soul Improvisations in 1972, which, although it included the minor hit
Let Me Down Easy, due to poor promotion, wasn't a success. He also formed his own orchestra
Soul City Symphony, and, with singers Faith, Hope and Charity, produced several albums and gave many performances. In 1975, to low expectations, McCoy released the mostly instrumental LP
Disco Baby for the
Avco (later "H&L") label.
Unexpectedly, the single "The Hustle" from the album, written about the dance of the same name and recorded last for the album, went to the top of the
Billboard pop charts, and won a
Grammy. McCoy, then regarded a
disco hitmaker, never repeated the success of the song, although the singles "Party," "That's The Joint" and "Change With The Times" got significant airplay. After a series of follow-up albums (
From Disco to Love the(1975 reissue of
Soul Improvisations),
The Disco Kid (1975),
The Real McCoy (1976),
Rhythms of the World (1976),
My Favorite Fantasy (1978),
Lonely Dancer (1979), and
Sweet Rhythm (1979)) of which only the first few sold somewhat well yet spawned no hits, returned to producing and writing. He did, however, have phenomonal success with former Temptation
David Ruffin's comeback LP, "Who I Am," featuring the massive hit, "
Walk Away From Love," and went on to produce the next two albums for
David Ruffin,
Gladys Knight and The Pips' "Still Together" LP, and
Melba Moore ("
This Is It" and "
Lean on Me").
He died from a
heart attack in
Englewood,
New Jersey on
July 6,
1979.
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