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August 16, 2009

Jim Dickinson Dies at 67 - Memphis Commercial Appeal Obit - Photo Essay - Career Highlights






Memphis musician Jim Dickinson

dies at 67

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Career of artist, producer touched four decades, many lives

The North Mississippi Allstars have lost their father, Bob Dylan has lost a “brother,” rock and roll has lost one of its great cult heroes and Memphis has lost a musical icon with the death of Jim Dickinson.

The 67-year-old Dickinson passed away early Saturday morning in his sleep. The Memphis native and longtime Mississippi resident had been in failing health for the past few months and was recuperating from heart surgery at Methodist Extended Care Hospital.

Iconic Memphis musician and producer Jim Dickinson has died at age 67.


Jim Dickinson in 1965. Dickinson, a musician and producer who helped shape the Memphis sound in an influential career that spanned more than four decades, was 67. (Courtesy Ardent Studios)

“He went peacefully,” said his wife, Mary Lindsay Dickinson, adding that her husband remained in good spirits until the end. “He had a great life. He loved his family and music. And he loved Memphis music, specifically.”

During the course of his colorful half-century career, Dickinson built a worldwide reputation as a session player for the likes of Dylan and The Rolling Stones, a producer for influential groups including Big Star and The Replacements, a sometime solo artist and the patriarch of a small musical dynasty through his sons, Cody and Luther Dickinson of the North Mississippi Allstars.

Just last weekend, a tribute concert headlined by singer-songwriter John Hiatt and featuring a host of Memphis musicians was held at The Peabody Skyway to help defray Dickinson’s medical costs.

Dickinson’s earthy musical approach resonated with his peers: Bob Dylan, who was a longtime friend and collaborator, acknowledged him as a “brother” while accepting a Grammy award for 1997’s Time Out of Mind; The Rolling Stones, ever wary of outsiders, brought Dickinson in to add his soulful piano touch to their classic Sticky Fingers ballad “Wild Horses.”

As a producer, Dickinson was a studio alchemist in the tradition of such great Memphians as Sam Phillips and Chips Moman, for whom he worked. Dickinson was willing take on any role, acting as a protector, parent or prankster for his artists — thus helping him forge creatively rewarding relationships with difficult talents including Alex Chilton, Paul Westerberg and Ry Cooder.

Dickinson’s reach and impact on Memphis music over the last four decades is significant; perhaps more than anyone, he was uniquely connected to the city’s historic past and its present.

In addition to being one of the key forces behind the rise of Memphis’ Ardent Studios, Dickinson’s deconstructionist roots-rock band Mud Boy & the Neutrons proved a seminal influence on several generations of local acts.

Dickinson remained busy during his final years, continuing to produce local artists, including the breakthrough CD for Memphis roots chanteuse Amy LaVere, as well as several projects for his sons. He’d also been writing and performing with a crew of musicians half his age in the garage bands Snake Eyes and Trashed Romeos in recent months.

Born in Little Rock on Nov. 15, 1941, and briefly raised in Chicago before settling in Memphis, the young James Luther Dickinson came up in a musical hothouse, influenced by his piano-teacher mother and mesmerized by the sounds permeating from the radio.

“There was something about the voice coming out of the box that got me. That’s where it all started,” Dickinson recalled in his final interview, given to The Commercial Appeal in May.

As a student at White Station High School, Dickinson formed his first band, The Regents; he later had the distinction of singing on The Jesters’ 1966 garage-rock nugget “Cadillac Man,” the final release on Sun Records.

After a stint in college in Texas, Dickinson returned to the Bluff City, where he began a career as a session player, eventually forming The Dixie Flyers, a group that became house band for Atlantic Records, and backing artists such as soul queen Aretha Franklin and R&B belter Little Richard.

In 1972, Dickinson released his first solo record, the cult classic Dixie Fried. The LP would prove the apotheosis of a kaleidoscopic musical vision he dubbed

“world boogie.”

Significantly, starting in the mid-’70s, Dickinson made an almost seamless transition from working with mainstream major label acts to punk and indie artists. Beginning with his work on the seminal Big Star album Third/Sister Lovers, Dickinson’s “anything goes” aesthetic made him a favorite choice to produce numerous alternative acts in the ’80s and ’90s.

Despite his connections, Dickinson never sought the trappings of fame, instead preferring to live on a sprawling thatch of land in rural Coldwater, Miss., that he dubbed Zebra Ranch, which housed a pair of trailers that served as his home and studio.

A gifted raconteur, musical philosopher and cultural historian, Dickinson was a veritable treasure trove of pop arcana and profound theory, capable of finding the cosmic and literal connections between deejay Dewey Phillips and former Mayor Willie Herenton, wrestler Sputnik Monroe and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

For Dickinson, there was some sense of artistic closure late in life. His final album, Dinosaurs Run in Circles, released in May, brought him back to his earliest love: the pop and jazz-flecked standards from his childhood radio days. Several of the tracks were recorded from his mother’s original sheet music.

Dickinson’s health woes began following an appearance playing with British rocker Elvis Costello at the Beale Street Music Festival in May. Though he’d long suffered from intestinal problems, a physical exam revealed Dickinson also had serious cardiac issues. A procedure to put two stents in his heart, a triple-bypass surgery and a prolonged stay in an intensive-care unit followed.

Last month, Dickinson was relocated to a rehabilitation facility; family and doctors had been hoping for gradual recovery, “but he just never did really get a break physically,” said his wife.

Luther Dickinson said the family has no plans for a public memorial and that the tribute show at The Peabody will stand as the farewell to their father.

“That was the best sendoff he could have ever wanted,”

he said.

Although he achieved a modicum of commercial success in his lifetime, ultimately, Dickinson’s legacy won’t be measured in chart placements or platinum albums but in the profound impact his work had on listeners.

“Some of the records I’ve done, really obscure things, will be the ones that somebody will tell you saved their lives,” he once said.

What Dickinson understood was both the impermanence of his own life and the enduring power of the music he made. It’s a sentiment reflected in the epitaph he chose for himself: I’m just dead, I’m not gone.

Career highlights

1966: Cuts the song “Cadillac Man” for Sun Records, attracting the interest of his idol, Sam Phillips.

1969: Plays piano on “Wild Horses” for The Rolling Stones in Muscle Shoals, Ala.

1975: Produces Big Star’s dark masterpiece Third/Sister Lovers. It eventually is named one of Rolling Stone magazine’s “500 Greatest Albums of All Time.”

1986: Rowdy Minneapolis rockers The Replacements come to Memphis to record the critically-acclaimed Pleased to Meet Me with Dickinson producing.

1997: Plays on Bob Dylan’s Grammy-winning “comeback” album Time Out of Mind.

2009: Releases his swan song, Dinosaurs Run in Circles, a collection of old pop standards:





Dickinson at work in the late 1970's. As a producer, ...
Dickinson at work in the late 1970's. As a producer, Dickinson was a studio alchemist in the tradition of such great Memphians as Sam Phillips and Chips Moman, for whom he worked. (Courtesy of Ardent Studios)
Mud Boy & the Neutrons proved a seminal influence on ...

Mud Boy & the Neutrons proved a seminal influence on several generations of local acts. From left: Sid Selvidge, Jim Dickinson, Jimmy Crosthwait and Lee Baker. Jim Dickinson talks with his son Luther Dickinson at his ...

Photo: Alan Spearman / The Commercial Appeal

Jim Dickinson talks with his son Luther Dickinson at his Zebra Ranch Studio in Coldwater, Mississippi in October, 2003.During the course of his colorful half-century career, Dickinson, seen ...

Photo: Alan Spearman / The Commercial Appeal

During the course of his colorful half-century career, Dickinson, seen here in 2003 with son Luther, built a worldwide reputation as a session player for the likes of Dylan and The Rolling StonesJim Dickinson with sons Cody and Luther at the Zebra ...

Photo: Alan Spearman / The Commercial Appeal

Jim Dickinson with sons Cody and Luther at the Zebra Ranch Studio in Coldwater, Mississippi in October 2003.Musician and producer Jim Dickinson listens to the new 5.1 ...

Photo: Lance Murphey / The Commercial Appeal

Musician and producer Jim Dickinson listens to the new 5.1 surround sound mixing console at Young Avenue Sound recording studio with engineer Jennifer Lee in May 2006.Prior to performing Jim Dickinson, left, carries a guitar and ...

Prior to performing Jim Dickinson, left, carries a guitar and his son Luther, center, takes a mandolin onto the stage at the Raoul Wallenberg Shell at Overton Park in July 2001

AlDiaTx.com | Noticias de Dallas Fort Worth

Muere productor y músico de Memphis Jim Dickinson

08/15/2009

Por CHRIS TALBOTT / Associated Press

Jim Dickinson, músico y productor que ayudó a dar forma al sonido de Memphis durante una carrera influyente de más de cuatro décadas, murió el sábado. Tenía 67 años.

Su esposa, Mary Lindsay Dickinson, dijo que el productor murió en un hospital de Memphis, Tenesí, luego de tres meses de problemas cardíacos y hemorragia intestinal. La pareja vivía en Hernando, Misisipí.

Dickinson había tenido una operación de desvío coronario hace poco y se estaba recuperando en el Hospital de la Universidad Metodista cuando murió cerca de las 4:30 de la mañana, dijo su mujer.

Aunque quizás era más conocido por ser el padre de Luther y Cody Dickinson, integrantes del trío ganador del Grammy North Mississippi Allstars, Dickinson grabó con astros como Aretha Franklin, Bob Dylan, Big Star, los Rolling Stones y Sam y Dave, produciendo además varias de sus obras .

AlDiaTx.com | Noticias de Dallas Fort Worth

Memphis Producer, Musician Jim Dickinson Dies - NYTimes.com

Memphis Producer, Musician Jim Dickinson Dies

JACKSON, Miss. (AP) -- Jim Dickinson, a musician and producer who helped shape the Memphis sound in an influential career that spanned more than four decades, has died. He was 67.

His wife, Mary Lindsay Dickinson, said he died Saturday in a Memphis, Tenn., hospital after three months of battling heart and intestinal bleeding problems. The couple lived in Hernando, Miss.

Dickinson recently had bypass surgery and was undergoing rehabilitation at Methodist University Hospital when he died around 4:30 a.m., his wife said.

Perhaps best known as the father of Luther and Cody Dickinson, two-thirds of the Grammy-nominated North Mississippi Allstars, Dickinson recorded and produced with greats like Aretha Franklin, Bob Dylan, Big Star, the Rolling Stones and Sam and Dave.
Memphis Producer, Musician Jim Dickinson Dies - NYTimes.com

The Associated Press: Obituaries in the news

Jim Dickinson

JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — Jim Dickinson, a musician and producer who helped shape the Memphis sound in an influential career that spanned more than four decades, died Saturday morning. He was 67.

His wife, Mary Lindsay Dickinson, said he died in a Memphis, Tenn., hospital after three months of heart and intestinal bleeding problems. The couple lived in Hernando, Miss.

Dickinson recently had bypass surgery and was undergoing rehabilitation at Methodist University Hospital, his wife said.

Perhaps best known as the father of Luther and Cody Dickinson, two-thirds of the Grammy-nominated North Mississippi Allstars, Jim Dickinson managed an outsider's career in an insider's industry. His work in the 1960s and '70s is still influential as young artists rediscover the classic sound of Memphis from that era — a melting pot of rock, pop, blues, country, and rhythm and blues.

A dabbler in music while in college and later in shows at the famed Overton Park Shell in Memphis, Dickinson spent time on the road playing live in both his own projects, like Mudboy and the Neutrons, and with others until Luther was born. He gave up the road, built a home studio and settled in to a hard-scrabble life he jokingly compared to hustling.

Dickinson's career touched on some of the most important music made in the '60s and '70s. He recorded the Rolling Stones' "Wild Horses" in Muscle Shoals, Ala.; formed the Atlantic Records house band The Dixie Flyers to record with Aretha Franklin and other R&B legends; inspired a legion of indie rock bands through his work with Big Star; collaborated with Ry Cooder on a number of movie scores, including "Paris, Texas"; and played with Bob Dylan on his Grammy-winning return to prominence, "Time Out of Mind."

His later work as a producer veered wildly across genres, skipping from Mudhoney to T Model Ford and Lucero.

The Associated Press: Obituaries in the news