Mark James (born Francis Rodney Zambon; November 29, 1940 – June 8, 2024) was an American songwriter. He wrote hits for B.J. Thomas, Brenda Lee and Elvis Presley, including Presley’s hit single “Suspicious Minds”.
Mark James was born an Italian-American in Houston, Texas, on November 29, 1940, the son of an Italian-born building contractor and a school teacher, and he was raised there. At High School he played the violin and the accordion and conducted the school orchestra, but he said later that he had not realised how much he loved music until he picked up a guitar. James befriended singer B.J. Thomas when both were young. He began writing songs and performing in clubs in Houston, and changed his name to Mark James after he was told that ‘Francis Zambon’ was “a non-starter” .
Career beginning and songwriting
At first James intended to record his songs himself rather than give them to other singers. He released his first single, “Jive Note”, in 1959. He formed a band, the Mark James Trio, and released several more songs co-written with Bobby Winder, including Running Back and Tell Me, released on Crazy Cajun Records in Houston, Texas, which was a minor hit in 1963. His career was temporarily halted when he was drafted into the US Army to serve in Vietnam with the First Infantry Division.
After his discharge, he moved to Memphis in 1968 and worked as a staff songwriter for Memphis producer Chips Moman’s publishing company. In 1968 and 1969 Moman produced Thomas’s versions of “The Eyes of a New York Woman”, “Hooked on a Feeling”, and “It’s Only Love”, all of which were successful. “Hooked on a Feeling”, inspired by Karen Taylor his high school sweetheart who had inspired “Suspicious Minds”, was his first top ten hit.
James released his own version of his song “Suspicious Minds”, also produced by Moman, on Scepter Records in 1968. Elvis Presley, looking for a song with which to relaunch his career, had “Suspicious Minds” played to him by Moman and recorded a version in 1969 with an almost identical arrangement. The song became a smash hit and was later listed on Rolling Stone’s 500 Greatest Songs of All Time at no. 91.
1969–1977: Continued success
In 1972 James signed a long-term contract with Screen Gems-Columbia Music. In 1973, his song “Sunday Sunrise” was recorded by American Country singer Brenda Lee. Lee’s version was a huge hit and became a top ten single on charts in the US. In 1975, Canadian musician Anne Murray covered “Sunday Sunrise”. Elvis Presley recorded more of James’s songs, “Raised on Rock”, “It’s Only Love” and “Moody Blue”, which was the title track to Presley’s last studio album. James’s greatest success came with “Always on My Mind”, which he wrote with Johnny Christopher and Wayne Carson. It was issued as a b-side by Presley in 1972. In 1973, jazz-rock group Blood, Sweat & Tears released James’s “Roller Coaster” as a single from their album No Sweat. The song was recorded by David Cassidy in the same year for the last Partridge Family album Bulletin Board, which contained two other James songs, “Where Do We Go From Here” and “Alone Too Long”, which he wrote with Cynthia Weil.
From 1978: Grammy wins, “Always on My Mind” covers, Mark James Trio
Mark James Trio released the album She’s Gone Away in 1960 on Crazy Cajun Records, with band members Joey Longoria and Bobby Winder who cowrote with Mark James .
A decade after “Always on My Mind” was released, Willie Nelson covered it and made the song a huge hit. James won a Grammy Award for Song of the Year and Grammy Award for Best Country Song for Nelson’s version. In 1987 the UK’s Pet Shop Boys released a version of “Always on My Mind” which reached No. 1 in the UK and No. 4 in the US. On October 11, 2015, James entered the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame.
Private life and death
James married his first wife, Shirley Yates, in Houston,Texas. They had a daughter. He married his second wife, Karen Taylor, in 1971. She had a daughter from her first marriage. Mark died at his home in Nashville, Tennessee, on June 8, 2024, at the age of 83.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_James_(songwriter)
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OTHER NOTABLE MUSICIANS’ DEATHS
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If you want to know more about any of the musicians we lost, please check them out at http://www.wikipedia.com
June 2024
20: Margarita Voites, 87, Estonian opera singer.
19: Chrystian, 67, Brazilian sertanejo singer, polycystic kidney disease; Silvia Infantas, 101, Chilean singer and actress.
18: James Chance, 71, American musician (James Chance and the Contortions).
17: Paul Spencer, 53, English musician (Dario G), rectal cancer.
16: Buzz Cason, 84, American singer and songwriter (“Everlasting Love”); Jodie Devos, 35, Belgian opera singer (Opéra-Comique), breast cancer.
13: Angela Bofill, 70, American singer-songwriter (“This Time I’ll Be Sweeter”); Pepe Guerra, 80, Uruguayan guitarist (Los Olimareños), cancer; Nahim, 71, Brazilian singer, fall; Skowa, 68, Brazilian singer-songwriter (Trio Mocotó).
12: Johnny Canales, 81, Mexican Tejano singer and television host; Ion Krasnopolsky, 79, Moldovan musician.
11: Enchanting, 26, American rapper, complications from a drug overdose; Marcel Guilloux, 93, French singer and storyteller; Françoise Hardy, 80, French singer-songwriter (“Tous les garçons et les filles”, “All Over the World”) and actress (Grand Prix), laryngeal cancer; Gaps Hendrickson, 73, British musician and vocalist (The Selecter), cancer; Adam Lewis, 45, American musician (Fenix TX), pancreatic cancer; Kevork Mardirossian, 70, American violinist; Éric Tappy, 93, Swiss operatic tenor (Grand Théâtre de Genève) and academic teacher (Conservatoire de Musique de Genève); Rajeev Taranath, 91, Indian classical musician.
9: William Carragan, 86, American musicologist, Bruckner expert, stroke; Alex Riel, 83, Danish jazz and rock drummer.
8: Mark James, 83, American songwriter (“Hooked on a Feeling”, “Suspicious Minds”, “Always on My Mind”); Charlie Lennon, 85, Irish traditional fiddler and composer.
7: Ernstalbrecht Stiebler, 90, German composer.
5: Rose-Marie, 68, Northern Irish singer and television personality; Ranch Sironi, 32, American bassist (Nebula).
4: C.Gambino, 26, Swedish rapper, shot.
3: Brother Marquis, 58, American rapper (2 Live Crew), heart attack.
2: Emma Lou Diemer, 96, American composer; Colin Gibb, 70, British musician (Black Lace).
1: Harry van Hoof, 81, Dutch conductor (“Ding-a-dong”, “I See a Star”), composer (“How Do You Do”) and music arranger.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deaths_in_2024
Photo: Elvis Presley