view cart menu separator categories menu separator faq
advanced search
categories  > READY TO PLAY USED 8-Track Tapes (2399)
Ronnie Dyson - Why Can't I Touch You? 1970 CBS T10 8-TRACK TAPE
5 images
 
Ronnie Dyson - Why Can't I Touch You? 1970 CBS T10 8-TRACK TAPE
Ronnie Dyson - Why Can't I Touch You? 1970 CBS T10 8-TRACK TAPE
Ronnie Dyson - Why Can't I Touch You? 1970 CBS T10 8-TRACK TAPE
Ronnie Dyson - Why Can't I Touch You? 1970 CBS T10 8-TRACK TAPE

Ronnie Dyson - Why Can't I Touch You? 1970 CBS T10 8-TRACK TAPE

Price: $19.99 add to cart     
Feedback: 100%, 2519 sales Ask us a question
Shipping: USPS calculated click to check
Condition: Used
Returns: 7 days, buyer pays return shipping (more)
Payment with:
In 1970, "(If You Let Me Make Love to You Then) Why Can't I Touch You?" was recorded by Ronnie Dyson. The song reached #8 on the Billboard Hot 100 and #9 on the R&B chart. The song also peaked at number 68 in Australia. The song appeared on Dyson's debut album of the same name.

Ronald Dyson (June 5, 1950 – November 10, 1990) was an American soul and R&B singer and actor.

Born in Washington, D.C., Dyson grew up in Brooklyn, New York, where he sang in church choirs. At 18 years of age, he won a lead role in the Broadway production of Hair, debuting in New York in 1968. Dyson became an iconic voice of the 1960s with the lead vocal in the show's anthem of the hippie era, "Aquarius". It is Dyson's voice leading off the song and opening the show with the famous lyric "When the Moon is in the seventh house, and Jupiter aligns with Mars..." He made a cameo appearance in the 1979 motion picture version of Hair, singing "3-5-0-0" with another Hair alumnus, Melba Moore.

Dyson also appeared in the 1969 film Putney Swope.

After Hair, Dyson pursued his stage career with a role in Salvation in 1970. His recording of a song from the Salvation score, "(If You Let Me Make Love to You Then) Why Can't I Touch You?", successfully launched his record career, breaking into the Top 10 of the US Billboard Hot 100 record chart, peaking at number eight in 1970. The follow-up, "I Don't Wanna Cry", was a US R&B seller, climbing to number nine.

In 1971, "When You Get Right Down To It", of which his was a more dramatic cover version of a song that had been a hit the previous year for the Delfonics, made the US charts, and reached number 34 on the UK Singles Chart in December that year.

His record company, Columbia Records, sent him to Philadelphia in 1973 to be produced by Thom Bell, one of the premier producers of the day, for several tracks. Bell's highly orchestrated style suited Dyson with hits including "One Man Band (Plays All Alone)", which reached number 28 on the Hot 100 and number 15 on the R&B chart, and "Just Don't Want to Be Lonely" peaking at number 60 on the Hot 100 and number 29 on the R&B chart. These appeared on an album which was also made up of re-mixes of some earlier recordings, including "When You Get Right Down To It".

Dyson remained with Columbia working with top-line producers for another three albums, The More You Do It (1976), Love in All Flavors (1977) and If The Shoe Fits (1979). The title track of the first of the three resulted in one of the singer's biggest-selling records, reaching number six on the R&B chart. It was produced by Charles "Chuck" Jackson (half brother of Jesse Jackson and no relation to the more famous singer of the same name, who recorded for the same company in the 1960s) and Marvin Yancy, who had been responsible for successfully launching the career of Natalie Cole with a series of hits. (Jackson and Yancy had also produced hits for a Chicago soul group, The Independents, with whom Jackson was also lead singer.)

In 1986, Dyson also provided the vocals for the song "Nola" on the She's Gotta Have It soundtrack.

Dyson then moved to an Atlantic Records subsidiary label, the Cotillion Records label, in 1981 for two albums and several singles which were only moderately successful. His acting and singing career had begun to stall in the late 1970s due to ill health, and it was in 1983 that Dyson appeared on the R&B chart for the last time on Cotillion with "All Over Your Face". His final solo recording was "See The Clown" in 1990.

Dyson died at the age of 40 from heart failure on November 10, 1990, in Brooklyn, New York.

A posthumous release on Society Hill Records appeared in 1991, when a duet with Vicki Austin, "Are We So Far Apart (We Can't Talk Anymore)", dented the US R&B chart, reaching number 79 during a five-week run.

Retrieved from
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ronnie_Dyson
T10

Comes to you fully restored with a 7-day money back guarantee.
Other Products from 8tracksrback:View all products
Van Halen - Fair Warning 1981 CRC Cassette Tape
$12.00
Canned Heat - The New Age 1973 UA A52 8-TRACK TAPE
$14.99
Juice Newton - Can't Wait All Night 1984 RCA Sealed AC2 8-TRACK TAPE
$39.99
Bob Dylan - Desire Cassette Tape
$10.00
Bachman-Turner Overdrive - Freeways 8-track tape
$10.99
Jefferson Starship - The Best Of Starship 1993 RCA C15 CASSETTE TAPE
$15.00
The Police - Synchronicity 1983 CRC A&M T14 8-TRACK TAPE
$39.99
Quarterflash - Quarterflash 1981 Debut CRC A24 8-track tape
$24.99
Rita Coolidge - Anytime... Anywhere Cassette Tape
$7.00
Bee Gee's - Bee Gee's Greatest Hits Entire 2-Record Set 1979 CRC RSO Sealed T15 8-TRACK TAPE
$39.99
Last Updated: 14 Dec 2024 00:10:19 PST home  |  about  |  terms  |  contact
Powered by eCRATER - a free online store builder