Allee Willis, Hall of Fame "September" songwriter, dead at 72 - The San Diego Union-Tribune

2021-12-25 08:41:23 By : Ms. Joanna Liang

Small coronavirus outbreak sends Koningsdam cruise ship back to San Diego

El Cajon police arrest 16-year-old suspected of eight robberies

Truck crashes in rainy weather and spills diesel fuel on Bonita Road

San Diego Zoo’s beloved orangutan Satu dies

Cold, sporadic showers expected across San Diego County on Christmas Day

US to lift omicron-linked travel ban on southern Africa

As migration challenges continue, Haitians in Tijuana find support at community forum

Best jazz albums of 2021 came from Ches Smith, Henry Threadgill, Charles Lloyd, Steph Richards & Joshua White

Afghan evacuation effort earns White House support with help from San Diego veteran

Best jazz and classical concerts of 2021 offered aural inspiration in a year of COVID-19 challenges

Musical collaborators, friends and fans took to social media on Christmas Day to pay homage to songwriter Allee Willis, who wrote or co-wrote such hits as Earth, Wind & Fire’s party anthem “September,” the Pointer Sisters’ “The Neutron Dance” and the Emmy-nominated theme to the long-running TV series “Friends,” a.k.a. “I’ll Be There for You,” after news surfaced that she had died on Christmas Eve at 72.

The cause of death was cardiac arrest, according to her publicist.

“Allee Willis was a one-of-a-kind creative genius,” Earth, Wind & Fire tweeted on Wednesday. “Her love, spirit and artistry are forever woven into the fabric and legacy of Earth, Wind & Fire. She will be sorely missed.”

Allee Willis was a one-of-a-kind creative genius. Her love, spirit and artistry are forever woven into the fabric and legacy of Earth, Wind & Fire. She will be sorely missed. Rest in Love (pictured here with our Maurice White) pic.twitter.com/wiEEqC4xqc

The group’s lead singer, Philip Bailey, separately tweeted, “It would be like Allee Willis to take flight at a time of the most holy of days. You will be missed my friend. Until we meet again. Love And Light.”

Willis was inducted last year into the Songwriters Hall of Fame for her decades of work crafting songs that stretched from pop and rock to R&B and soul and were recorded by myriad artists also including Ray Charles, Sister Sledge, Bonnie Raitt, Bryan Adams and Pet Shop Boys.

A Renaissance woman, Willis also delved deeply into visual art as a painter, wrote comedy, housed a renowned collection of kitsch memorabilia at her home in Valley Village in the San Fernando Valley, and in recent years had mounted a one-woman theater production she called “Allee Willis’ Love ’N Latkes Chanukah Christmas Shopping Extravaganza Show!”

Her wide-ranging interests and talents prompted Roots member Questlove to post on his Instagram page, “You were a strange beautiful soul Allee Willis. We are all the better for your words.”

Do u remember...the 24th day of December....when the Queen of our jam called “September” was suddenly called away.....so no one told us life was gonna be this way (clap furiously 4 times) we burned doing the Neutron Dance in Boogie Wonderland.....she was an All American Girl from The D ....where another notable Motown resident in 98 made his mark Gettin This Money sampling her “Just Come Running To Me”...I guess it’s written In The Stone that we must Stir It Up now & scream “I’m Alive”!?? What have we...what have we....What Have We Done To Deserve This? She was truly the Best! Around! And no spirit will ever keep your songs down...your words Lead Us On all night long....& thats All That Matters To Me....you were a strange beautiful soul Allee Willis we are all the better for your words. Rest in melody #AlleeWillis #September #BoogieWonderland #InTheStone #CantLetGo #NeutronDance #StirItUp #JustComeRunningToMe #YoureTheBest (Karate Kid) #WhatHaveIDoneToDeserveThis #AllAmericanGirls #IllBeThereForYou

A post shared by Questlove Froman, (@questlove) on Dec 25, 2019 at 12:27am PST

Allee Willis was born Nov. 10, 1947, in Detroit, where as a youth she was captivated by the music emanating from the headquarters of Motown Records.

In September, at a gathering celebrating the label’s 60th anniversary, Willis shared memories of sitting on the lawn outside Motown’s offices, watching musicians, songwriters and employees come and go, despite her father’s admonition to “stay away from black culture.”

Six decades later, she described the event as “the ultimate fulfillment of my childhood fantasy to be up on stage at Motown 60 in the finale singing ‘Signed, Sealed, Delivered’ with [Motown co-founder] Berry Gordy dancing right in front of me!”

She also had her own exhibit at the Motown Museum, placed between those highlighting the lives and careers of Oprah Winfrey and Nelson Mandela. “I cry just thinking about it,” she said at the time.

After studying journalism at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, she moved to New York and landed a job as a secretary at Columbia Records, working first as a copywriter before turning her attention to songwriting and performing.

Her only album, “Childstar” in 1974, flopped commercially, but did catch the ear of Bonnie Raitt, who became the first artist to record one of her songs, “Got You On My Mind.” She subsequently became a songwriter at A&M Records, and after being introduced by a mutual friend to Earth, Wind and Fire bassist Verdine White, she met his brother, Maurice, and began collaborating with him as a writer, scoring her first hit with “September.”

Earlier this year, the Library of Congress added the song “September,” which Willis wrote with EWF co-founder Maurice White and guitarist Al McKay, to its National Recording Registry honoring historic and culturally significant recordings.

She liked to tell of her initial resistance to the nonsense syllabic refrain “ba-dee-yah” that White repeated at various points while they were working up the number.

“I just said ‘What the [heck] does ‘ba-dee-yah’ mean?” she told NPR in 2014. “He essentially said, ‘Who the [heck] cares?’ I learned my greatest lesson ever in songwriting from him, which was never let the lyric get in the way of the groove.”

It went to No. 1 on Billboard’s Hot R&B Songs chart in 1978, and peaked at No. 8 on the Billboard Hot 100 ranking. The opening line “Do you remember/The 21st night of September” was subject to debate over the years, White claiming it simply sounded good to him. Willis, however, told the Wall Street Journal earlier this year that White’s wife, Marilyn, told her that was the due date of their son, Kahbran.

Perhaps even more widely recognized than “September” was the “Friends” theme “I’ll Be There for You.” She was one of several collaborators on the song, along with series creators David Crane and Marta Kauffman, composer Michael Skloff (Kauffman’s husband) and songwriters Phil Solem and Danny Wilde of the Rembrandts, whose recording was featured in the series and subsequently became a standard at weddings, anniversaries, bar mitzvahs and other special occasions.

The song was nominated in 1995 for an Emmy Award in the category of main title theme music, but lost to Jerry Goldsmith’s “Star Trek: Voyager” theme. Pop singer Meghan Trainor recorded a new version that was released in September for a 25th anniversary celebration of the show’s premiere.

Willis won a Grammy Award for her contributions to the soundtrack of “Beverly Hills Cop” and was nominated for musical show album for “The Color Purple,” the latter also earning her a Tony nomination in 2006.

“With all of her accolades, Allee Willis was most proud to be recognized for her extreme, over-the-top party-throwing at her famously kitschy Pink Streamline Moderne house known as ‘Willis Wonderland’ in Los Angeles,” her spokeswoman, Ellyn Solis, said in a statement.

“I always had a music career, an art career, set designer, film and video, technology,” she told the New York Times last year. “The parties really became the only place I could combine everything.”

Among her other songs that became hits were “Boogie Wonderland” for Earth, Wind & Fire with the Emotions, “What Have I Done to Deserve This?” by the Pet Shop Boys and “Lead Me On” by Maxine Nightingale.

Singer Bette Midler tweeted on Wednesday, “My condolences to all her friends in the music community, and in Los Angeles, where she was so beloved.”

Willis is survived by her partner of 27 years, animator and producer Prudence Fenton.

Get U-T Arts & Culture on Thursdays

A San Diego insider’s look at what talented artists are bringing to the stage, screen, galleries and more.

You may occasionally receive promotional content from the San Diego Union-Tribune.

Live Nation, AEG suspend all concert tours in wake of coronavirus pandemic

Joseph Shabalala, founder of famed vocal group Ladysmith Black Mambazo, dies at 78

Super Bowl 2020 opens with Demi Lovato singing the national anthem

Rage Against the Machine reform to headline Coachella 2020

Dick Dale, pioneer of the surf guitar, dies at 81

This year’s essential Christmas albums ranked, from ‘Shatner Claus’ to the irresistible JD McPherson

Dirtwire set for two concerts of its Americana and electronica music fusion at the Music Box

Other San Diego concerts of not in the last week of 2021 include Grateful Shred at the Belly Up and Sue Palmer and Her Motel Swing Orchestra at Humphreys Backstage Live.

Six things to know about the Mannheim Steamroller Christmas show

The neoclassical concert and light spectacle will play one night at the San Diego Civic Theatre on Dec. 30

Congress launches probe into Live Nation’s deadly Astroworld festival

The House Committee on Oversight and Reform has asked Live Nation for information regarding the crowd-crush disaster at Travis Scott’s Astroworld festival

Psychedelic soul, leftfield pop en español and breakthrough SoCal hip-hop lead our picks for the only playlist you need for 2021.

Scholarship foundation to host annual posada to help mariachi and folklórico students

Event will be held Thursday at Balboa Theatre

Box sets abounded in 2021, thanks to Bob Dylan, Aretha Franklin, David Bowie, Frank Zappa, and more

Art Blakey, The Doors, Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, Rory Gallagher and Kiss are just some of the other past and present artists with new box sets

Get U-T Arts & Culture on Thursdays

A San Diego insider’s look at what talented artists are bringing to the stage, screen, galleries and more.

You may occasionally receive promotional content from the San Diego Union-Tribune.

Jazz, dinner to benefit FanFaire Foundation

Best jazz albums of 2021 came from Ches Smith, Henry Threadgill, Charles Lloyd, Steph Richards & Joshua White

‘Scientology’ a slice of yuletide irony

Judge upholds ruling against NYT over Project Veritas memos

Marines on snowmobiles help Santa in Alaska’s remote Arctic

Avenatti likely to testify at trial over Stormy Daniels deal

South African minister objects to sale of Mandela’s cell key

Rudolfo Anaya weaved bilingual holiday tale for children

New this week: ‘Lost Daughter,’ NYE in Nashville, Boba Fett

On Broadway, a playwright becomes an actor, saving a show

UK Queen’s Christmas speech set to be particularly personal

Privacy Policy Terms of Service Sign Up For Our Newsletters