{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/5f6d255160ea8a34d0a7fde6/6151f9b841bab8001551e208?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"Mark Radice","thumbnail_width":200,"thumbnail_height":200,"thumbnail_url":"https://open-images.acast.com/shows/5f6d255160ea8a34d0a7fde6/1632762092464-5a440d04ff8d8e7536cbe1e5a417a5b8.jpeg?height=200","description":"<p>Mark Radice&nbsp;is an American singer, musician, songwriter, and producer. Since the early 1970s he has worked with a variety of different artists while also achieving success with his own material. He is a multi-instrumentalist&nbsp;and is credited with writing more than 5,500 songs.</p><p><br></p><p>Mark Radice was born in&nbsp;Newark, New Jersey&nbsp;in 1957, and from 1968 to 1982 he lived in nearby&nbsp;Nutley, where he was inducted into the Nutley Hall of Fame in 2019.&nbsp;His father Gene Radice was a well-known&nbsp;recording engineer&nbsp;who worked with&nbsp;Jimi Hendrix,&nbsp;Velvet Underground,&nbsp;Lovin' Spoonful,&nbsp;Janis Ian, the&nbsp;Four Seasons,&nbsp;Cowsills,&nbsp;Mamas &amp; the Papas,&nbsp;The Tokens,&nbsp;Vanilla Fudge, and many more.&nbsp;Mark Radice began writing songs, after teaching himself guitar while listening to Beatles albums, at the age of seven.</p><p><br></p><p>In 1964, at age of seven, Radice was signed to&nbsp;RCA Records. His single \"Natural Morning\" was later covered by&nbsp;Frankie Valli. In 1967 while signed to&nbsp;Decca Records&nbsp;he released \"10,000 Year Old Blues\", which featured the 20-year-old&nbsp;Steven Tyler.&nbsp;His first full-length self-titled LP was released in 1971 on&nbsp;Paramount Records.&nbsp;The song \"Hey, My Love\" was later covered by&nbsp;Dion&nbsp;and&nbsp;Mark Holden.</p><p>In 1973 Radice was invited by&nbsp;Donovan&nbsp;to move to England, where he would contribute to Donovan's album&nbsp;<em>7-Tease</em>&nbsp;album and the associated tour.&nbsp;In&nbsp;1976, Radice released his second solo album&nbsp;<em>Ain't Nothin' But A Party</em>, featuring&nbsp;Brass Construction. The album included the hit single \"If You Can't Beat 'Em Join 'Em.\"</p><p>As a writer for&nbsp;EMI Publishing&nbsp;in the 1970s, he collaborated with artists such as&nbsp;Michael Bolton,&nbsp;Eddie Money,&nbsp;Dave Edmunds,&nbsp;Barbra Streisand,&nbsp;Barry Manilow,&nbsp;Johnny Mathis,&nbsp;Helix,&nbsp;Cheap Trick,&nbsp;Aldo Nova,&nbsp;Deodato,&nbsp;Phyllis Hyman,&nbsp;Jetboy,&nbsp;Box of Frogs,&nbsp;Gene Simmons,&nbsp;Shark Island,&nbsp;Jennifer Rush, and&nbsp;The Muppets.&nbsp;In a chance encounter in a Los Angeles hotel lobby, Radice ran into&nbsp;Steven Tyler&nbsp;who asked him to tour with&nbsp;Aerosmith&nbsp;on keyboards and backing vocals. Radice appeared on Aerosmith's 1978 live album&nbsp;<em>Live! Bootleg</em>.&nbsp;In the mid-1980s Radice toured with Cheap Trick and appeared on their album&nbsp;<em>Standing on the Edge</em>.&nbsp;In the 1990s he toured with blues musician&nbsp;Matt \"Guitar\" Murphy.</p><p><br></p><p>Radice was introduced to&nbsp;Jim Henson&nbsp;by&nbsp;Phil Ramone&nbsp;and wrote 50-plus songs for&nbsp;The Muppets&nbsp;franchise over eight years, and for Sesame Street including the film&nbsp;<em>Elmo's Christmas Countdown.</em>&nbsp;From 2005 to 2011 Radice wrote 160 songs for&nbsp;<em>Sesame Street</em>,&nbsp;including rearranging the original theme in 2008. Radice was nominated for three&nbsp;Emmy&nbsp;Awards for his work on&nbsp;<em>Sesame Street</em>.</p><p><br></p><p>In 2012 he moved to Tennessee where he became involved with the Children's Media Studio and wrote 27 songs, one for each letter of the alphabet plus a \"new\" alphabet song, for the&nbsp;<em>Sing and Spell Learning Letters</em>&nbsp;project.&nbsp;In 2019, that project became an animated television show currently showing regionally in various test areas.&nbsp;Radice has also been employed DigiTrax Entertainment in&nbsp;Knoxville&nbsp;since 2013.&nbsp;In 2016 Radice released the limited-edition&nbsp;<em>Audio Quicksand</em>&nbsp;compilation spanning his songwriting career.</p>","author_name":"Shout Radio"}