By Eric Snider; cross-posted from The Daily Loaf:
You probably dont know the name Dennis Lambert, but you know the mans work. During most of the 70s and into the 80s, he was part of a songwriting/producing tandem that routinely spun out chart-topping singles.
The tunes cut a broad stylistic swath: Hamilton, Joe Frank and Reynolds Dont Pull Your Love, Players Baby Come Back, The Commodores Night Shift, The Four Tops Aint No Woman (Like the One I Got), Starships We Built This City, to name a few.
After watching his stock in the music biz fall in the 90s, Lambert retreated from New York to Boca Raton, where he built a successful career in real estate.
Hes the subject of a documentary, Of All the Things lovingly directed by his son Jody Lambert thats showing at the Gasparilla Film Festival.
The film follows Dennis Lamberts return to a country where he enjoyed his only real success as a solo artist: The Philippines. His 1972 album Bags and Things turned out to be a monster hit in that island country; the love ballad Of All the Things is still adored by the citizenry, and has become something of a wedding anthem. To read the rest, click here.
This article appears in Feb 25 – Mar 3, 2009.
