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・ Don Deacon
・ Don Dearson
・ Don DeBrandt
・ Don Dee
・ Don Deeks
・ Don DeFore
・ Don Delaney
・ Don DeLillo
・ Don Demeter
・ Don DeMola
・ Don Denkinger
・ Don Dennis
・ Don des vaisseaux
・ Don Det – Don Khon narrow gauge railway
・ Don Devereux
Don DeVito
・ Don Devitt
・ Don Devlin
・ Don DeVoe
・ Don Devore
・ Don Diablo
・ Don Diamond
・ Don Diamont
・ Don Dickinson
・ Don Diego de Gardoqui
・ Don Dietrich
・ Don Dietrich (ice hockey)
・ Don Dietrich (musician)
・ Don Digirolamo
・ Don Dilks


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Don DeVito : ウィキペディア英語版
Don DeVito
Don DeVito (September 6, 1939 – November 25, 2011) was an American record producer, music business executive and guitarist. His career was spent at Columbia Records, where his production credits included Bob Dylan's albums ''Desire'', ''Hard Rain'', ''Street-Legal'', and ''Bob Dylan At Budokan''.
==Life==
He was born on September 6, 1939 in Brooklyn, New York to Connie and Ralph DeVito, and in his late teens began playing as a guitarist in Al Kooper's band. After a year touring, he returned to college where he achieved a degree in English, before forming his own band, the Sabres. The band broke up while on a cross-country tour, leaving DeVito stranded in Fort Smith, Arkansas. There, he fortuitously met Johnny Cash. In 1967, DeVito began training as an executive with CBS, and worked as A&R manager covering Miami, Florida before transferring to New York City in 1971 to head up a new marketing initiative, later moving to the main Columbia A&R department. He also began spending time in recording studios to learn from such producers as Bob Johnston, James William Guercio and Phil Ramone.〔( ''Don DeVito, Grammy-Winning Producer and Longtime Columbia A&R Exec, Dead at 72'', Billboard.biz, November 28, 2011 )〕
Having been introduced by Cash to Bob Dylan, DeVito helped in the process of returning Dylan to Columbia from Asylum Records in 1975. Though commonly misreported as having produced Dylan's decade zenith, 1975's ''Blood on the Tracks'',〔http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/dylan-producer-don-devito-dies-at-72-20111129〕 DeVito did produce the following year's ''Desire'' which, like its predecessor, reached no. 1 on the ''Billboard'' album chart. He also joined Dylan on tour and produced ''Desires follow up, ''Street-Legal'', as well as period live albums ''Hard Rain'' (1976) and ''At Budokan'' (1978). DeVito also worked as A&R Director for Billy Joel, Bruce Springsteen, James Taylor, Simon and Garfunkel, Aerosmith, Tony Bennett and Carole King.〔〔( Christopher Morris, ''Don DeVito dies at 72'', Variety, 28 November 2011 )〕 A generous mentor, his protégé's included Warner/Chappel Music's Lee Dannay, and Daniel Levitin.
In 1981 he was appointed National Vice President of A&R for Columbia. He was nominated for a Grammy Award on five occasions, winning in the category of Best Traditional Folk Recording in 1989 for the album ''Folkways—A Vision Shared: A Tribute to Woody Guthrie & Leadbelly.'' In 2001, he was instrumental in organizing and promoting ''The Concert for New York City'', which raised over one million dollars in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks. He retired from Sony Music in 2007.〔
He died in 2011 at the age of 72, after a prolonged period with prostate cancer. Billy Joel, Rosanne Cash, and others performed at the funeral. He is survived by his wife Carolyn and his two children Marissa and James

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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