Browse Celebrities by Category
Celebrities - d
Musician, known for being part of the 70s and 80s duo, Hall & Oates John Oates and Daryl Hall combined their talents to produce such hits as “Maneater,” “Rich Girl” and “No Can Do
Chicago singer, composer, and producer Darryl Duncan began playing the organ at nine and was an accomplished pianist in his teens He joined a local band called Cashmere (not the Philly unit) while in high school
DJ Rogers is best known for the tender acoustic piano-based ballad “Say You Love Me,” a charting single from his 1976 debut RCA album It’s Good to Be Alive
With a career that started with the graphic bump and grind of “Doggy Style,” it would be easy to picture DJ Rogers Jr as a sultry R&B singer similar to R Kelly, especially considering the earthy nature of his first hit
Though hardly a soulful, bluesy master like Jimmy Smith or dashing experimentalist like Larry Young, organist Dave “Baby” Cortez made his mark in the ’50s,’60s, and ’70s as a capable, often clever soloist and pop instrumentalist
D Train, an innovative duo that consisted of James “D-Train” Williams (vocals) and Hubert Eaves III (keyboards, bass, drums, arrangements, productions), recorded a clutch of electrified dance/R&B classics in the early ’80s
There are many guys named Dave Adams who play bass, or at least carry the instrument around There has probably been one in each of the 50 states in the US during every era of musical history, yet bassists named Dave Adams do not apparently become celebrities
Pianist and drummer Dave Alexander is both an effective vocalist and outstanding instrumentalist, who’s best known for many festival and club appearances, and his Arhoolie albums
Make it “Dave” rather than “David,” “Allan” rather than “Allen”; the “Ace” nickname that two Southern musicians shared still causes plenty of confusion
The odd man out on the otherwise freaky and psychedelic International Artists label, Dave Allen was a straightforward Texas blues guitarist rather in the mold of Houston’s own Johnny Winters