By Daniel E. Slotnik
13 February 2017
Bobby Freeman, whose ‘Do
you want to dance’ climbed the pop charts in 1958 and endured long afterward in
covers by the Mamas & Papas, Johnny Rivers, Beach Boys, the Ramones, Bette
Middler and others, died on 23 January
2017 at his home in Daly City, Calif. He was 76.
The cause was a heart
attack, his son Robert Freeman Jr. said on Monday, 13 February 2017. The death
had not been widely reported.
Mr. Freeman was still a
teenager when he wrote and recorded the song that became his signature. Sung
with infectious enthusiasm and featuring a driving Latin rhythm and a joyful
guitar solo, “Do
you want to dance” reached No.
5 on the Billboard singles chart.
An energetic showman and
dancer, Mr. Freeman was soon touring with Fats
Domino and Jackie Wilson and appearing on television shows like “American
Bandstand” and “The Dick Clark Saturday Night Beechnut Show.”
Mr. Freeman’s version of
“Do you want to dance” (also known as “Do you wanna dance?,” with and without the question mark) embodied the spirit of
early rock’n’roll, but the secret to the song’s longevity was that artists
interpreted it in myriad ways.
The Beach Boys reached No.
12 on the Billboard chart in 1965 with a typically up-tempo close-harmony
interpretation. John Lennon recorded a dreamy reggae version. The Ramones
ramped up Mr. Freeman’s energy to punk-rock levels. Both the Mamas & the Papas and Ms. Midler
slowed the song down; Bette Midler’s
version, a sensual ballad, reached No. 17 on the Billboard chart in 1973. She told
CBS News in 2006 that “Do you want to dance” was her favorite song.
The song was also featured
on the soundtrack of George Lucas’s rock ’n’ roll coming-of-age film “American
Graffiti” (1973).
Mr. Freeman was not a
one-hit wonder. “C’mon and swim” (1964) — a young Sly Stone was its producer
and a co-writer — reached No. 5 on
the Billboard chart. “Betty Lou got a new pair of shoes” (1958) also charted.
Robert Thomas Freeman was
born in Northern California on 13 June 1940, and raised in San Francisco. He
attended Mission High School there before joining the Romancers, a doo-wop
group.
In addition to his son
Robert, his survivors include another son, Jerrald; his partner of 17 years,
Michele Ellen; two daughters, April Freeman and Nichole Hackett; and several
grandchildren.
Mr. Freeman released a
handful of songs after 1964, but none became hits. He spent years performing at
clubs in San Francisco, Lake Tahoe, Reno, Las Vegas and other cities, and that
was fine with him.
“I’m just as content as I
could be with what I’m doing,” he told The San Francisco Chronicle in 1990. “I
have no complaints whatsoever.”
Susan C. Beachy contributed research.
Bob Freeman on the television show 'Shindig' in 1964.
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