Harley Hatcher

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Harley Hatcher Genre Country
Record Company Paramount Records PAS-6005
Producer Harley Hatcher
Years active 1971
WEB mailto:licensing@homegrownmusicpublishing.com
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As a songwriter, he has scored several chart-topping singles, and as a record producer and musician Harley has written and produced eighty songs that have appeared in motion pictures and on television shows.

(The following is from the Harley Hatcher Website HarleyHatcher.com)

 

HARLEY HATCHER'S BIOGRAPHY

 

As a top executive with Curb Records and with a career spanning more than five decades, Harley Hatcher has had a hand in developing the careers of a wide array of rock, pop, country and Christian music recording artists. As a songwriter, he has scored several chart-topping singles, and as a record producer and musician Harley has written and produced eighty songs that have appeared in motion pictures and on television shows

 

Harley was born and raised near the city of Thomasville, Georgia. His introduction to the music business came in 1960 while serving in the United States Army’s 102nd Signal Battalion in Kaiserslautern, Germany where he met fellow soldier and record producer, Richard Podolor.  Podolor, who had found success as a producer for Sandy Nelson and later, Three Dog Night, Iron Butterfly and Steppenwolf, heard Harley perform on the army base, and invited him to come to Hollywood for a recording session. At the age of 21, Harley made the trip to Los Angeles to record four songs with Podolor at American Recording Studio.  Two of the four songs, The Twirl and Thief in the Night were recorded and released as singles.  

 

By 1964, Harley joined record producer and songwriter Mike Curb at Sidewalk Productions, where he signed on as exclusive songwriter for Sidewalk’s recording artists, and in 1965 he began producing records. Sidewalk Productions experienced early success with the song Apache ‘65 by Davie Allan & The Arrows (with Harley playing acoustic guitar), and the movie score and soundtrack album from The Wild Angels, starring Peter Fonda and Nancy Sinatra.  

 

In August of 1968, at the request of entertainment industry icon Dick Clark, Harley wrote and produced seven songs to be included in the soundtrack for the film Killers Three, which was produced by ClarkHarley also wrote songs that were featured on ABC-TV’s Super Saturday Club cartoon shows Cattanooga Cats and Hot Wheels. In 1969, Harley formed Pendulum Productions and Leo The Lion Music Publishing to record and publish his songs and soundtracks.  By 1972, Harley had composed and produced the musical scores for eight motion pictures, including Burt Topper’s The Hard Ride which featured the title song recorded by Righteous Brother, Bill Medley.

 

Harley is the co-writer of the BMI award-winning song All For The Love Of Sunshine featured in the MGM film Kelly’s Heroesstarring Clint Eastwood and Donald Sutherland.  All For The Love Of Sunshine, performed by Hank Williams, Jr., topped the Billboard Country charts on September 19, 1970. Harley’s other film credits include: 20th Century Fox’s Brubaker starring Robert Redford; Paramount Picture’s Switchback starring Dennis Quaid and Danny Glover; MGM’s The Walking Stick starring David Hemmings and Samantha Eggar; Roger Corman’s The Wild Angels starring Peter Fonda, Nancy Sinatra and Bruce Dern; and Quentin Tarantino’s Hell Ride starring Larry Bishop, Dennis Hopper and David Carradine.   

 

In addition to Hank Williams, Jr., Harley’s songs have been recorded by Solomon Burke, Marcene Harris,Terry Stafford, Merle Haggard, The Paris Sisters, The Hondells, Steve Holy, Mike Clifford, Jerry Naylor, Paul Delicato, Barbara Pittman, Dick Curless, Kay Adams, Davie Allan & The Arrows, Thelma Comacho, Morton Downey, Jr., Donny & Marie Osmond, The Mike Curb Congregation, Sounds of Harley, and many others.

 

In 1972, as part of a deal in which MGM Records acquired the administration rights to Harley’s Leo The Lion music publishing company, Harley became head of Special Projects at MGM.  He was later appointed head of Country Music at MGM where he worked with an all-star roster that included Hank Williams, Jr., Eddy Arnold, Kenny Rogers, Mel Tillis, and Ray Stevens.

 

In 1974, Harley established Artists of America Records with his brother Jimmy. With a roster of artists including Rufus Thomas, Paul Delicato, Robert Goulet, Richard Roundtree, Lorne Greene, Johnny Desmond, and Morton Downey, Jr., Artists of America Records enjoyed immediate success with the song Ice Cream Sodas & Lollipops & A Red Hot Spinning Top, a song written by Harley and performed by Paul Delicato. The song quickly became a Billboard chart top ten record, peaking at #7 in October of 1975.  Delicato enjoyed further success with six Billboard charting records including his biggest hit, Cara Mia, which peaked at #5 on Billboard’s Adult Contemporary chart.  All of Delicato’s recordings were produced by Harley and released on Artists of America Records.

 

Harley established his own band, Sounds of Harley, to record songs for motion picture scores and as a backing group for various artists that he produced.  As a producer, Harley has worked with top session musicians such as James Burton, Lee Ritenour, Larry Carlton, Richie Podolor, Jay Graydon, Emory Gordy, Jr., Spooner Oldham, Glen D. Hardin, Ronnie Tutt, Larry Knechtel, Jim Horn, Davie Allan, Bob Summers, Herb Pedersen, Randy Mitchell, Tom Hensley, Hal Blaine, Joe Osborn, Al Casey, Harold Bradley, and Hargus “Pig” Robbins.  These are the musicians that have played at various times on Sounds of Harley recordings.  Many of Harley’s sessions were engineered by award-winning engineer and producer Humberto Gatica.

 

One of Harley’s songs sparked a memorable meeting between Hatcher and former President Richard Nixon.  Inspired by President Nixon’s humorous appearance at the opening of the new Grand Ol’ Opry building in March of 1974, Harley wrote and produced a song about the event entitled He Played A Yo-Yo In Nashville. Morton Downey, Jr. performed vocals on the tribute song. Upon hearing the song, President Nixon invited Harley and Morton Downey, Jr. to his San Clemente, California estate. During their meeting, the three men discussed the song, with President Nixon expressing that his spirits were lifted by the good-time feel of He Played A Yo-Yo In Nashville.

 

In 1987, Harley re-joined Curb Records just as the company was expanding into a global record label. The Curb Records roster has featured such artists as Tim McGraw, Wynonna, LeAnn Rimes, Hank Williams, Jr., The Judds, Natalie Grant, Jo Dee Messina, Sawyer Brown, Bellamy Brothers, and Selah.  Harley served as Senior Consultant of Curb Records from 1987 to 1998 and Senior Vice President of Curb Records from 1999 to 2006, during which time he was in charge of music publishing and greatest hits catalog releases.  

 

Since 1987, Mike and Harley have worked together on the release of greatest hits compilation albums for more than 400 legendary recording artists including: Louis Armstrong, Judy Garland, Andy Williams, The Four Seasons, Fats Domino, Ricky Nelson, Kenny Rogers, Eddy Arnold, Pat Boone, The Kingston Trio, Peggy Lee, Nat King Cole, The Everly Brothers, Sonny James, and The Righteous Brothers.

 

With his vast experience as a music business executive as well as a music producer and writer, Harley brings a unique perspective and understanding to all areas of the record industry. Currently, in addition to his duties as Senior Consultant at Curb Records, Harley serves as an Adjunct Professor at Belmont University teaching the course, Music Business Strategies.  Harley is a member of Broadcast Music, Inc. as a songwriter, and BMI and American Society of Composers, Authors & Publishers (ASCAP) as a music publisher.  He is also a member of the Country Music Association, the Academy of Country Music, and the Gospel Music Association.

 

Harley enjoys all genres of music, but his great love is listening to the past and present legends of Southern Gospel music.  Harley has a library of over 60 videos of Bill Gaither’s gospel Homecoming concert series.

 

In 1978 and 1979, a memoir Harley penned about his time in the army entitled, Elvis Disguised, tells the story of a series of impromptu jam sessions Harley engaged in with an army buddy. The book was originally published in 1981 in limited edition, and is currently being re-worked into an updated version of the story.

 

During his high school years at Thomasville, Georgia, Harley was a standout basketball and baseball player and he continues to be an avid sports enthusiast.  Since moving to Los Angeles, he has played in numerous basketball and softball leagues and tournaments.

 

Harley Hatcher and his wife reside in Los Angeles, California.  They have two children.

 

Compilations (1)
Songs (12)
# Song