Allen 'Al' Stanton (November 23, 1924 – March 11, 2015) was an American music executive and record producer best known for his production work for The Byrds on their third album, Fifth Dimension (1966).
As a producer and A&R man for Goldmark's independent company, he worked on singles by such artists as Paul Evans ("Seven Little Girls Sitting in the Backseat") and Jimmy Jones ("Handy Man," "Good Timin'"). He often worked with composer Otis Blackwell, and he reportedly inspired the composition of "All Shook Up," a 1957 hit for Elvis Presley, by shaking a bottle of Pepsi and telling Blackwell to write a song based on the phrase "all shook up."
In 1962, Stanton was named A&R director of Kapp Records. Kapp signed an Akron, Ohio-based R&B group led by Ruby Nash, and Stanton suggested they call themselves Ruby & the Romantics. He produced several singles for Ruby & the Romantics, including their 1963 Billboard #1 hit "Our Day Will Come." Other Kapp artists produced by Stanton included Johnny Cymbal, who had a #16 hit on the Billboard pop chart in 1963, "Mr. Bass Man."
With Ernie Altschuler, Stanton produced Tony Bennett's "The Shadow of Your Smile (Love Theme from The Sandpiper)," introduced in the 1965 film The Sandpiper. The song would go on to win the Grammy Award for Song of the Year and the Academy Award for Best Original Song. Additional Columbia production credits included the albums Come Alive! by Joanie Sommers (1966) and Bim! Bam!! Boom!!! by Percy Faith (1966).
In December 1965, the Byrds entered RCA Records Studios in Los Angeles to record two new songs, "Eight Miles High" and "Why." Columbia refused to release either song because they had not been recorded at a Columbia-owned studio. The band was forced to re-record both songs at Columbia Studios in January 1966 with Stanton as producer. The re-recorded "Eight Miles High" (with "Why" as the B-side) was released as a single in March 1966, reaching #14 on the Billboard pop chart. Stanton went on to produce the Byrds' next single, "5D (Fifth Dimension)" (June 1966, #44 pop). Both singles were included on the album Fifth Dimension, released in July. The album generated an additional single, "Mr. Spaceman" (Sept. 1966, #36 pop).
Despite praise for the pioneering psychedelic sound of "Eight Miles High," Stanton's production work on the Fifth Dimension album has been criticized as uneven. Byrds bassist Chris Hillman later recalled, "All I remember is Allen Stanton would be over – with his shirt and tie, sleeves rolled up – reading the newspaper. Basically he was going, 'These guys know what they're doing. I'll just sort of be in here.'"
After leaving A&M in 1969, he was vice president and general manager of MGM's Big Three Publishing. In 1974, Stanton briefly served as label manager of Warner-Spector Records, an outlet for Phil Spector productions by Warner Bros. Records. He resigned to join RCA Records as general manager of music publishing.
Stanton died in Los Angeles on March 11, 2015, at the age of 90.
Later career
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