Donald Joseph Ciccone (February 28, 1946 – October 8, 2016) Donald Joseph Ciccone February 28, 1946 - October 08, 2016 accessdate January 22, 2018 was an American singer, songwriter and musician. He was a founding member of the pop group the Critters, singing their biggest hits "Younger Girl" and "Mr. Dieingly Sad". Ciccone was a member of The Four Seasons throughout the late 1970s.
Their song "Mr. Diengly Sad" he wrote about his girlfriend Kathleen "Kathy" Cobb before he entered the Air Force during the time of the Vietnam War (Cobb later became his wife). The subsequent album by the Innocence included two more songs written by Ciccone, "All I Ask," and "Your Show Is Over." When the Critters' first album started to take off, Ciccone was in the Air Force and the band had to tour without him, which is why many television appearances did not feature him, but instead have Ken Gorka lip-syncing Ciccone's part.
Ciccone's son was born in September 1981, and with his music schedule taking up time to be a father and tiring of the offstage complications of touring, he left in early 1982 following the group's last hit, "Spend the Night in Love."
In the early 2010s, Ciccone, at the time performing with a partially re-formed Critters lineup, suggested to his former Four Seasons bandmate Lee Shapiro that they assemble a supergroup consisting of musicians assembled from other bands. Ciccone recruited his Critters bandmate Jimmy Ryan to join Shapiro and Gerry Polci (partially capitalizing on the Jersey Boys resurgence in the Four Seasons' popularity) to form The Hit Men, a group that continues several years after Ciccone died with Shapiro as its manager.
Ciccone, who was a long time resident of Ridgewood, New Jersey and Port Saint Lucie, Florida had moved to Sun Valley, Idaho, a few years before he died of a heart attack on October 8, 2016, in adjacent Ketchum at the age of 70. He was survived by his second wife, Stephanie, two children and two grandchildren.
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