Joe Dolce


Joseph Dolce is an American-Australian singer/songwriter, poet and essayist who achieved international recognition with his multi-million-selling song, "Shaddap You Face", released under the name of his one-man show, Joe Dolce Music Theatre, worldwide, in 1980–1981.
The single reached number one in 15 countries, it has sold more than 450,000 copies in Australia, and for many years was the most successful Australian-produced single, selling an estimated six million copies worldwide. It reached No. 1 on the Australian Kent Music Report Singles Chart for eight weeks from November 1980.

Biography

Dolce was born in 1947, the eldest of three children, to Italian-American parents, in Painesville, Ohio, graduating from Thomas W. Harvey High School in 1965. During his senior year, he played the lead role of Mascarille in Molière's "Les Précieuses Ridicules" for a production staged by the French Club of Lake Erie College, which was his first time on stage, acting and singing an impromptu song he created from the script. The play was well received and his performance was noted by director Jake Rufli, who later invited him to be part of his production of Jean Anouilh's "Eurydice".
His co-star in "Les Précieuses Ridicules" was a sophomore, on a creative writing scholarship, at Lake Erie College, Carol Dunlop, who introduced him to folk music, poetry and the writings of William Faulkner and Ernest Hemingway. Dunlop later married the Argentine novelist Julio Cortázar. Dolce attended Ohio University, majoring in Architecture, from 1965–67, before deciding to become a professional musician.

Musical and theatrical career

While attending college at Ohio University, in Athens, Ohio, he formed various bands including Headstone Circus, with Jonathan Edwards who subsequently went on as a solo artist to have a charting hit song in the US. Edwards subsequently recorded five Dolce songs including, "Athens County", "Rollin' Along", "King of Hearts", "The Ballad of Upsy Daisy" and "My Home Ain't in the Hall of Fame", the latter song becoming an alt country classic, also recorded by Robert Earl Keen, Rosalie Sorrels, JD Crowe & the New South, and many others.

Move to Australia

Dolce relocated to Melbourne, Australia in 1978 and his first single there was "Boat People"—a protest song on the poor treatment of Vietnamese refugees—which was translated into Vietnamese and donated to the fledgling Vietnamese community starting to form in Melbourne. His one-man show, Joe Dolce Music Theatre, performed in cabarets and pubs with various line-ups, including his longtime partner, Lin Van Hek.

"Shaddap You Face"

In July 1980, he recorded the self-penned "Shaddap You Face", for the Full Moon Records label, at Mike Brady's new studios in West Melbourne. When in Ohio, Dolce would sometimes visit his Italian grandparents and extended family—they used the phrases "What's the matter, you?" and "Eh, shaddap", which Dolce adapted and used in the song. He wrote the song about Italians living in Australia and first performed it at Marijuana House, Brunswick Street, Fitzroy in 1979. Dolce paid A$500 for the recording and spent $1000 on the music video clip, which was created by Melbourne filmmaker, Chris Lofven.
It became a multi-million-selling hit, peaking at No. 1 on the Australian Kent Music Report Singles Chart for eight weeks from November 1980, in the UK from February 1981 for three weeks, and also No. 1 in Germany, France, Fiji, Puerto Rico, Quebec, Austria, New Zealand and Switzerland. Dolce received the Advance Australia Award in 1981. The song has had hundreds of cover versions over the decades including releases by artists as diverse as Lou Monte, Sheila, Andrew Sachs, actor Samuel L. Jackson and hip-hop legends, KRS-One. In 2018, the first Russian language version was released by two of Moscow's most popular singers, Kristina Orbakaite and Philipp Kirkorov. The song has been translated into fifteen languages, including an aboriginal dialect.

Subsequent artistic career

Follow up single, "If You Wanna Be Happy" charted in Australia and New Zealand. Dolce's subsequent singles included "Pizza Pizza", "Christmas in Australia" and "You Toucha My Car I Breaka You Face" and he released two albums during this period, Shaddap You Face and The Christmas Album. With Lin Van Hek, he formed various performance groups including Skin the Wig, La Somnambule and the ongoing Difficult Women. Van Hek and Dolce co-wrote "Intimacy", for the 1984 film, The Terminator's soundtrack, now part of the US Library of Congress collection. He was a featured lead actor in the Australian film Blowing Hot and Cold. He has continued to perform solo and with Van Hek as part of their music-literary cabaret Difficult Women. In the past decade, he has also received extensive recognition as a poet and essayist.

Personal life

In 1976, he married Zandie Acton, the sister of fashion icon Prue Acton, in Berkeley, California. They had two children, Ever and Brea, and moved to Australia in 1979, separated and divorced. He met singer-writer-painter Lin Van Hek in 1980, in Tiamos Coffee Shop, in Carlton, Victoria. They have remained together for thirty-eight years and have six grown children and thirteen grandchildren.

Recent

Joe Dolce has achieved further recognition as a poet and essayist.
He was the winner of the 2017 University of Canberra Health Poetry Prize. He won the 25th Launceston Poetry Cup in Tasmania in 2010. He has set poems to music by Sappho, Sylvia Plath, Les Murray, Ali Cobby Eckermann, Andrew Lansdown and C.P. Cavafy. He wrote "Hill of Death" from a poem of Louisa Lawson's that won Best Folk Gospel Song at the Australian Gospel Awards. "Cocaine Lil", an eighteenth-century public domain lyric, formed the basis for an up-tempo blues song – both of these poems-set-to-music appeared on his 2007 album The Wind Cries Mary. "Cocaine Lil" was also included as a featured track in Australian Guitar Player Magazine.
He has had over 150 poems, including thirty-five new unpublished song-lyrics, selected by Queen's Medal for Poetry recipient Les Murray for publication in Quadrant, as stand-alone poetry, including two poems in Best of Quadrant Poetry 2001–2010.
Between 2015–2017, he was on staff at the Australian Institute of Music, Melbourne, teaching Ensemble, Composition, Lyric and Poetry Setting & personal tutoring.
He has had four essays published in Meanjin – "The Benefit of Smoking", "My Craft or Sullen Art: Poetry, Songwriting", "Todesengel and the Seven Dwarfs" and "Dirty Laundry: The Art of Confessional Writing".
The Monthly published his essay on art censorship, "Shaddap You Facebook", in April 2013.
Quadrant has also published twenty-five of his essays: "Biblical Imagery in the Songwriting of the Creative Infidels: Bob Dylan, Leonard Cohen, Nick Cave and Paul Kelly", "Hey Mr Cowbell Man: Sir Christopher Ricks' Dylan's Visions of Sin", "Anti the Anti", "Who Is This White Fella Fella?", "In the Op Shop With Percy Grainger", "Father Scapegoat", "Pen Pencil or Keyboard", "Elysium in Paraguay", "Graham Greene's Lolita", "Speechless", "William S. Burroughs: Scientologist", "Salve for a Broken Childhood: The Phenomenon of Rod McKuen","The Popular Wobbly: The Subversiveness of Starvation Box Blues","Florence Foster Jenkins: Dire Diva of Din", "Polymaths and Monomaths", "The Willingness to Be Hated","Ain't Gonna Work on Bob Dylan's Farm No More", "Grape-Pickin': Best Australian Poems 2016","The Great American Songbook: The Classical Music of America", "How I Met Jake Rufli", "GSTQ – God Save the Queen" and "Maximilian Kolbe: Saint of Auschwitz". From June 2018, he has written Quadrants monthly critical review of extended television series including "The Crown", "The Night Manager", "Great British Railway Journeys","Victoria" and "The Last Kingdom".
He has been shortlisted for the 2017 Queensland Poetry Festival Philip Bacon Ekphrasis Poetry Prize, the 2017 Ipswich Poetry Feast Photographic Ekphrasis Prize, the 2014 Newcastle Poetry Prize and long listed three times for the University of Canberra Vice-Chancellor's Poetry Prize in 2014, 2017 & 2018.
Dolce's poetry, essays, short stories, photographs and song-lyrics have been published in Meanjin, Overland, Island magazine, Southerly, Cordite, Eye to the Telescope, Verity La, Contrappasso, The Canberra Times, Soto, Stars Like Sand, Australian Love Poems, Flightpath, Going Down Swinging, Carmenta, Spinifex Press, Journey, Australian Poetry Magazine, Coolabah 23: Short Poems Issue, Shots from the Chamber, Best of Vine Leaves, Meniscus, Going Down Swinging, PEN International, Best of Little Raven, Not Shut Up, Artview, Voltage, Tupelo Press, Báo Giấy Vietnamese Poetry Journal, Structure and Surprise, "North of Oxford " and American Association for Australian Literary Studies .
He released his first self-published book of poems HATBOX in 2010 and his most recent book, ON MURRAY'S RUN – 150 poems and songlyrics selected by Les Murray – in 2017, is published by Ginninderra Press.
He is included in Best Australian Poems 2015 and 2014, edited by Geoff Page, published by Black Inc.
In May 2015, the Aphids Theatre Company produced a successful contemporary Futurist deconstruction of his life story, called A Singular Phenomenon, which ran for three sold-out nights at The Malthouse Theatre, in Melbourne, and was nominated for a Green Room Award in 2016.
He is currently contributing as the extended series television review editor for Quadrant.

Discography

Albums

;Collections
;List of poems
TitleYearFirst publishedReprinted/collected
Lemonricks2012
Sandmen2016
Noh means Noh2016
The daughter that still loves me2016

Short stories

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