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David Cassidy still in demand

GROOVY: His latest album is platinum in the United Kingdom and is set for a May release in America.

February 8, 2002

By Cathy Maestri
The Press Enterprise

Growing up as the hottest teen-pop idol of the early '70s, and living to tell the tale, David Cassidy became a renaissance man. He parlayed his TV role as singer Keith Partridge into other acting parts and solo albums, reviving his career in the '90s with hit shows on Broadway and later in Las Vegas.

Now 51, Cassidy is again in demand -- as David Cassidy, pop idol.

Which, as Keith Partridge surely would say, is groovy. It's more gratifying than starring in a stage show, Cassidy said. "I'm there being me, and my fans are just there to see me." (Thanks to reruns, they aren't just the 30- and 40-somethings who once made Cassidy's fan club bigger than those of the Beatles or Elvis Presley.)

And while some celebrities chafe at the role that made them famous, Cassidy is happy to be remembered as the dreamy guy who rode around with his musical family (including real-life stepmom Shirley Jones) in a multicolored bus. "I love that," Cassidy said. "A lot of my material and a lot of my show is about celebrating that."

Indeed, his latest album is "Then and Now" -- a newly recorded collection of Partridge hits ("I Think I Love You," "I Woke Up in Love This Morning," "I Can Feel Your Heartbeat"), solo singles ("Cherish," "Rock Me Baby"), covers of old favorites ("How Can I Be Sure," "Cry" and an especially impressive "Ain't No Sunshine") and a few recent numbers ("Ricky's Tune" was on a 1998 indie release).

"It's just gone platinum in the UK -- it's a very exciting thing," said Cassidy, who's been back in the studio to record another track for the slightly different U.S. version, scheduled for a May 7 release. Tours of Europe and another go-round in the States will follow.

For "Then and Now," Cassidy started with master tapes from "The David Cassidy Story," an autobiography he produced for ABC in 2000. Additional recording was done in New York and England -- where Cassidy sang and played guitar and his band played live, rather than each musician recording a separate track. "It was so cool for me to do it the way I used to do it," he said.

Cassidy had wanted to record Bill Withers' "Ain't No Sunshine" since the first time he heard it, driving down the 405 freeway in the early '70s, he said.

The one song that seems out of place is "I Write the Songs" -- unless you know the history. Cassidy originally cut the song with members of the Beach Boys and America for his 1975 album, "The Higher They Climb the Harder They Fall," and had a big hit with it overseas -- but his label, RCA, "said it wouldn't be a hit in America," he recalled. It was later that Barry Manilow recorded the song and proved RCA wrong.

The Partridge connection will be especially strong for Cassidy's Valentine's Day show at the Grove of Anaheim with TV sibling Danny Bonaduce acting as the opener. The two remained friends over the years -- Cassidy said he was one of the few who stuck by Bonaduce, now a morning personality for LA radio station Star 98.7 FM, throughout his well-publicized problems with drugs and the law.

"This is going to be the one and only date that he does," Cassidy said. "He actually has some anxiety about it" -- Bonaduce worried about having new material, so Cassidy told him to do the same thing he'd done last time they'd shared a stage. Bonaduce protested, Cassidy said: "I can't -- it's about me being in jail!"

The Anaheim show will also be noteworthy as a sort of closing night. "For the last time, I'm going to do two or three songs from the "Copa" show," he said. "At the Copa" was the big-band show he did at Las Vegas' Rio in 2000. "I'm not going to bring horns with me after this."

Cassidy actually closed "Copa" so he could spend more time with his family -- wife Sue Shifrin-Cassidy and their son, 11-year-old Beau. "I was working 46 weeks a year, producing two shows simultaneously ('The Rat Pack is Back!' is still running) and starring in one," he said. So he started a sort of commuter tour, flying out from Las Vegas for a couple shows each week and keeping his band (many teach master classes at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas) on retainer.

Working as an actor, singer, songwriter and/or producer, he said, "is a blessing, but it can also be a curse," he said. "I can't do all of it at the same time ALL the time."

He's been juggling so many lately that he doesn't have much time to tend to his true passion, horses. Then again, he's happy to be so busy. "I know what the alternative is," he said with a chuckle, referring to a post-Partridge dry spell that lasted into the '80s.

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