The Dio You Don't
Know
The man many were familiar with as Ronnie James Dio was born as Ronald James
Padavona. Raised by Italian-American parents in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, his
legacy spans more than just a handful of bad-ass metal bands. Though recognized
for vocally luring Ritchie Blackmore out of Deep Purple to form Rainbow
to replacing
Ozzy Osbourne in Black Sabbath
it is also
claimed that it was he who brought the "sign of the horns" hand gesture
into the rock scene, as his grandmother used it when cursing those she disliked.
Still, that's all
common knowledge for a true metalhead, but what many never realized was that,
before Sabbath, or Rainbow, there were much more - stemming all the way back
to the late-50s.
Ronnie J began on bass with The Vegas Kings in 1957. The following year, he
jumped in front of the mic, with his own act, Ronnie and the Red Caps, releasing
two 7" singles (1958 and 1960).
In 1961, RJ dropped
the surname Padavona for Dio, possibly as an allusion to NY's acid-throwing
gangster Johnny Dio, or in honor that "dio" means "god"
in Italian. Either way, with new name in mind (though he kept his birth name
for song credits), he formed Ronnie Dio and the Prophets, and was picked up
by Atlantic Records in 1962.
Dio's crew released
ten more singles, from 1962 to 1967, for labels such as Swan, Stateside, Parkway
and Kapp, with a full LP, Dio At Domino's, in 1963 (on Jove Records).
He and his Prophets toured the state of New York heavily, and they even appeared
on tv.
Almost immediately after the '67 release of the Prophets' last single, "Walking
In Different Circles", Dio decided to go another musical route, as the
times called for a more psychedelic vibe, and - with the addition of a keyboard
player - The Electric Elves were born, who released one 7" on MGM.
Not long after,
the "Electric" part of their name was nixed, and with the backing
of Decca Records, Dio's new outfit, simply known as The Elves, produced two
more 7"es with a remake of the Prophets' '67 single in 1969, and "Amber
Velvet" in 1970.
By the time Epic
Records came sniffing around, they not only lost "The", but felt the
plurality of the moniker didn't fit with their "hoochie koochie" blues
(as they called it), and changed it to just Elf upon delivery of their debut
in 1972.
Dio's Elf released
two more albums (Carolina County Bail [1974] and Trying To Burn the
Sun [1975]), and opened for Deep Purple quite a bit, which is where Blackmore
first got to witness Ronnie's greatness, and, when hearing his vocals, was quoted
as saying, "I felt shivers down my spine."
The rest is, of course, heavy metal history.
A. Souto, 2016
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