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Jim Seals
Musical artist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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James Eugene "Jim" Seals[1] (October 17, 1942 — June 6, 2022) was an American folk musician. He was one half of the folk duo Seals and Crofts and was the older brother of Danny "England Dan" Seals.
Seals was a multi-instrumenalist, playing the fiddle as a child before playing saxophone in The Champs, where he met Dash Crofts. The two formed folk duo Seals and Crofts, in which both members sang and played the guitar and mandolin among other instruments. Seals died in 2022.
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Early life
Seals was born in Sidney, Texas to pipe-fitter Wayland Seals and Susan Taylor Seals, he grew up in Iraan.[1][2] His father was also a guitar player who encouraged Jim to play the guitar.[1] Jim's older brother, Eddie, was born in 1937 to Wayland and his former partner Clodell who died in 1940.[2] Seals recalled that he grew up surrounded by oil rigs and smoke covered the air, "the stench was so bad, you couldn't breathe".[3]
He learned how to play the Fiddle at age 5 or 6 after seeing a travelling fiddler, which led to his father ordering him the instrument soon after.[4]
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Career
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Seals quickly learned how to master the fiddle and at age ten years would go on to win a contest in west Texas in 1952 playing the fiddle with his father accompanying him on guitar and his younger brother Dan on upright bass.[4]
He also learned how to play the saxophone and formed The Seals Family Band with Dan.[1] In high school he played the sax in Dean Beard & the Crew Cats where he met Darrell "Dash" Crofts who joined the band on drums.[1] After graduating they moved to California and joined The Champs who had just released the song "Tequila" in 1958.[1] The two remained in the band until its disbanding in 1965.[4] The two then worked in The Dawnbreakers with Champs Glen Campbell.[5]
Jim and Dash would go on to write songs for artists such as The Monkees and Gene Vincent before working as a recording duo in the 1970s as Seals and Crofts.[1] The duo were best known for their songs "Summer Breeze" and "Diamond Girl" and released five gold certified studio albums from 1972 to 1976.[4][6] The duo parted ways in 1980, Seals and his family moved to Costa Rica and lived on a coffee farm.[1] Seals and his younger brother Dan, who eventually made a name for himself as England Dan, toured as a duo called "Seals & Seals".[1][7] Seals and Crofts reunited in the 90s and in 2004.[8][9][10]
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Personal life and death
Seals married Ruby Jean Anderson in 1970; Seals and Crofts wrote "Ruby Jean and Billie Lee" for them.[1] They had three children Juliette (now Juliette Crossley)[3], Joshua and Sutherland.[1] Seals moved to Nashville, Tennessee where he spent the rest of his life. He suffered a stroke in 2017 and retired from performing.[4][11][12]
His younger brother was singer Danny "England Dan" Seals who was one half of the soft rock duo England Dan & John Ford Coley with John Ford Coley; Dan died in 2009. Seals' cousins are Brady Seals and Troy Seals; Brady is a country singer and former vocalist for Little Texas and Hot Apple Pie, Troy was a singer-songwriter who died in 2025.[13]
Seals died at his home in Nashville on June 6, 2022 aged 80.[4][9] He died from an unspecified chronic illness.[6][3]
References
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