“Almost every band had hair down to their waist and beards and ripped jeans, and they looked like a bunch of hippies, and I wanted to get as far away from that as I could,” Carmen told the Observer in 2017.
The Raspberries’ second album, Fresh, released in 1972, would be their highest charting, hitting No 36 and featuring two Top 40 hits, I Wanna Be With You and Let’s Pretend.
The Raspberries ended their first run in 1975, two years after creative differences hastened the departures of drummer Jim Bonfanti and bassist Dave Smalley.
Carmen then launched a solo career and his self-titled debut included the soaring hit All by Myself, which sold more than 1 million copies in the US and reached No 2 in 1976. His other hits included Make Me Lose Control — a No 3 hit on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1988 — and he co-wrote Almost Paradise, sung by Mike Reno and Ann Wilson, which peaked at No 7 in 1984.
Carmen’s albums include 1977′s self-produced and autobiographical Boats Against the Current, Change of Heart (1978), and Tonight You’re Mine (1980). His songs Nowhere to Hide and Desperate Fools are soft-rock classics.
In 1984, he released a second self-titled album, teaming up with Bob Gaudio from Frankie Valli & The Four Seasons. It had the single I Wanna Hear It from Your Lips. In 1987, he had another massive hit when his recording of Hungry Eyes was featured on the Dirty Dancing soundtrack, reaching the Top 5 on Billboard’s Hot 100 and propelling the album to sales of over 32 million copies.
Carmen was born in Cleveland and was musical early, taking violin lessons at 6 and later learning piano and guitar. He was a student at John Carroll University when he joined a local group called Cyrus Erie. He and another Cyrus Erie member, guitarist Wally Bryson, joined forces with former members of a band called the Choir to form the Raspberries, combining melodies, guitar riffs and lush ballads.
He and the Raspberries reunited for a couple of shows in late 2004 at Cleveland’s House of Blues, and that led to dates nationwide the following year and the album Live on Sunset Strip, which included liner notes by no less a fan than Bruce Springsteen, who hailed the Raspberries as “The great underrated power pop masters”.
“It’s more satisfying now to go on stage and play with these guys than it ever was,” Carmen told The Plain Dealer in 2007. “It’s also nice that after 30-some years, we finally seem to be eliciting the respect of the media and people who maybe the first time around didn’t quite get it.”