Jump to content
Main menu
Navigation
●Main page
●Contents
●Current events
●Random article
●About Wikipedia
●Contact us
●Donate
Contribute
●Help
●Learn to edit
●Community portal
●Recent changes
●Upload file
Search
●Create account
●Log in
●Create account
● Log in
Pages for logged out editors learn more
●Contributions
●Talk
(Top)
1
References
2
External links
Fred McFarlane
●العربية
Edit links
●Article
●Talk
●Read
●Edit
●View history
Tools
Actions
●Read
●Edit
●View history
General
●What links here
●Related changes
●Upload file
●Special pages
●Permanent link
●Page information
●Cite this page
●Get shortened URL
●Download QR code
●Wikidata item
Print/export
●Download as PDF
●Printable version
Appearance
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Fred McFarlane
|
---|
Birth name | Frederick Craig McFarlane |
---|
Occupation(s) | Record Producer, Songwriter, Multi-Instrumentalist, Arranger |
---|
Musical artist
Frederick Craig McFarlane (November 14, 1959 – September 3, 2016)[1] was an American R&B songwriter, record producer and multi-instrumentalist. McFarlane's career as a songwriter and producer spanned more than 30 years. He wrote or co-wrote a number of R&B and dance hits including Jenny Burton's "Bad Habits" in 1985; Robin S.' 1993 debut single "Show Me Love" which he co-wrote with Allen George; and Jason Derulo's "Don't Wanna Go Home".[2]
McFarlane began his professional career as a keyboardist, supporting such artists as Crown Heights Affair and Enchantment.[2] He transitioned to producing during the 1980s. Among the songs he produced was Jocelyn Brown's 1984 hit "Somebody Else's Guy".[2]
McFarlane also penned songs for dozens of other artists, including Will Downing, Force MDs, Evelyn "Champagne" King, Keith Sweat and Madonna.[2]
McFarlane died in early September 2016. A cause of death was not released at the time.[2]
References
[edit]
External links
[edit]
t
e
t
e
t
e
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Fred_McFarlane&oldid=1186917892"
Categories:
●1959 births
●2016 deaths
●American male songwriters
●African-American songwriters
●American record producers
●American multi-instrumentalists
●20th-century African-American people
●21st-century African-American people
●American songwriter stubs
●Rhythm and blues and soul music biography stubs
●American record producer stubs
Hidden categories:
●Articles with short description
●Short description is different from Wikidata
●Articles with hCards
●Articles with MusicBrainz identifiers
●All stub articles
●This page was last edited on 26 November 2023, at 08:44 (UTC).
●Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License 4.0;
additional terms may apply. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.
●Privacy policy
●About Wikipedia
●Disclaimers
●Contact Wikipedia
●Code of Conduct
●Developers
●Statistics
●Cookie statement
●Mobile view