Jim Vienneau | |
---|---|
Born |
James Francis Vienneau September 18, 1926 Albany, New York, US |
Residence | Nashville, Tennessee |
Occupation | |
Years active | 1956-1989 |
Relatives | Frank Walker (uncle) |
James Francis "Jim" Vienneau (born September 18, 1926, in Albany, New York) is a retired music producer. He is best known for producing the song "It's Only Make Believe" by Conway Twitty.
Jim Vienneau was born on September 18, 1926, to Marian Catherine "Mary" (née Boyne) (1891-1989) and Alfred Edmond Vienneau (1886-1966), in Albany, New York. He had two older siblings, Alfred James (1918-1925) and Edmond Boyne "Ed" (1923-1995) Vienneau. Alfred Vienneau was an electrical salesman who was originally from New Brunswick, Canada and Mary Boyne Vienneau was a housewife originally from Philmont, New York. When Jim was a toddler, the family moved to North Hempstead, and later to Queens, New York. His maternal uncle was fellow music producer and mentor Frank Walker, the husband of Marian Vienneau's sister Laura Walker.
As a young man, he was mentored in producing music by his uncle Frank Walker, a producer of hit singers like Bessie Smith and Hank Williams, In 1956, he was signed as a producer by the president of MGM Records, Arnold Maxin, and began working out of the company's offices on Broadway, commuting to Nashville at times for recording sessions. He signed his most famous client Conway Twitty two years later and produced the Billboard Hot 100 number-one hit in 1958. Originally, he decided not to sign Twitty, but was overruled by Arnold Maxin. He ended up being the producer for many of Twitty's songs from 1958 to 1963.