Robert Bateman, American songwriter and record producer, Died at 80

  Dead Famous

Robert Bateman was born in 1936, and died on October 12, 2016.
He was an American R&B singer, songwriter and record producer.
Some of his other songs that he had co-wrote the hits “Please Mr. Postman” and “If You Need Me”.
Robert was one of the founding members of vocal group the Satintones in Detroit, Michigan, in 1957.
He was the bass singer.
During 1959, the group made their first recordings for Motown, and Bateman did additional work for the company as a backing singer and engineer.
Bateman was reportedly responsible for acquiring Motown’s first recording equipment, a tape recorder discarded by radio station WJLB.
After the Satintones disbanded in 1961, after several record releases on Motown but without a hit, Bateman formed a writing and production partnership with Brian Holland, being credited as “Brianbert”.
They went to worked with Georgia Dobbins of the Marvelettes to rewrite “Please Mr. Postman”, a song that had been partly written by Dobbins’ friend William Garrett.
He and Holland then produced the Marvelettes’ recording of the song, which became the first Motown song to reach the number one position on the Billboard Hot 100 pop singles chart, and was later also recorded successfully by the Beatles and the Carpenters, among others.
He also co-wrote and co-produced some of the Marvelettes’ follow-up singles, including “Twistin’ Postman” and “Playboy”, and conducted the audition that led to Motown signing Mary Wells.
He died following a heart attack after attending an awards ceremony in Los Angeles, California
Robert Bateman passed away at 80 years old.