when they worked as the team "Jim, Jake & Joan" Holmes' first musical foray was with his wife Katherine in the folk pop parody duo,
Allen & Grier. Following military service, he resumed his music career. Among the highlights: Holmes put lyrics to
Bob Gaudio's music on
The Four Seasons' 1969
Genuine Imitation Life Gazette album, after which the pair went on to compose
Frank Sinatra's 1970
Watertown album. Coming during a relative low point in Sinatra's career,
Watertown was his least successful album, but the song "I Would Be in Love (Anyway)" reached No. 4 on the
Billboard Adult Contemporary chart. The song "What's Now is Now" reached No. 31 on that chart and was later included in ''Frank Sinatra's Greatest Hits Volume 2''. Sinatra's recording of the Gaudio-Holmes composition "Lady Day" was left off the
Watertown album, but was released as a single, and
Don Costa later rearranged "Lady Day" for inclusion in Sinatra's
Sinatra & Company album (1971). In 1985,
Nina Simone recorded a cover version of "For a While", from the
Watertown album, for her ''Nina's Back
album. That same year, she recorded a live version of "For a While" for her Live And Kickin''' album. On his own, Holmes recorded during the 1960s two well-regarded albums for
EMI's Tower Records label:
A Letter to Katherine December, and
"The Above Ground Sound" of Jake Holmes, which contained the aforementioned "
Dazed and Confused" and "Genuine Imitation Life". The Four Seasons' Bob Gaudio heard Holmes sing "Genuine Imitation Life" at
The Bitter End in New York's City's
Greenwich Village, which led to their collaborations on The Four Seasons and Sinatra albums. Between those projects, Holmes, who had landed a recording contract with Polydor, went to Nashville to record an album called
Jake Holmes. That was followed by the most successful solo album of his career,
So Close, So Very Far to Go. Released by Polydor in 1970, it reached No. 135 on the
Billboard album chart, and the single "So Close" rose to No. 49 on
Billboard's Hot 100. In 1970,
Lena Horne sang Holmes' "It's Always Somewhere Else" on a TV special made with
Harry Belafonte and released on the album
Harry & Lena. Belafonte commenced recording Holmes' songs on
The Warm Touch (1971), followed by
Play Me (the song "So Close", 1973), and
Loving You Is Where I Belong (1981), culminating in a whole album, 1988's
Paradise in Gazankulu. These were followed by the live recordings ''
Belafonte '89 and An Evening with Harry Belafonte and Friends'' (1997). In 1977, "So Close" became the title song of an album by
Helen Schneider, a popular New York nightclub singer. Holmes' modest success with Polydor led to a contract with Columbia Records and the album
How Much Time. It was as accomplished as all his work but yielded no hits in a pop era that was about to be swamped by disco music. Later in the 1970s, with his music career stalling, Holmes moved into writing advertising jingles for HEA Productions, which provided music for advertising agencies. His first jingle for HEA was for an anti-drug campaign, "What Do You Do When the Music Stops". Besides the US Army slogan and Dr Pepper jingle, he is also the composer of the "Aren't You Hungry for Burger King Now?" campaign (1981), "Come see the softer side of Sears", and many other commercials – most famously in the UK, "We'll Take More Care Of You" for
British Airways – earning him the nickname "Jingle Jake". His voice can also be heard on commercials for
Philip Morris,
General Motors,
Union Carbide,
Gillette,
DeBeers,
Winn-Dixie, and
British Petroleum. In the 1990s, Holmes set up a production company for jingles and music, called Three Tree Productions. This was eventually acquired by
Frank Gari's Gari Media Group. Gari, best known for television
news music and image packages, continues to produce TV commercial jingles, including "Vista Blues" for
Apple Inc.'s
Get a Mac campaign. Even as his jingle career flourished, Holmes never gave up songwriting. He co-wrote every song on Harry Belafonte's 1988 album
Paradise in Gazankulu, including the song
Kwela (Listen to the Man), after which Belafonte's subsequent concert video was named. As the new century dawned, Holmes released a new solo album called
Dangerous Times, and jumped into the political fray with anti-
George W. Bush songs such as "Mission Accomplished" and "I Hear Texas". ==Discography==