As a solo artist signed to Arista Records, Springs released the albums Helena in 1986 and New Love in 1987, and several singles. She has been a backup singer for other artists, including David Bowie and Mick Jagger, Bette Midler, Pet Shop Boys, and Elton John. Springs later worked in cabaret, and launched a line of toy dolls. She had personal relationships with Dylan and Robert De Niro, and was married to music executive Tony Lisandrello for six years. Actress Nina Lisandrello is her daughter.
During the years that she worked with Dylan, Springs jointly wrote 19 songs with him, more than any of his other co-writers; she said in an interview that she had co-written a further three, but none of those were published with a credit for her.[3] Their joint songwriting started in Brisbane in March 1978. According to Springs, she and Dylan were together one evening, and he was playing guitar. Springs told Dylan she was not a writer, and he offered to write something together, telling her "You start singing some stuff and I'll start playing", with the two jointly composing "If I Don't Be There by Morning" and "Walk Out in the Rain" in the session.[8]: 477 Both of those, and fellow collaboration, "Stop Now", were recorded by Dylan and his band during the Street-Legal sessions.[8]: 478 Heylin included two of the acknowledged joint compositions as among the 25 best of Dylan's unreleased tracks in a 2010 article. He called "Coming from the Heart", which has been performed in concert by Dylan only once, and was covered by the Searchers, "one of Dylan's best love songs". Heylin also included "More Than Flesh and Blood", which had been intended to be Springs' debut solo single.[9] Covers of "Walk Out in the Rain" and "If I Don't Be There by Morning" were included on Eric Clapton's 1978 album Backless.[3] In 1987, Clapton told an interviewer for Dylan fanzine The Telegraph that Dylan had handed him a cassette tape with the two songs when they met in Germany, and that "[Dylan and Springs] were co-writing, and I think he was very proud of it".[10] According to Dylan biographer Spencer Leigh, the meeting was on July 1 in Nuremberg, when Clapton played guitar on stage during Dylan's concert.[11]
Springs signed to Arista Records, who released her albums Helena in 1986 and New Love in 1987. They also issued her singles "I Want You",[a] "New Love", "Paper Money", and "Be Soft with Me Tonight".[3] In 1987, she told interviewers that one of her main influences was Tina Turner,[17] and that "I have never been a backing singer. I have sung with people who allowed me to be up front."[4] "Be Soft with Me Tonight" was praised as a "haunting ballad" by Paul Cole in the Birmingham Evening Mail.[18] The reviewer of New Love in the Evening Post wrote that Springs "seems to have a penchant for hi-energy pop soul" but "doesn't really have the songs".[1] Peter Holt of The Evening Standard, highlighting the track "Paper Money", opined that Springs demonstrated a "knack for writing a good pop song" and that "'Black Stockings' makes Tina Turner sound as sexy as cold rice pudding".[19] Springs was described as having a "rather deep voice which is well-suited to this techno-pop-gone-crazy single", by John Lee in the Huddersfield Daily Examiner. Lee wrote that Springs had "certainly come up with something a bit fdifferent that could make her bundles of the stuff she's singing about."[20]
Springs later worked in cabaret, and launched a line of toy dolls.[3][21]
Personal life
Springs had a personal relationship with Dylan, which is thought to be the inspiration of his song "New Pony" (1978).[22] In 1979, she started a relationship with Robert De Niro, who was filming Raging Bull at the time. In his biography of De Niro, John Parker writes the relationship continued on a casual basis for a number of years, and that when Springs had a child in 1982, De Niro paid her $35,000 in cash and selected the child's name. However, blood tests a decade later showed that De Niro was not the father. In the interim, Springs married music executive Tony Lisandrello in July 1984, and their marriage ended six years later.[23][24]Nina Lisandrello, Springs's daughter, is an actress.[21]
^Cooper, Chris (1992). "Helena Springs interviewed by Chris Cooper". In Bauldie, John (ed.). Wanted Man: In Search of Bob Dylan. Penguin. p. 138. ISBN978-0-14-015361-3.
^Heylin, Clinton (July 1, 2010). "Songs that blew away in the wind". The Daily Telegraph.
^Gibbons, Roger (1992). "Eric Clapton interviewed by Roger Gibbons". In Bauldie, John (ed.). Wanted Man: In Search of Bob Dylan. Penguin. p. 168. ISBN978-0-14-015361-3.
^Leigh, Spencer (2020). Bob Dylan: Outlaw Blues. Carmarthen: McNidder & Grace. p. 328. ISBN978-0-85716-205-2.