Career
Born in Saint Paul, Minnesota, Cavanaugh became a session tenor saxophone player in California in his mid-twenties, working with numerous bands, including those of Eddie Miller, Bobby Sherwood, Benny Carter and Woody Herman. Amongst the singers whose work he backed in the late 1940s were Sammy Davis Junior., Ella Mae Morse and, as part of a group called Ten Cats & A Mouse, Peggy Lee. As "Big Dave" Cavanaugh, he also released singles such as "Big Dave"s Special" / "One Stop" and "The Cat from Coos Bay" / "Loosely with Feeling".
In the early 1950s, Cavanaugh became a Director of A & R (Artists and Repertoire) for Records, where, during a stint that would endure to the end of his career, he signed artists such as Dakota Staton, Donna Hightower, Nancy Wilson, Plas Johnson and Sandler & Young.
He became one of the label"s main producers, becoming responsible for the output of top artists such as National "King" Cole, Stan Kenton, Peggy Lee, Kay Starr, Billy May, Sandler and Young and Frank Sinatra and winning a Grammy in 1959 for producing Sinatra"s album Come Dance with Maine!. Cavanaugh even worked as arranger on some sessions, most notably on National "King" Cole"s 1958 album Welcome to the Club, on which Cole was backed by the Count Basie Orchestra, though not, for contractual reasons, by Basie himself.
In a less serious vein, Cavanaugh also arranged Sinatra"s spoof doo-wop single, "Two Hearts, Two Kisses (Make One Love)", with a session group called the Nuggets. In the 1970s, Cavanaugh became President of Records, with whom he remained associated until his death on New Year"s Eve 1981 at Tarzana Hospital of heart complications following surgery in Tarzana, Los Angeles, California.