Jimmy Destri (born James Mollica, April 13, 1954, Brooklyn, New York) is an American musician. He played keyboards in the rock band Blondie, and is one of the principal songwriters for the band along with Chris Stein and Deborah Harry. Destri stopped touring with the band in 2004, but remained an official member of the band for several more years. He released a solo album, Heart on a Wall, in 1981.
Destri became interested in music in the late 50s and early 60s due to his uncle being a drummer with Joey Dee and the Starlighters. He played in a group named Milk and Cookies in the early 70s, but was dismissed from the band just before they relocated to the UK. He joined Blondie in 1975, a few months after Clem Burke, using the Farfisa organ as his main instrument.
As Blondie's career progressed, Destri became increasingly interested in synthesizers, and added them along with his Farfisa to the overall band's sound.
His sister, Donna Destri, also sang back up on the Blondie song "Living in the Real World."
After the band's break-up in 1982, Destri ran a company that bought, renovated, and sold old buildings. He also produced records and remixed material for artists like Prince and INXS. He and the rest of the band reunited in 1997, and Destri remained with the reunited Blondie through 2004. At that time, he retired from live performances with the band, though he intended to keep working with them in the studio. However, he played no part in the writing or recording of their first post-2004 album, 2011's Panic of Girls.
He has a daughter named Eileen (b.October 26, 1985) and a son named Jimmy (b.September 2, 1997) with his first wife Eileen. He then married Roberta (Robbie), and they have a daughter named Riƫnna (b.August 31, 2005).
Destri composed or co-wrote several songs for Blondie, among them some of their biggest hits:
- "Look Good In Blue", "A Shark In Jet's Clothing" and "Kung Fu Girls" for debut album Blondie (1976)
- "Fan Mail", "Contact in Red Square", "No Imagination", "Kidnapper", "Detroit 442" and "Poets Problem" for album Plastic Letters (1977)
- "Picture This" and "11:59" for Parallel Lines (1978)
- "Accidents Never Happen", "Slow Motion", "Atomic" and "Living in the Real World" for Eat to the Beat (1979)
- "Angels on the Balcony", "Do the Dark" and "Walk Like Me" for Autoamerican (1980)
- "Danceway" and "(Can I) Find The Right Words (To Say)" for The Hunter (1982)
- "Maria", "Nothing Is Real but the Girl", "No Exit" and "Dig up the Conjo" for No Exit (1998).
- "Rules for Living", "Background Melody (The Only One)", "Last One in the World" and "Diamond Bridge" for The Curse of Blondie (2003)
Jimmy Destri produced Going Up by Joey Wilson for Modern Records (the label co-owned by Stevie Nicks' then-boyfriend Paul Fishkin and infamous music exec Danny Goldberg). Joey Wilson's album Going Up was released in October 1980.