FACTOID # 164: If you're looking to invade someone by sea, try Canada! Canada has only 9000 Navy personnel guarding the longest national coastline in the world.
 
 Home   Encyclopedia   Statistics   Countries A-Z   Flags   Maps   Education   Forum   FAQ   About 
 
WHAT'S NEW
RECENT ARTICLES
More Recent Articles »
 

SEARCH ALL

FACTS & STATISTICS    Advanced view

Search encyclopedia, statistics and forums:

 

 

(* = Graphable)

 

 


Encyclopedia > Jeff Barry

Jeff Barry (born Joel Adelberg, 1938, Brooklyn, N.Y.) and Ellie Greenwich (born 1940, Brooklyn, N.Y.) comprised one of the most prolific and successful Brill Building song writing and production teams in the early 1960's.


First meeting in late 1959, Barry and Greenwich did some writing together, but kept to separate paths. Barry's first chart success was "Tell Laura I Love Her" recorded by Ray Peterson. At this time Barry was also recording under his own name, but had little success. Greenwich stayed in college until her graduation in 1962, all the while writing songs and travelling to the Brill Building on weekends to cut demonstration records of other people's songs. (She became known as "New York's Demo Queen.") One day Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller heard her singing from the next room, mistook her for Carole King, and subsequently offered her a job as a staff writer for their Trio Music publishing company. Barry, also a Brill Building regular, was subsequently signed to the same company.


A Greenwich pairing with Tony Powers led to a few hits, such as "Why Do Lovers Break Each Other's Hearts?" (Bobby Soxx and the Blue Jeans), "(Today I Met) The Boy I'm Gonna Marry" (Darlene Love), and "He's Got The Power" (Exciters), but after Ellie married Jeff in 1963, they became exclusive writing partners. The duo, in collaboration with Phil Spector, wrote several of his best remembered records: "Da Doo Ron Ron," "Then He Kissed Me," (Crystals) and "Be My Baby" and "Baby I Love You." (Ronettes).


In early 1963, Greenwich and Barry, recording as the Raindrops, had chart success with such songs as "What A Guy" and "The Kind of Boy You Can't Forget." (Through overdubbing, Greenwich supplied the lead and background vocals.) In 1964 Leiber and Stoller put the pair in charge of their newly founded Red Bird Records. Fifteen of Red Bird's first twenty releases made the charts, all written and/or produced by the Barry/Greenwich team, including "Chapel of Love," "People Say," and "Iko Iko" (Dixie Cups), "Walkin' In The Sand," and "Leader of the Pack," (Shangri-Las.)


Barry and Greenwich left Red Bird in early 1966 and with their latest discovery, Neil Diamond, they signed with Bert Berns' Bang Records. There they produced Diamond's first hits: "Cherry, Cherry," "Solitary Man," "Kentucky Woman," and "Girl You'll Be A Woman Soon." With Phil Spector, they also continued to write classics like "River Deep, Mountain High" (Ike and Tina Turner) and "I Can Hear Music' (Ronettes, Beach Boys), but with their marriage having ended the year before, they found it difficult to continue their collaboration. Barry subsequently moved to California and in the late sixties, in partnership with singer Andy Kim, wrote and produced the musical material used on TV's The Archie Show ("Sugar, Sugar"). He also produced several songs for the Monkees ("I'm A Believer"). He also founded his own label, Steed Records. Andy Kim, born December 5, 1952 in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, is a pop singer/songwriter. ... Steed Records was a record label founded by songwriter-record producer Jeff Barry in the late 1960s, which continued until the mid-1970s. ...


In 197l, Greenwich made her first solo album, "Let It Be Written, Let It Be Sung," which included new versions of the hits she'd written with Barry. She wrote and performed in the 1985 Broadway musical, "Leader of the Pack," a tribute to the Brill Building era.


Jeff Barry and Ellie Greenwich were inducted into the Songwriter's Hall Of Fame in May 1991.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Jeff Barry (5632 words)
Jeff's childhood was unspectacular; he wasn't a rebel, he wasn't a child prodigy (his fondness for cowboy songs notwithstanding), and he certainly wasn't a blueblood.
Jeff breathed new life into these two "baby" songs with fresh and fantastic arrangements, such as a heavy percussive sound he effected in the latter by playing one component of the drum kit at a time (to prevent sound leakage), layering each one on the track like the petals of a flower.
Jeff is a born entertainer and a lot of fun to know, and that dominant sense of fun, not unnoticed by his friends and colleagues, is what has endeared him to so many people.
Jeff Barry: Information from Answers.com (2041 words)
Jeff and Ellie met in late 1959, although it might not have been for the first time - her maternal uncle was married to his cousin, so they may actually have known each other since childhood.
Among Jeff's new collaborators were Marty Sanders, a member of the pop group Jay and the Americans, and Bang label CEO Bert Berns, with whom he wrote "Am I Groovin' You?," a top R and B single for Freddie Scott in 1967.
During the mid-1990s, Jeff served as president of the National Academy of Songwriters, and in December 1998 he was a recipient of their Lifetime Achievement Award.
  More results at FactBites »


 

COMMENTARY     


Share your thoughts, questions and commentary here
Your name
Your comments
Please enter the 5-letter protection code

Want to know more?
Search encyclopedia, statistics and forums:

 


Lesson Plans | Student Area | Student FAQ | Reviews | Press Releases |  Feeds | Contact
The Wikipedia article included on this page is licensed under the GFDL.
Images may be subject to relevant owners' copyright.
All other elements are (c) copyright NationMaster.com 2003-5. All Rights Reserved.
Usage implies agreement with terms.