Wednesday, August 24, 2011

The LuLac Edition #1730, August 24th, 2011

PHOTO INDEX: "WRITE ON WEDNESDAY" LOGO.

WRITE ON WEDNESDAY

SONGWRITERS DYING BEFORE US


This week's "Write On Wednesday" features an article by ABC News Music critic Nina Terrero. Terrero writes of the passing of the late Jerry Leiber (he of Leiber and Stroller) and Nick Ashford. Here's her article.
The Day The Music Died: The Top 7 Songs We Loved
by NINA TERRERO
Legendary songwriters Jerry Leiber and Nick Ashford died Monday, but they leave behind a huge legacy of rock 'n' roll and rhythm and blues classics, not to mention countless numbers of devoted fans.
Nick Ashford, half of the prolific Motown husband and wife duo Ashford and Simpson who composed unforgettable hit classics for such artists as Diana Ross, Chaka Khan and Marvin Gaye, died of throat cancer in New York City. He was 70 years old.
He'd been undergoing treatment for the cancer, his former publicist Liz Rosenberg said. Ashford first met his wife of 38 years, Valerie Simpson, in New York City, where they began their prolific collaboration by writing hits for the legendary record label Motown Records. They were inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2002.
Jerry Leiber, the lyricist in the prolific songwriting duo of Leiber and Stroller, died of cardiopulmonary failure at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, at the age of 68.
With partner Mike Stoller, whom Leiber met as a teenager, Leiber wrote many of the iconic rock 'n' roll hits of the 1950s and '60s for such mega artists as Elvis Presley, the Beatles, Jerry Lee Lewis, Buddy Holly, Fats Domino and Aretha Franklin. The pair was inducted in the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1985 and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1987.
In a tribute to the day the music died, here are the top 7 hits written by celebrated songwriters Nick Sanford and Jerry Leiber:
1. 'Hound Dog'
This hit, recorded by Elvis Presley in 1956, was Leiber and Stroller's first No. 1 hit, and cemented their place in rock 'n' roll history, according to Billboard.com. Leiber was surprised that the tune, as sung by "some white guy" (Elvis Presley), about a woman who kicked out her good-for-nothing man, had made the airwaves so quickly, according to the Los Angeles Times. The duo would go on to write many more hits for Presley, including "Love Me," "Jailhouse Rock" and "Fools Fall in Love."
2. 'Love Potion No. 9'
This song, originally recorded by the doo-wop group the Clovers, was released in 1959. According to Billboard.com, the tune climbed steadily up R&B charts and was considered one of the group's greatest hits (the Clovers broke up in 1961). The song was also included in the iconic coming of age movie "American Graffiti."
The Top 7 Ashford and Leiber Songs the World Loved
3. 'Yakety Yak'
Yakety Yak was a smash hit attributed to Leiber's lively banter with Stroller. The Los Angeles Times recounted the story of Stroller, who had been fooling around on the piano when Leiber shouted out at him to "Take out the papers and ... the trash!" What ensued was a smash hit about a youth who resented parental authority. The lyrics describe a handful of chores and the consequences of not doing them ("Take out the papers and the trash, Or you don't get no spending cash") with the mischievous refrain "Yakety yak, don't talk back." According to Billboard.com, the classic tune topped Billboard charts in June 1958.
4. 'This Magic Moment'
The Drifters -- one of America's most beloved doo-wop groups -- crooned this tune to the top of the Billboard Hot 100 in 1960, as chronicled on Billboard.com. A tune that ended the night for hundreds of proms that year, this hit goes down in history as one of Ashford and Simpson's greatest melodies.
5. 'Ain't No Mountain High Enough'
"Ain't no mountain high enough, ain't no valley low enough" -- this eternal hit, first sung in 1966 by Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrelll, was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 1999. It became a hit again when Diana Ross put her own soulful spin on it in 1970, and has since been regarded as one of Motown's greatest classics of all time.
6. 'Ain't Nothing Like the Real Thing
A single released in 1968 by R &B duo Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell, it is perhaps one of Ashford's most popular songs and launched Gaye's reputation as one of rhythm and blues' sexiest crooners.
7.' I'm Every Woman'
Chaka Khan made her mark on music history with this funky 1978 anthem. The hit, later covered by Whitney Houston, made it a chart-climber in the 1980s. It eventually reached No. 1 on Billboard's Hot Soul Singles chart, according to Billboard.com. With its soulful lyrics "I'm every woman, it's all in me, anything you want done, baby, I'll do it naturally," Ashford wrote a lasting classic that earned thousands of fans all over the world.
This song is one of the most memorable Leiber & Stroller songs. It was also one of the first by the Drifters. It revolutionzed soul music at the time because the arrangements included strings.



2 Comments:

At 10:42 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Lieber and Stoller were two Jewish kids who wrote meaningful, sometimes humorous, insightful tunes, sung by and written for Black artists. Presley's Hound Dog version pales next to Big Mama Thornton's original. The song was written for a woman and their first cut by a white artist, but it went to Number #1 and Elvis and the songwriters were launched into uncharted territory on the Billboard charts.
It was also a giant step in the world of race relations.
Jerry Lieber's words coupled with
Mike Stoller melodies gave birth to Rock n Roll and ignited a cultural revolution in America!
As Bob Dylan once said of his lyrics, "the're just words, man",
but what words they were when inked by writers like Dylan and Lieber. Along with a very few others,
they are the Poets of my generation.

JP
American Society of Composers Authors and Publishers

 
At 12:51 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

$20 Million/$40 Million for a 25 year old stadium! Lets have a reality check NEPA. The team is not drawing and a new stadium wont change that for long. The team will eventually leave, thats one of Bob Cordaros political legacies.
Its been mismanaged from day one and the only reason the stadium needs extensive repair is the political corruption that went into building it! The Stadium Authority was always a joke and some of the same faces remain in place. Government has no business in Sports or Entertainment. The Yankee name is experiencing one of their rare failures in NEPA and they will do whats necessary to correct that, move! Then we can use the renovated stadium for High School Band Tournaments. Fix it up
but not to the tune of 40 Million Dollars.

Waverly Bob

 

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