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Songwriter
Ellie Greenwich helped to shape and popularize the girl group sound of the early '60s that included such acts as
the Ronettes,
the Shangri-Las, and
the Crystals, becoming, in the process, one of the most respected pop songwriters of the era. Like most of her generation,
Greenwich was transfixed with the sounds of rock & roll and, between college classes, hung out at a local record shop in her home of Hicksville, New York. The owner of the shop introduced
Greenwich to some label scouts and soon she found herself recording a single for
MCA under the name Ellie Gaye. The single flopped, however, but in a moment of fate she met aspiring songwriter
Jeff Barry in 1962 at a party and soon the two began writing songs together, eventually becoming husband and wife. After composing for a few short months, the duo made an appointment at the famed Brill Building where other songwriting teams such as
Leiber and
Stoller,
King and
Goffin, and
Mann and
Weil where beginning to find success.
Greenwich and
Barry were taken into the fold by
Leiber and
Stoller and began writing and producing for
Phil Spector's short-lived Philles label. It was during this period that
Greenwich co-wrote some of her most lasting songs, including "Da Do Ron Ron" and "Be My Baby."
Greenwich and
Barry also recorded an album under the name
the Raindrops, scoring with "The Kind of Boy You Won't Forget."
In 1964,
Greenwich and her songwriting husband teamed up with
Leiber and
Stoller to write for their Red Bird imprint. It was with Red Bird that the girl group sound was molded into perfection by
Greenwich,
Barry,
Leiber,
Stoller, and producer George "Shadow" Morton. Providing songs for
the Dixie Cups ("Chapel of Love") and
the Shangri-Las ("Leader of the Pack"), the Red Bird staff produced records whose love-struck lyrical content belied the complication and sophistication of the music.
Greenwich continued to write hit records with
Jeff Barry, including the seminal "River Deep, Mountain High" and
the Beach Boys' 1969 hit "I Can Hear Music," but, like the team of
Cynthia Weil and
Barry Mann, when their marriage soured so did their writing partnership.
Greenwich continued on in the music industry, recording a singer/songwriter album for
Verve Records in 1973 and providing background vocals to many of rock's biggest stars. In 1984 she involved herself in a musical based on her life titled Leader of the Pack.
Ellie Greenwich died of a heart attack in August 2009 after being hospitalized for pneumonia in New York City; she was 68 years old. ~ Steve Kurutz