Posted on 08/22/2011 2:08:22 PM PDT by Borges
Jerry Leiber, one of the most important songwriters in the history of rock & roll whose 60-year partnership with Mike Stoller produced "Stand By Me," "Hound Dog," "Jailhouse Rock," "Young Blood," "On Broadway," "Yakety-Yak" and countless other classics has died of cardiopulmonary failure. He was 78.
"When Jerry and I started to write, we were writing to amuse ourselves," Stoller told Rolling Stone in 1990. "It was done out of a love of doing it. We got very lucky in the sense that at some point what we wrote also amused a lot of other people."
Leiber met Stoller in Los Angeles in 1950 when he was still a senior in high school. They had a mutual love of R&B, blues and pop, and began writing music together almost instantly, with Stoller mostly handling the music and Leiber mostly handling the lyrics. "Jerry was an idea machine," Stoller says in their 2009 memoir Hound Dog. "For every situation, Jerry had 20 ideas. As would-be songwriters, our interest was in black music and black music only. We wanted to write songs for black voices. When Jerry sang, he sounded black, so that gave us an advantage . . . His verbal vocabulary was all over the place black, Jewish, theatrical, comical. He would paint pictures with words."
In the early days, they pulled 12-hour days writing on an upright piano in Stoller's house. "We're a unit," Leiber told Rolling Stone in 1990. "The instincts are very closely aligned. I could write, 'Take out the papers and the trash,' and he'll come up with 'Or you don't get no spending cash.'"
Within three years of meeting each other, Leiber and Stoller were the hottest songwriters in the business writing hits for the Drifters, Coasters and the Robins and many other R&B groups of the era. In 1956, their career went to a higher level when Elvis Presley took "Hound Dog" which they wrote for Big Mama Thornton four years earlier and turned it into a gigantic hit.
Leiber was extremely irritated by the changes that Presley made to the original lyrics. "To this day I have no idea what that rabbit business is about," he said in 2009. "The song is not about a dog; it's about a man, a freeloading gigolo. Elvis' version makes no sense to me, and, even more irritatingly, it is not the song that Mike and I wrote. Of course, the fact that it sold more than seven million copies took the sting out of what seemed to be a capricious change of lyrics."
Despite their success with Presley, most of the acts that Leiber and Stoller worked with were black. "I felt black," Leiber told Rolling Stone in 1990. "I was as far as I was concerned. And I wanted to be black for lots of reasons. They were better musicians, they were better athletes, they were not uptight about sex, and they knew how to enjoy life better than most people."
Not all of their songs were as innocent as they seemed. "Pure and simple, 'Poison Ivy' [a 1959 hit they wrote for The Coasters] is a metaphor for a sexually transmitted disease or the clap hardly a topic for a song that hit the Top Ten in the Spring of 1959," Leiber said in 2009. "But the more we wrote, the less we understood why the public bought what it bought."
The hits continued into the early 1960s with such classics as "Stand By Me" and "Spanish Harlem," but when the Beatles broke in America in early 1964, the music industry changed very quickly. The duo never stopped working together, and in 1972 they produced "Stuck In The Middle With You," which was recorded by Stealers Wheel. In 1995, their catalog of hits was turned into the Broadway musical Smokey Joe's Cafe, and this past May, American Idol devoted an entire evening to their music.
Coasters were the best there ever were.
RIP
Do you know about this too?
http://www.myspace.com/wreckingcrewfilm
Seems like you might enjoy...
cheers!
Always liked Bad Company’s version of “Young Blood”
Dion “Ruby Baby”: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xRjviO8negQ
“Down Home Girl”: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fp2q3yK8Lrs
Down in Miami Springs, at a place called the Flick...where J Buffet was the opening act to warm the crowd up...Dion played Abraham Martin and John. It was the first time...I remember, that I heard an actual voice sing. He wouldn’t do Purple Haze after Jimmy died...
Dion singing that song taught me
I’d be doing something else for life...
There were no cell phones to record my life then. I wish I could share it with you all.
I grew up on their stuff without knowing even who they were. Yakity-yak, Charlie Brown, Along Came Jones, Working in a Coal Mine, Poison Ivy, Youngblood, and my favorite Down in Mexico.
Their version of If I Had a Hammer is amazing and haunting:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NUlV2ki1w1k
You are right - they are the best.
Rock trivia: The Coasters and The Robins were the same group, The Robins transitioning into The Coasters.
I have heard that version a number of times and think that it is much, much superior to the way that Elvis treated it.
Interesting, if arguable, that so many of the Leiber-Stoller compositions had to wait for the second, third, etc, version to get a definitive recording. Examples: “Down Home Girl”, “One Kiss Led to Another”.
RIP Jerry and thanks for all of the great music you gave us. You done good!
You somehow managed to miss their best song, which was Run Red, Run.
Did not know about that song. Dad or my aunt must have never had a A or B side of that one. I’ll have to dig around on Youtube.
RIP.
This song might be part of the same story.
LOL! I think you might be right! Thanks!
- Napoleon Bonaparte
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