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Bert Berns

 
Artist: Bert Berns
  • Born: November 08, 1929, New York, NY
  • Died: December 31, 1967, New York, NY
  • Active: '50s, '60s
  • Genres: Rock
  • Instrument: Producer, Arranger, Songwriter Representative Album: "The Heart and Soul of Bert Berns"

Biography

Bert Berns was one of the great rock and soul songwriters of the 1960s, as well as being a producer of note. He worked in the studio with the Drifters, Ben E. King, the Isley Brothers, and Solomon Burke. He wrote or co-wrote a raft of classics, including "Twist and Shout," the Drifters' "I Don't Want to Go On Without You," Burke's "Cry to Me" and "Everybody Needs Somebody to Love," Garnet Mimms' "Cry Baby" and "It Was Easier to Hurt Her," and "Hang on Sloopy." By the mid-'60s, he was proving adaptable to changing trends in white rock too, successfully collaborating with Lulu, Them, and Neil Diamond. With executives of Atlantic Records, he founded the Bang! label, which had hits with the McCoys, the Strangeloves, Diamond, and Van Morrison before Berns' death at the end of 1967.

When writing and producing for soul artists, Berns was notable for his ability to combine the best of pop and R&B. As with the compositions of his sometimes writing partner Jerry Ragovoy, there was an earthy gospel and down-home soul feel that was surprising coming from the pen of a white New Yorker. Berns, however, was more pop savvy than Ragovoy, as can be most audibly heard in his productions for the Drifters, which often backed the vocal group with smooth yet inventive strings (as on "Under the Boardwalk"). For Solomon Burke he proved capable of generating earthier and churchier tracks that sometimes drew from country music as well as R&B.

Partially as a result of playing in Caribbean night clubs in the 1950s (he had been a student at the Juilliard School of Music), and his admiration of salsa music as played in New York, Berns infused his writing and production with a pronounced Latin spice. This can be heard in the composition done by the Jarmels for a hit in the early '60s, "A Little Bit of Soap," and also in the rhythms of some of his Drifters productions. He was especially fond of an ascending chord progression whose origins have been attributed to Latin music, as heard in songs like "La Bamba." The most obvious and famous example in the Berns catalog is "Twist and Shout," very much like "La Bamba" in chord structure; the song was a huge seller not once but twice, both as a Top 20 hit for the Isley Brothers in 1962, and a number-two hit for the Beatles in 1964. (If you're wondering why the writing credit for "Twist and Shout" reads "Medley-Russell," it's because Berns sometimes wrote under the name of Bert Russell.) It was recycled yet again for a number-one hit in 1965 by the McCoys on "Hang on Sloopy." Van Morrison would later be critical of Berns' passion for these kinds of chord progressions, noting that Berns wanted to record such songs even when they didn't suit the artist.

In the mid-'60s, Berns did some work in London with Lulu and Them, including the original version of his composition "Here Comes the Night," recorded by Lulu. In a move that could have been sloppiness or just Berns and Decca Records trying to fire on all cylinders, Berns produced covers by both Lulu and Them at around the same time; Them's superior version of this classic tune became the big hit, although Lulu's version was released slightly earlier. Although lead singer Van Morrison was already writing quality material for the group, Them recorded several other decent Berns songs in the mid-'60s, including "(It Won't Hurt) Half as Much," "I Gave My Love a Diamond," and "Go on Home Baby."

In 1965, Berns founded the Bang! label, with Atlantic executives Ahmet Ertegun, Nesuhi Ertegun, and Jerry Wexler as partners; "Bang" was just an acronym of their first initials (Jerry Wexler being considered "Gerald Wexler" for this purpose). In its brief existence, Bang! was very successful: recording pop-garage rock with the teenage McCoys, getting a Bo Diddley-derived hit with "I Want Candy" by the Strangeloves, and issuing Neil Diamond's first hit singles. Bang! also had a subsidiary, Shout!, for soul material, including releases by Freddie Scott and Erma Franklin, who did the original version of "Piece of My Heart" for the label.

For Bang!, Berns favored material that had a driving, upbeat feel, clean production, and catchy chord progressions; ethos that were bound to drive him into conflict with Van Morrison when he produced the singer's first solo work in 1967. Morrison had been at loose ends after leaving Them in 1966, and was just hanging around Belfast trying to get something different going when Berns came to the rescue by asking Morrison to come to New York; although Morrison has said that Berns did not, as has sometimes been written, pay for the fare. Morrison became a Bang! artist and recorded his first singles, and debut solo album, in New York with Berns as producer. Although this quickly yielded a big hit with "Brown Eyed Girl," Morrison, already a serious singer/songwriter, was frustrated by conditions in the studio that were too commercially pressurized for his liking. In fairness to Berns, it should be noted that Morrison was not (and has never been) the easiest of musicians to work with due to his mercurial artistic temperament. One of the root problems was that Morrison, despite the success of "Brown Eyed Girl," was in truth already more suited to being treated as an album-oriented artist for the expanding LP market, an area that Bang! was not tapped into.

It might have been interesting to see if Berns could have evolved with Morrison and like-minded artists into such directions, but he unexpectedly died of a heart attack on December 31, 1967. In a footnote to Bang!, control of the label had passed to Berns' widow Eileen, who agreed to release Morrison from his contract if he gave them publishing rights for an album's worth of new songs. Morrison complied, in letter if not spirit, with about 30 compositions that are little more than extemporized ditties, some of which seem to blatantly satirize Berns' taste for "La Bamba"-like patterns and rhythms, and Bang!'s pressure to deliver commercial material. These tapes were eventually issued in the mid-'90s on European compact discs, as a perverse postscript to the Berns legacy. ~ Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Bert Berns
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Bert Berns
Birth name Bertrand Russell Berns
Also known as Bert Russell
Born 8 November 1929(1929-11-08)
Origin New York City, New York, United States
Died 30 December 1967 (aged 38)
Genres Pop
Occupations songwriter, record producer
Years active 1960s
Website bertberns.com

Bertrand Russell Berns (8 November 1929 – 30 December 1967), aka Bert Russell and Bert Berns and Russell Byrd, was an American songwriter and record producer of the 1960s. A pioneer of sixties rock and soul, Berns made several notable contributions to popular music, including "Here Comes the Night", "Piece of My Heart", "Hang on Sloopy", and "Twist and Shout". He died of heart failure at age 38.

Contents

Biography

Born in the Bronx, New York City to Russian Jewish immigrants, Berns contracted rheumatic fever as a child, an illness that would mark the rest of his life. Turning to music, he found consonance in the sounds of his African American and Latino neighbors. As a young man, Berns danced in mambo nightclubs, and made his way to Havana before the Cuban Revolution.

Shortly after his return from Cuba, Berns began a seven-year run from an obscure Brill Building songwriter to the chief of his own record labels. His first hit record was "A Little Bit of Soap" performed by The Jarmels in 1961. One year later, the Isley Brothers recorded "Twist and Shout", written by Berns and Phil Medley. During these years, Berns wrote and produced records for a wide range of labels, including Wand, United Artists, Capitol, Laurie, MGM, Big Top, Old Town, Roulette, and Atlantic Records. In 1963, Berns would replace Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller as the staff producer at Atlantic, where he produced such acts as Solomon Burke ("Cry to Me" and "Everybody Needs Somebody to Love"), The Drifters ("Under the Boardwalk" and "Saturday Night at the Movies"), Barbara Lewis ("Baby I'm Yours" and "Make Me Your Baby"), Little Esther Phillips ("Hello Walls"), Wilson Pickett and LaVern Baker. Berns was also one of the few American record producers to travel across the Atlantic to London, where he produced a number of British Decca artists such as Them ("Here Comes the Night," "Baby Please Don't Go" and "Gloria"), and Lulu.

In 1965, Bert Berns formed his own record labels, Bang Records and Shout Records. It was founded with the Atlantic Records partners with the Bang name derived from their first names--Bert Berns, Ahmet Ertegün, Nesuhi Ertegün and Gerald Wexler. Bang was home to such artists as The McCoys ("Hang on Sloopy"), The Strangeloves ("I Want Candy"), Van Morrison ("Brown Eyed Girl") and Neil Diamond ("Solitary Man" and "Cherry Cherry"). Berns formed Shout as an outlet for his R&B passions, recording Freddie Scott ("Are You Lonely for Me Baby") and Erma Franklin ("Piece of My Heart").

Bert Berns' death in the last days of 1967 marked an end to the golden era of rock and soul music. One of his last songs, "Piece of My Heart", was originally recorded that year by Erma Franklin, covered shortly later by Big Brother and the Holding Company (fronted by then-unknown Janis Joplin). The Led Zeppelin outtake "Baby Come on Home" (originally titled "A Tribute To Bert Berns") was loosely based on a song Berns wrote for Hoagy Lands, and was recorded in Berns' honour. While the Bang/Shout Records catalogue is today owned by Sony Music, the Berns family still owns the music publishing operations originally called WEB IV Music. The WEB IV name was also derived from the founders with WEB as an acronym for Wexler-Ertegun-Berns and the Roman numeral IV for the four original partners.

Selected writing credits

Selected producer credits

Selected discography

  • The Heart and Soul of Bert Berns (2003) a CD encompassing some of Berns' best work.
  • The Bert Berns Story - Vol. 1: 1960-1964 (2008), a CD featuring more than two dozen of Berns' R&B and rock hits, released through Ace Records of England.

References

External links


 
 
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