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Artist:

Bob Crewe

Bob Crewe

Born:
Nov 12, 1931 in Newark, New Jersey

Representative Albums:

Music to Watch Girls By, The Best of the Bob Crewe Generation: Music to Watch Girls By, All the Song Hits of the 4 Seasons

Similar Artists:

A Member of the Group:

Worked With:

Bob Gaudio, Gordon Clark, Lesley Gore
  • Genre: Rock
  • Active: '60s, '70s
  • Instrument: Producer

Biography

One of the most successful pop/rock producers of the 1960s, Bob Crewe is primarily known for his work with the Four Seasons, many of whose hits he also had a hand in writing. Crewe also got hits with Diane Renay, Mitch Ryder, Freddy Cannon, and several others. He also made some solo recordings, although he only got a big hit with one, the 1966 instrumental "Music to Watch Girls By." Crewe entered the music business as both a singer, making numerous obscure recordings from the '50s onwards, and songwriter. He rose to prominence with work for Philadelphia-area labels, writing and producing, with partner Frank Slay, the Rays' classic doo wop hit "Silhouettes." The Crewe-Slay team became partners in the Swan label, where Crewe was involved in writing and production for early hits by Freddy Cannon ("Tallahassee Lassie" being the biggest) and Billy & Lillie ("La Dee Dah"). The Crewe sound was early rock & roll, diluted through a pop filter for a white teenage market, but with Cannon's hits especially retaining some raucousness. Hits like "Tallahassee Lassie" demonstrated Crewe's talents at getting tracks with stomping rhythms and hand claps, which he would build upon in a more artful fashion in his sides with the Four Seasons.

Crewe signed the Four Seasons in the early '60s, at first using them as backup vocalists for other artists. One of the decade's more enduring producer/artist partnerships took off when a single done by the group under their own name, "Sherry," made number one in 1962. Although this was written by Four Seasons member Bob Gaudio, the equally massive follow-up, "Big Girls Don't Cry," was penned by Gaudio and Crewe. Gaudio and Crewe would write many of the Seasons' big '60s hits -- including "Walk Like a Man," "Ronnie," "Rag Doll," "Save It for Me," and "Silence Is Golden" -- although they also wrote separately for the group. Crewe's productions for the Four Seasons (and some of his other artists) always boasted thick but cleanly recorded percussion, sometimes in an almost military cadenced stomp (as on "Walk Like a Man" and "Rag Doll"). Also crucial to the balance of the Four Seasons' arrangements were their sophisticated harmonies, in which both Frankie Valli's falsetto and the backup vocalists had a lot of presence. It's sometimes forgotten that Crewe's Four Seasons discs also adeptly incorporated imaginative touches of other instruments that made them stand out from the pack of other pop/rock records in the early and mid-'60s. For instance, there were the heavenly glissandos of "Candy Girl," the tremoloed guitars of "Silence Is Golden," the bells on "Dawn," the space-age organs and galloping rhythms of "Save It for Me" (which perhaps owe something to Joe Meek's production of the Tornados' "Telstar"), and the sad harmonica on "Big Man in Town."

Income from the Four Seasons' sales and songwriting was probably enough to keep Crewe comfortable for much of the '60s, but he was constantly working with other artists as well, for whom he also often assumed both production and songwriting hats. Diane Renay had a one-shot girl group-styled hit with "Navy Blue," and a lesser-known gem, "Watch Out Sally." Crewe worked extensively with another decent girl group-type singer, Tracey Dey, without getting a big hit; on "Watch Out Sally" and Dey's "I Won't Tell," you can really hear the Four Seasons influence in the assertive drum-stomp-hand-clap patterns. Crewe produced some sides for Lesley Gore, but just after her best work, which had been overseen by Quincy Jones, Crewe did get a substantial hit with Gore, "California Nights."

In the mid-'60s, Crewe formed his own New Voice and DynoVoice labels, which had hits by the Toys ("A Lover's Concerto"), Norma Tanega ("Walkin' My Cat Named Dog"), and Mitch Ryder & the Detroit Wheels. With Ryder, Crewe successfully took on the harder-driving sound of mid-'60s rock and soul, as usual getting in on some of the songwriting credits, as on the hit "Sock It To Me -- Baby!" Crewe, though, is sometimes cited as a factor in separating Ryder from the Wheels for a solo career, during which Ryder was given some inappropriately pop material, and his career ran aground.

In early 1967, Crewe himself finally had a big hit, "Music to Watch Girls By," credited to the Bob Crewe Generation. A prototypical easy listening/pop crossover instrumental with a '60s, party, go-go beat and Herb Alpert-like brass, it's still easily recognized today, and was ideal for use as background music for radio and television links. In the late '60s, he was behind another label, Crewe, whose biggest smash was Oliver's ballad "Jean," a considerable distance from the pop/rock with which he was most strongly identified in years past. Crewe's glory days passed after the '60s; his most significant achievement, and one which many wouldn't suspect to be his work, was co-writing Labelle's monster soul hit, "Lady Marmalade," in the mid-'70s. ~ Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide
 
 
Wikipedia: Bob Crewe

Bob Crewe (born November 12, 1931 in Newark, New Jersey) is an American songwriter and music producer, probably best known for co-writing a number of Top 10 singles for The Four Seasons.

Crewe began his career in the early 1950s. He and then-partner Frank Slay wrote several hit songs which were recorded by a variety of artists, including "Silhouettes" and "Daddy Cool" for The Rays; "Lah Dee Dah" and "Lucky Ladybug" for Billy and Lillie; and "Tallahassee Lassie" and "Okefenokee" for Freddy Cannon.

In the early 1960s Crewe began writing with Bob Gaudio. Their first collaboration, "Sherry," became a #1 hit single for The Four Seasons (fronted by Frankie Valli) in 1962. The pair wrote many other songs for the band, including "Big Girls Don't Cry," "Rag Doll," "Ronnie," "Walk Like a Man," "Bye Bye Baby" and "Connie O." Crewe & Gaudio also wrote Frankie Valli's solo hit "Can't Take My Eyes Off You," and Crewe collaborated with Sandy Linzer and Denny Randell on The Four Seasons hit "Let's Hang On!." In addition to his work with The Four Seasons, Crewe also cowrote "Navy Blue" (with Bud Rehak and Eddie Rambeau) and produced it for Diane Renay; her recording made the Top Ten in early 1964, and #1 on the Adult Contemporary charts.

In 1965 Crewe formed his own record label, DynoVoice Records, which found early success with the R&B trio The Toys. Crewe himself (recording as The Bob Crewe Generation) released the 1967 instrumental single "Music to Watch Girls By" on DynoVoice. Crewe also discovered an unknown band called Billy Lee and The Rivieras, renamed them Mitch Ryder and The Detroit Wheels, and arranged several of their songs including the hit "Devil With A Blue Dress On." In 1967, Bob Crewe was responsible for producing and writing seven of the songs sung by Lesley Gore on her California Nights album. The Bob Crewe Generation also recorded "Barbarella" for the 1968 film of the same name.

The Bob Crewe Generation reappeared briefly in the mid-1970s, recording disco material. In 1975 he wrote and produced disco material for The Eleventh Hour who had disco success with at least three releases on 20th Century Records: "Hollywood Hot" (45 rpm single, number: TC-2215), "Bumper to Bumper" and "Sock It To Me/It’s My Thing"[1]. In 1977, Crewe recorded a solo album at the insistence of producer Jerry Wexler. The album, entitled Motivation, was a showcase for his singing voice. Although the album did not become popular, it included a great ballad called "Marriage Made In Heaven" -- a collaboration between Crewe and Kenny Nolan. The song later became popular with Carolina Beach bands. [citation needed]

Crewe had previously written two other hit singles with Nolan, which were back-to-back #1 records in 1975: Frankie Valli's "My Eyes Adored You," and Patti LaBelle's "Lady Marmalade". The latter song was rerecorded by Christina Aguilera, Lil' Kim, Mya and Pink for the soundtrack of the movie Moulin Rouge!, and this version also reached #1 in 2001.

Bob Crewe was inducted into the Songwriter's Hall of Fame in 1985.

In 2005, Crewe was featured as a supporting character (played by Peter Gregus) in the new Broadway musical Jersey Boys, based on the story of Frankie Valli & The Four Seasons. The Crewe character is portrayed as a flamboyant producer and talented musician in his own right, and one of the driving forces behind the success of the group. Although his songwriting contributions are downplayed in the stage production, Crewe is still credited as the show's lyricist.

Discography

  • Kicks, Warwick W-2009 (1960, out-of-print)
  • Crazy In The Heart, Warwick W-2034 (1961, out-of-print)
  • All The Song Hits Of The Four Seasons, Philips 600150 (1964, out-of-print)
  • Bob Crewe Plays The Four Seasons' hits, Philips 600238 (1967, out-of-print)
  • Music To Watch Girls By, DynoVoice 9003 (1967, out-of-print)
  • Music To Watch Birds By, DynoVoice 1902 (1967, out-of-print)
  • Barbarella (Original Soundtrack Recording), originally published by Famous Music Corporation (1968, out-of-print), re-released by Soundtrack Classics SCL 1411 (2004)
  • Let Me Touch You, CGC 1000 (1970, out-of-print)
  • Street Talk, Electra 7E-1083 (1976, out-of-print)
  • Motivation, Electra 7E-1103 (1977, out-of-print)
  • The Best of The Bob Crewe Generation, Varèse Vintage 302 066 703 2 (Feb 2006)

References

  1. ^ ELEVENTH HOUR - Hollywood Hot. Retrieved 2 September, 2007.

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Copyrights:

Artist. Copyright © 2008 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ® , a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Bob Crewe" Read more

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