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Gene Pitney

 

Singer, songwriter

Gene Pitney set himself apart from the vacuous teen idols of the early 1960s with a series of smartly crafted, emotionally sung recordings that appealed to both young and old. More intense than contemporaries Paul Anka and Johnny Tillotson, Pitney’s best recordings channeled the same type of romantic paranoia and desperation that typified the works of Del Shannon and Roy Orbison.

During an era when the 45-rpm record was still king and preteens their biggest consumers, Pitney’s vibratoladen tenor transformed typical pop fare into dramatic yet catchy anthems of heartbreak and longing. Aided by some of the top producers, writers, and arrangers of his time, he scored a string of top-40 hits, some of which are considered timeless classics.

Gene Francis Allan Pitney was born February 17, 1941, in Hartford, Connecticut, was raised in nearby Rockville, where he learned the basics of piano, drums, and guitar while digging the influences of such early rock and R&B pioneers as the Penguins, the Crows, Clyde McPhatter, the Drifters, and the Flamingos. By high school, the youngster was proficient enough to front his own local band, Gene & the Genials, and to record four sides—unreleased until 1990—with a local R&B group, the Embers. In 1959, when cute boy-girl duos were all the rage, Pitney and Ginny Arnell recorded "Classical Rock and Roll" and "Strollin’ through the Park" as Jamie & Janie for Decca Records. This aversion to putting his given name on record continued when he waxed "Cradle of My Arms" and "Please Come Back" as Billy Bryan for Festival records that same year. According to his self-composed website biography, Pitney didn’t make a stand for his own moniker until a record exec wanted to dub him Homer Muzzy. "Well, that was it. I wasn’t going to go through life with a name like that! I decided it was time to use my real name…."

Although his early recorded efforts stiffed—they’re highly sought collectibles today—Pitney began to achieve some notoriety as a songwriter in 1960. Multi-decade artist-producer-songwriter-session ace Al Kooper, who co-authored "I Must Be Seeing Things"; for Pitney, recalled in the liner notes of 25 All-Time Greatest Hits, "[Publisher] Aaron Schroeder asked me to sit in on Gene’s audition for him in the REALLY early Sixties. I advised Aaron to sign Gene as I was incredibly impressed by his talents … and the rest is history."

Schroeder—who co-wrote "I Got Stung," "A Big Hunk O’ Love," and many others for Elvis Presley—began placing Pitney’s songs with such notable recording artists as the Kalin Twins, Tommy Edwards, Steve Lawrence, and Roy Orbison. Eventually, the young songwriter would garner significant coin penning such major pop hits as "Rubber Ball" for Bobby Vee, "Hello Mary Lou" for Ricky Nelson, and "He’s a Rebel" for the Crystals. Contractual complications compelled Pitney

to use his mother’s maiden name, Orlowski, on "Rubber Ball," the success of which convinced him to quit studying electronics at Connecticut University in favor of a full-time music career.

Pitney made a bold step as a recording artist in his own right when a demo recording he cut for $30 interested Schroeder enough to release it on his new Musicor label. Although its chipper, almost girlish vocals encompassed more of Neil Sedaka’s style than his own, Pitney’s "I Wanna Love My Life Away" became a fringe top-40 hit. In the process the 1961 release established the nucleus of his style with its overdubbed back-up vocals, youthful tenor, and vibrato.

As a favor, Schroeder asked Phil Spector to produce Pitney’s follow up session. Spector, working without fee on one of his last freelance projects before starting the Philles label with Lester Sill, spent $13,000 on a session that normally would have cost $500. The commercial fortunes of "Every Breath I Take," featuring an uptown R&B approach reminiscent of the Drifters and an Orbisonesque falsetto ending, didn’t justify its cost. Forty-one years later, Spector told Roger Caitlin of the Hartford Courant that the record bombed in America "because they knew what [Pitney] looked like. This nice Pat Boone kid with the bucks and the pompadour." However, Spector’s blend of rock instruments with strings and kettledrums conjured a blueprint subsequent producers and arrangers, including Pitney himself, would follow very closely. The Schroeder-produced "Town without Pity" added swaggering brass to Spector’s formula, transforming the theme to a strident, mediocre film of the same name into an Oscar-nominated hit.

Another important association came via the writing team of Burt Bacharach and Hal David, who wrote such major chartmakers as "Walk on By," "I’ll Never Fall in Love Again," and many others for Dionne Warwick. The duo crafted Pitney’s western-flavored breakthrough hit "(The Man Who Shot) Liberty Valance." Intended for the John Ford-directed film of the same name, the tune never made it onto the soundtrack due to the movie’s unexpected early release. A bemused Pitney told 25 All-Time Greatest Hits liner note writer Mike Ragogna, "We were in the studio about to record the song and Bacharach informed us that the film just came out."

Bacharach and David composed the Pitney classics that helped him successfully cross over from his teen fans to adult contemporary audiences. The most en-during of these songs are "Only Love Can Break a Heart," "True Love Never Runs Smooth," and "Twenty Four Hours from Tulsa." Although Schroeder and Wally Gold are credited for producing these tracks, it was Bacharach who arranged and conducted the sessions, leaving his inimitable classy stamp on the finished product.

Nineteen sixty-four was a tough year for most American pop and rock performers. British Invasion acts such as the Beatles, the Dave Clark Five, Herman’s Hermits, Gerry & the Pacemakers, and the Rolling Stones were bumping the early 1960s teen idols off the airwaves, relegating them to oldies tours or premature retirement. By contrast, Pitney’s career initially flourished with two major hits, the Spector-influenced "It Hurts to Be in Love" and the Barry Mann/Cynthia Weil-penned "I’m Gonna Be Strong." Surprisingly, most of Pitney’s subsequent recordings scored higher on the British charts than at home. In the process, he earned the respect of the Rolling Stones’ Keith Richards and Mick Jagger, who wrote "That Girl Belongs to Yesterday" for Pitney to record, making him the first American to record a Stones composition.

The disparity between Pitney’s domestic and overseas popularity was dramatically evidenced by such chart-makers as "I Must Be Seeing Things," "Looking through the Eyes of Love," "Princess in Rags," and "Backstage," all of which hit the top ten in Britain but never got higher than number 25 on the American charts. Moreover, British audiences appreciated such early Randy Newman-penned gems as "Nobody Needs Your Love" and "Just One Smile," even after Americans turned a deaf ear to them.

During the mid-1960s, Pitney attempted to expand his appeal by recording with country music icon and fellow Musicor artist George Jones. Pitney told Bill Kennedy of the Belfast News Letter, "I love the way George Jones drawls on things and the minute we started to sing then, it was as though I’d been a country singer all my life. I could phrase like George without even thinking about it—it was the natural thing to do. The high sound that I have and that beautiful low baritone of his worked very well together."

Billed as George & Gene, the duo scored two respectable country hits, a remake of Faron Young’s "I’ve Got Five Dollars and It’s Saturday Night" and a rousing rendition of Doug Kershaw’s "Louisiana Man." Pitney also recorded a handful of singles with Jones’s frequent duet partner Melba Montgomery, the most successful being "Baby Ain’t That Fine." However, still successful as a pop artist, Pitney saw no reason to continue pursuing a career in the lighter-selling country music field.

Even though his last major American pop hit, the uncharacteristic R&B chanter "She’s a Heartbreaker," didn’t make the charts overseas, Pitney continued to rack up top-40 hits in England through the early 1970s. Concentrating on his overseas audiences, the singer took second place at the San Remo Song Festival in Italy twice and recorded the regionally popular "Nessuno Mi Puo’ Giudicare."

Although the worldwide hits eventually dried up, Pitney toured overseas constantly until he hurt his voice in the mid-1970s. From that point on he began concentrating more on his family and real estate ventures, leaving live performances scattered over six to eight months of each year.

Domestically, Pitney’s last shot at the big time came via three unsuccessful singles for Epic in 1977. Yet good fortune smiled on him in the ensuing decades. A lengthy court battle with Gusto Records over unpaid royalties on reissue packages of his old Musicor hits resulted in a federal judge awarding him $187,762. In Britain, where he remains a star to this day, Pitney rerecorded "Something’s Gotten Hold of My Heart" with former Soft Cell lead singer Marc Almond in 1990. The result was his very first number-one record in the United Kingdom. Finally, in 2002, the former teen idol oft hailed as "one of pop’s great sufferers" was finally accorded some overdue recognition in America when he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

Selected discography
Anthology (1961-1968), Rhino, 1986.
More Greatest Hits, Varese Sarabande, 1995.
25 All-Time Greatest Hits, Varese Sarabande, 1999.

Sources
Books
Brown, Tony, Jon Kutner, and Neil Warwick, editors, The Complete Book of the British Charts: Singles and Album, Omnibus Press, 2000.
Graff, Gary, and Daniel Durchholz, editors, MusicHound Rock: The Essential Album Guide, second edition, Visible Ink Press, 1999.
Helander, Brock, The Rockin’ ’60s: The People Who Made the Music, Schirmer Books, 1999.
Hyatt, Wesley, editor, The Billboard Book of Number One Adult Contemporary Hits, Billboard Books, 1999.
Mansfield, Brian, and Gary Graff, editors, MusicHound Country: The Essential Album Guide, Visible Ink Press, 1997.
McAleer, Dave, editor, The All Music Book of Hot Singles: Top Twenty Charts from 1954 to the Present Day, Miller Freeman Books, 1994.
McCloud, Barry, editor, Definitive Country: The Ultimate Encyclopedia of Country Music and Its Performers, Perigree Books, 1995.
Ress, Dafydd, and Luke Crampton, Rocks Movers & Shakers: An A to Z of the People Who Made Rock Happen, Billboard Books, 1991.
Ribowsky, Mark, He’s a Rebel: The Truth about Phil Spector—Rock and Roll’s Legendary Madman, Dutton, 1989.
Soocher, Stan, They Fought the Law: Rock Music Goes to Court, Schirmer Books, 1999.
Ward, Ed, Geoffrey Stokes, and Ken Tucker, editors, Rock of Ages: The Rolling Stone History of Rock & Roll, Summit Books, 1986.
Warner, Jay, editor, Billboard’s American Rock ‘n’ Roll in Review, Schirmer Books, 1997.

Whitburn, Joel, editor, The Billboard Book of Top 40 Country Hits: Country Music’s Hottest Records 1944 to the Present, Billboard Books, 1996.
Whitburn, Joel, editor, The Billboard Book of Top 40 Hits, 7th edition, Billboard Books, 2000.

Periodicals
Belfast News Letter, January 4, 2002, p. 32.
Hartford Courant, March 21, 2002.

Online
"Gene Pitney," All Music Guide, http://www.allmusic.com (June 19, 2002).
"Gene Pitney," The History of Rock ‘n’ Roll, http://www.history-of-rock.com/gene_pitney.htm (June 17, 2002).
Gene Pitney Official Website, http://www.gene-pitney.com (June 19, 2002).
Additional information was taken from the liner notes of Gene Pitney: 25 All-Time Greatest Hits, Varese Sarabande, 1999, and from the liner notes to the multi-artist tribute He’s a Rebel: The Gene Pitney Story… Retold, To M’Lou Music, 2002.
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Biography

One of the most interesting and difficult-to-categorize singers in '60s pop, Gene Pitney had a long run of hits distinguished by his pained, one-of-a-kind melodramatic wail. Pitney is sometimes characterized (or dismissed) as a shallow teen idol-type prone to operatic ballads. It's true that some of his biggest hits -- "Town Without Pity," "Only Love Can Break a Heart," "I'm Gonna Be Strong," "It Hurts to Be in Love," and "Twenty Four Hours From Tulsa" -- are archetypes of adolescent or just-post-adolescent agony, characterized by longing and not a little self-pity.

But Pitney was not just an archetype of his style -- he was one of the best at his style, and indeed one of the few (along with Roy Orbison) that could pull it off convincingly. Also (like Orbison), he had more range than he's generally given credit for, making forays into tough pop/rock, country, and even borderline rockabilly. Other than Dionne Warwick, he was the best interpreter of Bacharach-David's early compositions. Although he didn't pen much of his material, he was a composer of note, writing "He's a Rebel" for the Crystals, and "Hello Mary Lou" for Rick Nelson. He was also something of a closet hipster -- he was the first American artist to cover a Jagger-Richards song ("That Girl Belongs to Yesterday," which was a British hit before the Rolling Stones had ever entered the U.S. Top 100), contributed to an actual Rolling Stones session in early 1964 (during which they recorded "Not Fade Away"), had a brief fling with a teenage Marianne Faithfull, and recorded songs by Randy Newman and Al Kooper long before those musicians became famous.

Pitney broke into the music as a songwriter in his late teens, getting his first taste of success when Rick Nelson had a hit with "Hello Mary Lou" in 1961. That same year, Pitney had a small hit with his first single, "(I Wanna) Love My Life Away," a self-penned demo on which he sang and played every instrument -- an extraordinary feat for 1961. Another 1961 single, Goffin-King's "Every Breath I Take," was produced by Phil Spector, and is one of the very first examples of his pull-out-the-stops Wall of Sound productions. Pitney didn't really find his metier, however, until late-1961's "Town Without Pity," which became his first Top 20 entry.

For the next four years, Pitney was one of the most successful solo male vocalists in America, reeling off over a dozen more Top 40 hits. While lovelorn angst was his stock-in-trade, some of the singles were fairly innovative -- "Half Heaven, Half Heartache" and "(The Man Who Shot) Liberty Valance" were crossover country-pop before that term existed, "Mecca" was one of the few big pop/rock hits to bear the influence of Middle Eastern music (albeit in a superficial fashion), and "Last Chance to Turn Around" was a hard-boiled tough-luck tale worthy of a top-notch B-movie thriller.

Pitney withstood the initial onslaught of the British Invasion fairly well, scoring Top Ten hits in 1964 with "It Hurts to Be in Love" and "I'm Gonna Be Strong." By 1966, though, he was in serious trouble stateside. Ironically, by this time he was a much bigger star in Britain, making the U.K. Top Ten six times in 1965-1966. He could also depend on a faithful international audience throughout Europe, and frequently recorded in Italian and Spanish for overseas markets. In 1966, he became one of the first artists to reach success with Randy Newman compositions, taking "Nobody Needs Your Love" and "Just One Smile" into the British Top Ten.

Pitney entered the U.S. Top 20 one last time in 1968 with "She's a Heartbreaker," a rather forced updating of his trademark sound, and reached the Top 40 in Britain for the last time in 1974. Still, he remained a big concert draw on the overseas nostalgia circuit. In 1989, he made number one in the U.K. again by duetting with Marc Almond on a remake of one of his '60s singles, "Something's Gotten Hold of My Heart." He died in April 2006, the night after a show in Cardiff, Wales. ~ Richie Unterberger, Rovi
Wikipedia on Answers.com:

Gene Pitney

Top
Gene Pitney

Pitney in 1967.
Background information
Birth name Gene Francis Alan Pitney
Also known as Billy Bryan
Born February 17, 1941(1941-02-17)
Hartford, Connecticut, U.S.
Origin Rockville, Connecticut, U.S.
Died April 5, 2006(2006-04-05) (aged 65)
Cardiff, Wales, UK
Genres Rock and roll
Occupations Singer, songwriter, musician
Instruments Guitar, piano, drums
Years active 1961–2006

Gene Francis Alan Pitney, known as Gene Pitney (February 17, 1941 – April 5, 2006), was an American singer-songwriter, musician and sound engineer. Through the mid-1960s, he enjoyed success as a recording artist on both sides of the Atlantic and was among the group of early 1960s American acts who continued to enjoy hits after the British Invasion. Pitney charted 16 Top-40 hits in the U.S., four in the Top 10. In the UK he had 22 Top-40 hits, and 11 singles in the Top Ten. He also wrote the early 1960s hits "Rubber Ball" by Bobby Vee, "He's a Rebel" by The Crystals, and "Hello Mary Lou" by Rick Nelson. In 2002, he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

Contents

Early years

Pitney was born in Hartford, Connecticut, and grew up in Rockville, now part of Vernon, Connecticut. His early influences were Clyde McPhatter, country-blues singer Moon Mullican and doo-wop groups like The Crows. He attended Rockville High School, at which he was named "the Rockville Rocket", and where he formed his first band, Gene & the Genials. He made records as part of a duo called Jamie and Jane with Ginny Arnell (who later had a solo hit, "DumbHead"), and in 1959 recorded a single as Billy Bryan. The first of the two Decca 45s as Jamie and Jane was "Snuggle Up, Baby," a cover of a song Charlie Gracie recorded at Cameo 1957 or early 1958, which remained unreleased until London Records released Gracie's original version in Europe in 1978.

Career

Rise to fame (1961–1964)

Signed to songwriter Aaron Schroeder's newly formed Musicor label in 1961, Pitney scored his first chart single, which made the Top 40, the self-penned "(I Wanna) Love My Life Away", on which he played several instruments and multi-tracked the vocals. He followed that same year with his first Top 20 single, the title song from the film Town Without Pity starring Kirk Douglas. Written by Dimitri Tiomkin and Ned Washington, the song won a Golden Globe Award and was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Song. Pitney performed the song at the Oscars ceremony on 9 April 1962 (honoring the film year of 1961). The song lost the Academy Award to "Moon River". "Town Without Pity" would be the last song Gene Pitney would sing in public, at a gig in south Wales before his death at the age of 65.

Pitney is also remembered for Burt Bacharach-Hal David song "The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance", which peaked at No. 4 in 1962. Though it shares a title with a 1962 John Ford western with the same title, The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, staring John Wayne, the song was not used in the film because of a publishing dispute between Famous Music and Paramount Pictures.

Meanwhile, Pitney wrote hits for others, including "He's a Rebel" for The Crystals, Vikki Carr, and Elkie Brooks; "Today's Teardrops" for Roy Orbison; "Rubber Ball" for Bobby Vee; and "Hello Mary Lou" for Ricky Nelson. In an ironic twist, when Pitney hit No. 2 in November 1962 with the Bacharach-David song "Only Love Can Break a Heart", he was kept from the top spot by The Crystals' version of "He's a Rebel". "Only Love Can Break a Heart" would be Pitney's highest-charting single in the U.S.

Pitney's 1963 hit "Mecca" can be regarded as a precursor to psychedelia in its use of Arabian music several years before The Beatles began experimenting with exotic sounds. Exotic instruments became a Pitney trademark, such as mariachi trumpets in "Lonely Drifter", ukuleles in "Hawaii", and a gypsy fiddle in "Golden Earrings".

His popularity in the UK market was ensured by the breakthrough success of "Twenty Four Hours from Tulsa", a Bacharach and David song, which peaked at No.5 in Britain at the start of 1964 ("Twenty-Four Hours From Tulsa" was only Pitney's third single release in the UK to reach the singles chart and the first to break the Top Twenty there). "Twenty-Four Hours From Tulsa" was also a hit in the U.S, peaking at No.17 on the US Billboard Hot 100.

Involvement with the Rolling Stones (1964)

Pitney was present with Phil Spector at some of the Rolling Stones' early recording sessions in London, including "Little by Little" and other tracks for their debut album;[1] he played piano, though the extent is uncertain.

The Jagger/Richards song "That Girl Belongs to Yesterday" was a UK hit for Pitney in 1964; it was the first tune composed by the Rolling Stones to become a Top 10 hit in the UK.[2] In the U.S. the single stalled at No. 49, ending a run of seven Top 40 singles for Pitney as a performer.

Maintaining popularity

After another low-charting single, 1964's "Yesterday's Hero", Pitney rebounded with another string of hits in the mid-1960s, including the 1964 singles "It Hurts To Be in Love" (previously mentioned) and "I'm Gonna Be Strong", which reached No. 7 and No. 9, respectively, in the U.S., and 1966's "Nobody Needs Your Love", which peaked at No. 2 in the UK. ("I'm Gonna Be Strong" also reached No. 2 on the UK charts.) "It Hurts To Be in Love" had been planned for and recorded by Neil Sedaka, but RCA refused to release it because Sedaka had recorded the song outside RCA Victor in violation of his contract. The writers, Howard Greenfield and Helen Miller, presented the song to Pitney. Miller replaced Sedaka's voice with Pitney's.

In 1965, Pitney recorded two successful albums with country singer George Jones. They were voted the most promising country-and-western duo of the year. Pitney also recorded songs in Italian, Spanish and German, and twice finished second in Italy's annual Sanremo Music Festival, where his strong vibrato reminded older listeners of the Italian tenor Caruso. He had a regional hit with "Nessuno Mi Puo' Giudicare".

UK, Australian and European stardom (1966–1970s)

Pitney's career in the U.S. took a downturn after mid-1966, when "Backstage" ended another run of Top 40 hits. He returned one last time to the Top 40 with "She's a Heartbreaker" in mid-1968 and placed several singles in the lower reaches of the Hot 100 after that, but by 1970 he was no longer a hit-maker in the U.S.

Pitney maintained a successful career in Britain and the rest of Europe into the 1970s, appearing regularly on UK charts as late as 1974. In Australia, after a fallow period in the early 1970s, Pitney returned to Top 40 in 1974, as both Blue Angel (No. 2) and Trans-Canada Highway (No. 14; production by David Mackay) were substantial hits. Pitney continued to place records in the Australian charts through 1976, including the hit "Down This Road", written and produced by distant relation Edward Pitney. They also collaborated in the production of the hit song "Days of Summer".

In the early 1970s, Pitney decided to spend only six months each year on the road.

Later career

Pitney's last hit on the UK charts came in 1989, after an absence of 15 years, when he and Soft Cell singer Marc Almond recorded a duet version of "Something's Gotten Hold of My Heart" by British writers Roger Cook and Roger Greenaway. The song had been a UK No. 5 for Pitney in 1967. The duet brought him his first UK No. 1, in late January 1989. The single remained at the top for four weeks, and also went to No. 1 elsewhere in Europe. Pitney and Almond appeared on the Terry Wogan television show in Britain, Almond dressed in leather, Pitney in a white tuxedo.

Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds had recorded "Something's Gotten Hold of My Heart" on their cover album, Kicking Against the Pricks, in 1986. But it never had the success of Pitney-Almond.

On 26 February 1993, Pitney performed at Carnegie Hall in New York on the day of the first World Trade Center bombing. On 18 March 2002 he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

Death

Pitney died on April 5, 2006, aged 65. His tour manager found him dead in the Hilton Hotel, in Cardiff, Wales, in the middle of a UK tour.[3] His final show at Cardiff's St. David's Hall earned him a standing ovation; he ended with "Town Without Pity". An autopsy confirmed that he had a heart disease, caused by atherosclerosis. He left a wife, Lynne, and three sons, Todd, Chris and David behind.[4]

Posthumous tributes

Marc Almond recorded "Backstage (I'm Lonely)" for his 2007 covers album "Stardom Road".

On 20 September 2007, a plaque to Pitney was unveiled at the town hall in his hometown of Rockville, Connecticut. Members of the family attended. The event was emceed by nationally known oldies radio DJ and Pitney friend "Wild" Wayne. The Gene Pitney Commemorative Committee established a music scholarship in Pitney's name. It is awarded annually to Rockville High School. In October 2008, an international fan convention was held in Rockville. In 2009 Gene Pitney was inducted into the Hit Parade Hall of Fame.

Discography

Singles

Note that release dates refer to initial release. Pitney's early singles generally appeared one to four months later in the UK/Australia. Many of his later releases are UK/Australia/NZ only.

Sources include Joel Whitburn's Record Research material for the U.S. Top 100, "Bubbling Under" and U.S. Country charts; Tim Rice et al., Guinness Book of Hit Singles for the UK; CHUM Chart for Canada prior to mid-1964, and the Canadian RPM charts thereafter; and The Kent Report for Australia

Year Month Title Chart positions
AUS CAN UK Singles Chart[5] U.S Hot 100 U.S. C&W
1959 Jamie & Jane (Gene Pitney and Ginny Arnell):
"Snuggle Up Baby"
Jamie & Jane (Gene Pitney and Ginny Arnell):
"Classical Rock And Roll"
1960 as Billy Bryan: "Cradle of My Arms"
"Going Back To My Love"
as Gene Pitney: "I'll Find You"
"Please Come Back"
1961 January "(I Wanna) Love My Life Away" 29 23 26 39
April "Louisiana Mama"
July "Every Breath I Take" 42
October "Town Without Pity" 31 10 32 13
1962 April "(The Man Who Shot) Liberty Valance" 3 2 4
August "Only Love Can Break a Heart" (A-Side) 4 11 2
"If I Didn't Have a Dime (To Play the Jukebox)" (B-Side) 4 42 58
December "Half Heaven - Half Heartache" 11 4 12
1963 March "Mecca" (A-Side) 7 2 12
"Teardrop by Teardrop "(B-Side) 130
June "True Love Never Runs Smooth" 18 17 21
October "Twenty Four Hours from Tulsa" 3 6 5 17
1964 January "That Girl Belongs to Yesterday" (A-Side) 9 41 7 49
"Who Needs It" (B-Side) 9 41 131
April "Yesterday's Hero" (A-Side) 18 36 64
"Cornflower Blue" (B-Side) 18
July "It Hurts to Be In Love" 6 2 36 7
"Lips Are Redder on You"
Australian release only
83
October "I'm Gonna Be Strong" 5 3 2 9
1965 February "I Must Be Seeing Things" (A-Side) 12 6 6 31
"Marianne" (B-Side) 12
April George & Gene (George Jones & Gene Pitney):
"I've Got Five Dollars and It's Saturday Night"
65 99 16
May "Last Chance to Turn Around" 13 4 13
June George & Gene (George Jones & Gene Pitney):
"Louisiana Man" (A-Side)
25
George & Gene (George Jones & Gene Pitney):
"I'm a Fool to Care" (B-Side)
115
July "Looking Thru the Eyes of Love" 34 3 3 28
November "Princess In Rags" 13 2 9 37
George & Gene (George Jones & Gene Pitney):
"Big Job"
50
1966 January Gene Pitney and Melba Montgomery:
"Baby Ain't That Fine"
15
March "Nessuno Mi Puo' Giudicare" 30 115
April "Backstage" 29 2 4 25
May George & Gene (George Jones & Gene Pitney):
"That's All It Took"
47
June "Nobody Needs Your Love"
European release only
2
July? Gene Pitney and Melba Montgomery:
"Being Together"
September "(In the) Cold Light of Day" (A-Side) 19 38 115
"The Boss's Daughter" (B-Side) 19
December "Just One Smile" (A-Side) 55 8 64
"Innamorata" (B-Side) 55
1967 March "I'm Gonna Listen to Me"
"Animal Crackers (In Cellophane Boxes)" 87 106
April "Tremblin'"
September "Something's Gotten Hold of My Heart" 69 5 130
1968 March "The More I Saw of Her"
"Somewhere in the Country"
European release only
19
April "She's a Heartbreaker" 39 13 16
October "Billy, You're My Friend" 31 92 92
November "Yours Until Tomorrow"
European release only
34
1969 March "Maria Elena"
European release only
25
August "Playing Games of Love"
Australian release only
85
December "She Lets Her Hair Down (Early in the Morning)" 88 89
1970 March "A Street Called Hope" 37
October "Shady Lady" 29
1971 "Higher and Higher"
"Gene Are You There?"
1972 "I Just Can't Help Myself"
"Summertime Dreamin'"
1973 April "24 Sycamore"
European release only
34
1974 October "Blue Angel"
European/Australian release only
2 39
1975 March "Trans-Canada Highway"
European/Australian release only
14
1977 "It's Over, It's Over"
"Dedication"
1989 January Marc Almond & Gene Pitney:
"Something's Gotten Hold of My Heart"
European release only
24 1

References

  1. ^ Zentgraf, Nico. "The Complete Works of the Rolling Stones 1962-2008". http://www.nzentgraf.de/books/tcw/works1.htm. Retrieved 2008-02-23. 
  2. ^ Elliott, Martin (2002). The Rolling Stones: Complete Recording Sessions 1962-2002. Cherry Red Books. p. 16. ISBN 1-901447-04-9. 
  3. ^ Singer Gene Pitney dies in Wales after acclaimed performance Retrieved February 23, 2008[dead link]
  4. ^ http://www.classicbands.com/pitney.html
  5. ^ Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 428. ISBN 1-904994-10-5. 

External links


 
 
Related topics:
Gene Pitney Sings Just for You/World Wide Winners (1998 Album by Gene Pitney)
Golden Greats/This Is Gene Pitney (1998 Album by Gene Pitney)
Ten Years Later/New Sounds of Gene Pitney (1998 Album by Gene Pitney)

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