Ellie Greenwich, 'Chapel of Love' co-writer, dies

August 26, 2009 · 0 comments

By NEKESA MUMBI MOODY,  AP Music Writer
56 mins ago

NEW YORK – Ellie Greenwich, who co-wrote some of pop music’s most enduring songs, including “Chapel of Love,” “Be My Baby” and “Leader of the Pack,” died Wednesday, according to her niece. She was 68.

Greenwich died of a heart attack at St. Luke’s Roosevelt Hospital, where she had been admitted a few days earlier for treatment of pneumonia, according to her niece, Jessica Weiner.

Greenwich, a member of the Songwriters Hall of Fame, was considered one of pop’s most successful songwriters. She had a rich musical partnership with the legendary Phil Spector, whose “wall of sound” technique changed rock music. With Spector, she wrote some of pop’s most memorable songs, including “Da Doo Ron Ron” and “River Deep, Mountain High.” But Spector wasn’t her only collaborator.

She also had key hits with her ex-husband Jeff Barry, including the dynamic song “Leader of the Pack” (years later, Broadway would stage a Tony-nominated musical with the same name based on her life).

“He was the first male I could actually harmonize with,” she once said.

The AP Obit Continues here at Yahoo news.

Gosh! How many more icons can we possibly say goodbye to like this? This has just been much too much this entire year! One musical and/or political and/or pop cultural icon leaves us just far too often of late.

Related posts:

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  2. George David Weiss, Writer of Hit Pop Songs, Dies at 89
  3. Abbey Lincoln, Jazz Singer and Writer, Dies at 80
  4. Singer Dee Dee Warwick dies at 63
  5. Singer, Actress Eartha Kitt Dies

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