Bruce Sudano | |
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Background information | |
Birth name | Bruce Charles Sudano |
Born | New York City, U.S. | September 26, 1948
Genres | |
Occupation(s) |
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Instruments |
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Years active | 1968–present |
Labels | Purple Heart Recording Company |
Member of | The Candyman Band |
Formerly of |
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Spouse(s) | |
Website | brucesudano |
Bruce Charles Sudano (born September 26, 1948) is an American musician and songwriter noted for creating songs for artists such as Michael Jackson, Dolly Parton, Reba McEntire, and his wife, the Grammy Award-winning singer Donna Summer. [1] Sudano is the founder of indie record label Purple Heart Recording Company. [1]
Sudano was born in Flatbush, Brooklyn, New York City, to Margaret Alessio (1924–2012) and Louis Sudano (1923–2008). [2] [3] At the age of four, Sudano learned to play his first instrument, the accordion. [4] He later taught himself to play piano and guitar. [4] He soon developed a reputation in his community as a talented musician and got his first paid gig at the age of twelve. [4]
By the mid-1960s, Sudano was playing bass guitar in his first band, Silent Souls. [5] He spent much of his time rehearsing and was soon playing live shows at popular New York City nightclubs. [5]
While playing at the Cheetah, Sudano met Tommy James of Tommy James and the Shondells and became his protégé. [1] While working his way through college at St. John's University, where he earned a BA in theater, Sudano learned to craft songs with James at Allegro Studios. [1]
In 1969, while only twenty, Sudano scored his first hit on the music charts with the song "Ball of Fire", which he co-wrote with his mentor. [1] [5]
In 1968, Sudano co-founded the pop rock band Alive N Kickin' and became its keyboard player. [6] [7] Tommy James wrote a song for the band called "Tighter, Tighter" with Bob King. [8] James also produced the track and sang backing vocals. [8] The song was released on Roulette Records in 1970 and went to No 7 on the Billboard Hot 100. [7] [8]
Alive N Kickin' did a promotional tour of the United States as the opening act for Chicago and Frank Zappa. [6] However, Sudano left the band in 1972 and moved to Los Angeles, where he wrote and performed folk songs as a solo singer. [4]
In 1973, Sudano returned to Brooklyn, where he continued writing and performing but also began rehearsing and playing gigs with Joe "Bean" Esposito, Eddie Hokenson, and Louis Hokenson. [4]
In 1977, Sudano, Esposito, and Eddie Hokenson moved to Los Angeles, formed the band Brooklyn Dreams, and signed a recording deal with Millennium Records. [4] That same year, Skip Konte of Three Dog Night produced their self-titled debut. [4] The trio scored a modest hit with the single "Music, Harmony and Rhythm", which they performed on American Bandstand . [9]
On March 13, 1977, Sudano met Donna Summer, who was signed to Casablanca Records, [4] the distributor for Sudano's label Millennium Records. [4] Brooklyn Dreams and Summer immediately began writing songs together, and within a few months, Sudano and Summer were dating. [4] In 1978, the band penned "Take It to the Zoo" with Summer for the Thank God It's Friday soundtrack. [9] The same year, Brooklyn Dreams appeared in the movie American Hot Wax , performing as the Planotones, a group created for the movie with longtime friend Kenny Vance. [4] They scored a top 5 hit when they appeared on the single "Heaven Knows", with Esposito and Summer singing a duet. [4] The song peaked at #4 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart and became a certified million-selling Gold single in 1979. [4]
That year, Brooklyn Dreams and Summer wrote the title track "Bad Girls" for the best-selling album of Summer's career, Bad Girls . [4] Sudano also co-wrote the songs "Lucky" and "On My Honor" with Summer and Harold Faltermeyer, as well as "Can't Get to Sleep at Night", with Bob Conti. [4] He then wrote the song "I'm a Rainbow", which was the title track to Summer's next album. This was shelved by Geffen Records, however, and not released until 1996.[ citation needed ]
When Millennium Records changed their distribution to RCA, the Brooklyn Dreams contract was transferred to Casablanca. [4] Under their new recording contract, the band recorded three more studio albums. In 1979, they released Sleepless Nights, produced by Bob Esty, and Joy Ride, produced by Jürgen Koppers, an engineer for Giorgio Moroder. [4] In 1980, they made their fourth and final album, Won't Let Go, which they produced themselves. [4] A song from this record, "Hollywood Knights", became the title track for the comedy The Hollywood Knights , starring Tony Danza, Michelle Pfeiffer, and Fran Drescher. [4] In 2008, "Hollywood Knights" was sampled by Snoop Dogg on his song "Deez Hollywood Nights".
Brooklyn Dreams amicably disbanded in 1980, when Hokensen returned to New York after his mother died. [4] Sudano and Summer continued writing songs together and were married the same year. [4] Sudano spent two decades managing Summer's career. [5] They toured together, with Sudano playing keyboards and singing background vocals. [5]
Sudano was signed as a solo artist by RCA and released his first record, Fugitive Kind, in 1981. [5] It featured the song "Starting Over Again", which Sudano had co-written with Donna Summer, about his parents' divorce. In 1980, the song was recorded and released by Dolly Parton on the album Dolly, Dolly, Dolly and hit #1 on the U.S. country charts on May 24, 1980. [5] [10] The track was re-recorded by Reba McEntire in 1995.
In 1984, Sudano wrote "Tell Me I'm Not Dreamin' (Too Good to Be True)" with Michael Omartian. Jermaine and Michael Jackson recorded the song as a duet for the album Jermaine Jackson . [1] The track was nominated at the 1985 Grammy Awards for Best R&B Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals. In 1988, it was covered by Robert Palmer. [1] During the same period, Sudano co-wrote four songs on Summer's She Works Hard for the Money album. In 1986, he co-wrote "Closest Thing to Perfect", the title track for the John Travolta and Jamie Lee Curtis movie Perfect .
In 2004, Sudano released a second solo record, called Rainy Day Soul, which scored three top-ten Adult Contemporary hits and earned him the New Music Weekly 2004 Adult Contemporary Artist of the Year award. [5]
Sudano's third solo record, Life and the Romantic, was released in 2009 and won the New Music Weekly Adult Contemporary Song of the Year award for the track "It's Her Wedding Day", which Sudano wrote about his daughter Brooklyn's marriage. [11] Footage from younger daughter Amanda's wedding to her Johnnyswim bandmate Abner Ramirez was included in the song's music video. [12] [5] Johnnyswim performed with Sudano on the track "Morning Song". [5] In 2014, after the death of his wife, Sudano released the CD With Angels on a Carousel.
In the fall of 2015, Sudano released The Burbank Sessions. While playing shows throughout 2014 with his newly formed Candyman Band, he continued writing and incorporated the new material into the sets.[ citation needed ]
In May 2017, Sudano released 21st Century World, a record that features the most culturally and politically charged songwriting of his career,[ citation needed ] touching on topics from self-serving government, extremism and demonization, the loss of common sense, the epidemic of single motherhood, and the illusion of social media, to hypocrisy and the meaning of Christianity. A number of videos and live shows followed in support of this record.[ citation needed ] At the same time, he was steadily immersing himself in the production of a musical based on the life and music of his late wife. In April 2018, Summer: The Donna Summer Musical opened on Broadway. Sudano ended his 2019 tour in the UK, before heading into a two-year COVID lockdown.[ citation needed ] He spent that time writing and recording three EPs: Spirals, Vol. 1: Not a Straight Line to Be Found (2020), Spirals, Vol. 2: Time & the Space in Between (2020), and Ode to a Nightingale (2021).
Three years after their first meeting, Sudano and Donna Summer were married, on July 16, 1980.[ citation needed ] Sudano became the stepfather to Summer's daughter, Natalia Pia Melanie Sommer (born 1973), from her first marriage, to Austrian actor Helmuth Sommer.[ citation needed ]
Sudano and Summer had two daughters together. The couple's first child, Brooklyn, named after the New York City borough Sudano is from, was born in 1981. [4] Their second child, Amanda Grace, was born in 1982. [13] The family settled on a 56-acre ranch in Thousand Oaks, California. [14] In 1991, they moved to Connecticut and remained there for four years. [14] In 1995, they relocated to Nashville, Tennessee, keeping a second home in Naples, Florida, and later buying a third home in Manhattan. [14] On May 17, 2012, Donna Summer Sudano died from lung cancer. [15]
Solo
with Alive N Kickin'
with Brooklyn Dreams
Donna Adrian Gaines, known professionally as Donna Summer, was an American singer and songwriter. She gained prominence during the disco era of the 1970s and became known as the "Queen of Disco", while her music gained a global following.
Alive 'N Kickin' is an American pop group formed in Brooklyn, New York. Led by singers Pepe Cardona and Sandy Toder, they are best known for their 1970 hit "Tighter, Tighter", which peaked at number seven on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart.
Sunshine was a disco group and the backing vocalist for singer Donna Summer. The members included Carlena Williams and Summer's sisters Linda Gaines, Dara Bernard, and Mary Ellen Bernard. Their 1978 number one Billboard Disco hit "Take It to the Zoo" charted as "Last Dance / After Dark / Thank God It's Friday / Take It to the Zoo" by Donna Summer. The song was featured on the "Thank God It's Friday" film and soundtrack, was co-written by Summer, who also sings background on the track.
Live and More is the first live album recorded by American singer-songwriter Donna Summer, and it was her second double album, released on August 28, 1978 by Casablanca Records. The live concert featured on the first three sides of this double album was recorded in the Universal Amphitheater, Los Angeles, California in 1978.
"Starting Over Again" is a song recorded by American entertainer Dolly Parton. The song was written by Donna Summer and her husband Bruce Sudano. Parton's recording was performed as a slow tempo ballad, gradually building to a dramatic crescendo. It was released in March 1980 as the first single from her album Dolly, Dolly, Dolly. "Starting Over Again" made the U.S. pop top forty, peaking at number 36, and reached number 1 on the U.S. country charts on May 24, 1980, becoming Parton's 12th number one. Dolly’s recording would also make Donna Summer the first black female to co-write a number 1 country hit.
The Mystics are an American rock and roll group that began in Brooklyn, New York, United States, in the late 1950s. The group was known as The Overons, a quintet that, when signed to Laurie Records, consisted of Phil Cracolici, Albee Cracolici, George Galfo, Bob Ferrante, and Al Contrera. Under the direction of their manager, Jim Gribble, The Overons became The Mystics when each group member wrote a name they liked on a slip of paper and placed the papers in a hat; Contrera's choice was drawn.
"Bad Girls" is a song by American singer and songwriter Donna Summer from her 1979 seventh studio album of the same name. Casablanca Records released it as the album's second single on June 23, 1979. The song was produced by Summer's regular collaborators Giorgio Moroder and Pete Bellotte, and co-written by Summer and the members of Brooklyn Dreams, Bruce Sudano, Joe "Bean" Esposito and Edward "Eddie" Hokenson.
Brooklyn Sudano is an American actress and director. She starred as Vanessa Scott in the ABC comedy series My Wife and Kids and later played the leading role in the 2006 drama film Rain. Sudano has appeared in films such as Alone in the Dark II (2008), Turn the Beat Around (2010) and With This Ring (2015), and starred in the NBC action series, Taken (2017).
Joe "Bean" Esposito is an American singer-songwriter whose career spans from the 1970s to the present day. Esposito is known for creating songs that have appeared in film soundtracks, such as those of American Hot Wax, Staying Alive, Scarface, The Karate Kid, and Coming to America. Several of his songs have also been recorded by Donna Summer, Aretha Franklin, Patti LaBelle, and Stephen Stills, among others.
I'm a Rainbow is the ninth studio album recorded by American singer-songwriter Donna Summer. The album was recorded in 1981 and scheduled to be released on October 5 of that year but was shelved. It was not released until fifteen years later, on August 20, 1996 by Casablanca and Mercury Records. There was no promotion for the album. No singles or music videos were released. AllMusic gave the album a positive review, naming it her most personal record.
The Dance Collection: A Compilation of Twelve Inch Singles is a compilation album by Donna Summer released in 1987. Summer had become the biggest star of the disco era in the 1970s when signed to Casablanca Records. By 1987, Summer was signed to the Geffen label, and Casablanca had long since been bought out by Polygram. This album was released on Polygram's Casablanca label. It features some of her most famous songs from the disco era in their extended 12" versions, as they would often have been played in the clubs during their popularity.
The Donna Summer Anthology is a double CD compilation album by the American singer Donna Summer, released by Polygram Records in 1993. The compilation featured the majority of Summer's best known songs right from the start of her success to the then present day. Summer had originally made her name during the disco era in the 1970s and in the decade that followed had experimented with different styles. Most of the tracks on this compilation are the original album versions of the songs, which were sometimes edited down for their release as a single. Included for the first time are two remixed tracks from her then unreleased album I'm a Rainbow, which had been recorded in 1981 but was shelved by her record company. The album also featured the Giorgio Moroder-penned and produced song "Carry On"', marking the first time Summer and Moroder had worked together since 1981. Summer and Moroder, together with Pete Bellotte had written the vast majority of her 1970s disco hits. Four years later, "Carry On" would be remixed and become a big dance hit. It also won Summer a Grammy for Best Dance Recording, her first win since 1984 and her fifth win in total.
Endless Summer: Donna Summer's Greatest Hits is a compilation album by American singer-songwriter Donna Summer, released on November 8, 1994. It contains many of Summer's best known songs, from her 1970s breakthrough to the release of the album. Unlike 1993's The Donna Summer Anthology, which contains the majority of the songs in their original longer forms, Endless Summer generally includes single versions of the songs. However, the version sold in the United Kingdom uses the album version of the track "I Don't Wanna Get Hurt",, not the more club-oriented mix released as a single there.
Live And More Encore is a live album released by Donna Summer in 1999, an edited version of a televised concert of the same name. Released on Sony Music's sublabel Epic, it featured a live concert which had been filmed especially for the VH-1 channel, and also two new dance tracks, including a re-working of "Time To Say Goodbye", a semi-classical song previously made popular by Andrea Bocelli and Sarah Brightman. Summer's dance version of the song was entitled "I Will Go with You ". Both of the album's two studio recordings, the other being "Love Is the Healer", reached #1 on the US dance charts, with "I Will Go With You" nominated for a Grammy as Best Dance Recording.
Brooklyn Dreams were an American singing group of the late 1970s, mixing R&B harmonies with contemporary dance/disco music and best known for a number of collaborations with singer Donna Summer. The band consisted of Joe "Bean" Esposito, Eddie Hokenson and Bruce Sudano. Esposito provided lead vocals for the band and played guitar, while Sudano played keyboards and Hokenson played drums and occasionally sang lead vocals.
"Heaven Knows" is a song by American singer Donna Summer, with guest vocals from Brooklyn Dreams. It is a single from Summer's Live and More album. The song became a number 4 hit for Summer in the US the week of March 17, 1979, and held there for three weeks. It features the group Brooklyn Dreams with vocals by Joe "Bean" Esposito.
Treated and Released is the third studio solo album by Joe "Bean" Esposito, the lead singer for the Brooklyn Dreams. They scored a Billboard # 2 hit with "Heaven Knows", a duet with Donna Summer.
Kenny Vance and the Planotones is an American musical group led by Kenny Vance, formerly of Jay and the Americans.
Amanda Grace Sudano Ramirez is an American singer-songwriter and model. She is a member of the musical duo Johnnyswim.
The Ultimate Collection is a greatest hits compilation of recordings by American singer Donna Summer released in the United Kingdom in late 2016. The album was certified Silver in the UK.