"It Hurts to Be in Love" | ||||
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Single by Gene Pitney | ||||
from the album It Hurts to Be in Love and Eleven More Hit Songs | ||||
B-side | "Hawaii" | |||
Released | July 1964 [1] | |||
Recorded | 1964 | |||
Genre | Rock and roll, pop | |||
Length | 2:34 | |||
Label | Musicor Records | |||
Songwriter(s) | Howard Greenfield, Helen Miller | |||
Gene Pitney singles chronology | ||||
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"It Hurts to Be in Love" is a song written by Howard Greenfield and Helen Miller which was a Top Ten hit in 1964 for Gene Pitney. [2] It was one in a long line of successful "Brill Building Sound" hits created by composers and arrangers working in New York City's Brill Building at 1619 Broadway. [3]
The song has been covered by many other artists, notably Bobby Vee. In 1981, Dan Hartman recorded a version which peaked at No. 72 on the Billboard Hot 100. [4]
This "It Hurts to Be in Love" is not to be confused with a similarly titled tune, co-written by Julius Dixson and Rudy Toombs, first recorded by Annie Laurie on De Luxe Records (1957), [5] and subsequently recorded by Frankie Lymon, and Trini Lopez, among others. [6]
"It Hurts to Be in Love" was originally intended to be sung by Howard Greenfield's long-running songwriting partner Neil Sedaka, but Sedaka's record label at the time, RCA Victor, refused to release Sedaka's new recording because he had not recorded it in their studios, as stipulated by his contract. Sedaka attempted another recording of this song in RCA's studios, but the results were unsatisfactory. Greenfield and Helen Miller, the song's co-writers, offered it to Gene Pitney instead, and he took the existing musical track, replacing Sedaka's lead vocal track with Pitney's own. Everything else was Sedaka's, including his own arrangement and backing vocals, piano-playing, and usual female backup singers. Pitney ended up with a top ten hit in the Billboard Hot 100 for himself and his record label, Musicor, in 1964. [2] The personnel on the original recording included Artie Kaplan on saxophone, Bill Suyker, Charles Macy, and Vinnie Bell on guitar, Milt Hinton on bass, Artie Butler on organ, Gary Chester on drums, and Toni Wine on backing vocals.
In the US, "It Hurts to Be in Love" spent 16 weeks on the Billboard Hot 100, peaking at No. 7, [7] [8] also reaching No. 7 on the Cash Box Top 100, [9] and No. 6 on Record World 's "100 Top Pops". [10] The song also made No. 2 on Canada's RPM Top 40-5s [11] and No. 36 on the UK's Record Retailer chart. [12]
Although not characteristic of Pitney's pop sound, as heard in "Town Without Pity" and "(The Man Who Shot) Liberty Valance," AllMusic noted that "It Hurts to Be in Love" "was about as close as any of his major hits came to straight-ahead rock & roll." [3]
In 2007, Razor & Tie Records released the original Sedaka demo as part of the anthology album The Definitive Collection .
In 1979 a power pop version of the song was recorded by Durocs, a studio group comprising singers, songwriters and multi-instrumentalists Ron Nagle and Scott Mathews. Mathews and Nagle performed almost all the vocal and instrumental parts on the recording themselves, with the exception of the saxophone solo, which was performed by renowned session musician Steve Douglas, a long-time member of The Wrecking Crew. It was the first single released from the self-titled Durocs album, issued the same year on Capitol Records. The song was promoted with a pioneering music video, conceived and directed by Matthews and Nagle, which gained some exposure outside the U.S., including Europe and Australia, and the single reportedly charted in Europe. However it was not successful in America (MTV did not launch until late 1981, so the video gained only limited exposure in the USA) and Capitol dropped the group soon after, partly due to Nagle and Mathews' unwillingness to put together a touring band to promote the album. [18]
"It Hurts to Be in Love" | ||||
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Single by Dan Hartman | ||||
from the album It Hurts to Be in Love | ||||
Released | 1981 | |||
Genre | Pop | |||
Length | 2:51 | |||
Label | Blue Sky | |||
Songwriter(s) | Howard Greenfield, Helen Miller | |||
Producer(s) | Dan Hartman | |||
Dan Hartman singles chronology | ||||
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In 1981, American singer-songwriter and musician Dan Hartman released a version on his fourth studio album It Hurts to Be in Love . [19] The song was the second single from the album and reached No. 78 on the US Billboard Hot 100. [20] It also charted No. 48 on the Billboard Disco Top 100 chart. [20]
In a review of It Hurts to Be in Love, John Smyntek of the Detroit Free Press noted: "Hartman doesn't even bother to change the arrangement so he knows a good thing when he hears it." [21] The Morning Call felt Hartman's version "sounds remarkably similar to the original". [22] Dave Marsh of Rolling Stone considered Hartman's rendition "a terrific version". [23] People felt Hartman's take of the "frothy pop tune does little to improve on the original". [24]
Chart (1981) | Peak position |
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US Billboard Disco Top 100 [20] | 48 |
US Billboard Hot 100 [20] | 72 |
US Cash Box Top 100 Singles [25] | 80 |
Gene Francis Alan Pitney was an American singer, songwriter and musician.
Neil Sedaka is an American singer, songwriter and pianist. Since his music career began in 1957, he has sold millions of records worldwide and has written or co-written over 500 songs for himself and other artists, collaborating mostly with lyricists Howard "Howie" Greenfield and Phil Cody.
"Baby Love" is a song by American music group the Supremes from their second studio album, Where Did Our Love Go. It was written and produced by Motown's main production team Holland–Dozier–Holland and was released on September 17, 1964.
Howard Greenfield was an American lyricist and songwriter, who for several years in the 1960s worked out of the famous Brill Building. He is best known for his successful songwriting collaborations, including one with Neil Sedaka from the late 1950s to the mid-1970s, and near-simultaneous songwriting partnerships with Jack Keller and Helen Miller throughout most of the 1960s.
Toni Wine is an American pop music songwriter, who wrote songs for such artists as The Mindbenders, Tony Orlando and Dawn ("Candida"), and Checkmates, Ltd. in the late 1960s and 1970s. Wine also sang the female vocals for the cartoon music group The Archies, most notably on their #1 hit song "Sugar, Sugar". She shared the lead vocals in the Archies' subsequent single, "Jingle Jangle" with Ron Dante using his falsetto voice. In addition, Wine was a backing vocalist on "It Hurts to Be in Love" and on Willie Nelson's "Always on My Mind."
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"He's a Rebel" is a song written by Gene Pitney that was originally recorded by Vikki Carr and by the girl group the Blossoms. Produced by Phil Spector, the Blossoms' version was issued as a single credited to the Crystals, which topped the Billboard Hot 100 chart in November 1962. It was Spector's second chart-topper after "To Know Him Is to Love Him" (1958).
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Helen Miller was an American songwriter. She collaborated with several lyricists, notably Howard Greenfield in the early 1960s, and with him wrote several pop hits, including "Foolish Little Girl" by The Shirelles, and "It Hurts To Be In Love" by Gene Pitney.
It Hurts to Be in Love and Eleven More Hit Songs is American singer Gene Pitney's ninth album, released on the Musicor label in the United States in 1964. The album was released as I'm Gonna Be Strong on the Stateside label in the United Kingdom.
It Hurts to Be in Love is the fourth studio album from American singer and songwriter Dan Hartman, released by Blue Sky in 1981. It was produced by Hartman and mixed by Neil Dorfsman.
"All I Need" is a song by the American musician Dan Hartman, released in 1981 as the third and final single from his fourth studio album It Hurts to Be in Love. It was written and produced by Hartman.
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