Singer and songwriter Barry Mann â born Barry Imberman on February 9, 1939 â is best known as one-half of a successful songwriting team with his wife Cynthia Weil. He began his musical career as both a performer and a songwriter. He achieved his first taste of success co-writing the Top 20 hit âShe Say (Oom Dooby Doom)â for the Diamonds in 1959 and âI Love How You Love Me,â a number 5 hit for the Paris Sisters in 1961. As a performer, he scored a Top 40 hit in 1961 with the novelty rock / doo-wop song âWho Put the Bomp,â which became almost as classic as the doo-wop songs it parodied. He released several other singles as a solo artist, but they barely made the Hot 100. Marrying Cynthia Weil in 1961, the duo wrote iconic pop and rock classics including âBlame It on the Bossa Novaâ (Eydie Gorme / 1961), âOn Broadwayâ (The Drifters / 1963), âWalking in the Rainâ (The Ronettes / 1964), âYouâve Lost That Lovinâ Feelinââ (The Righteous Brothers / 1964), âWe Gotta Get out of This Placeâ (The Animals / 1965), â(Youâre My) Soul and Inspirationâ (The Righteous Brothers / 1966), âKicksâ (Paul Revere & the Raiders / 1966), âRock and Roll Lullabyâ (B. J. Thomas / 1972), and many more. In total, Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil scored nearly 100 hits on the US singles chart. At 14 million plays, their collaboration âYouâve Lost That Lovinâ Feelinââ was the most played song in the 20th century. Barry Mann has also co-written with other artists including Dan Hillâs âSometimes When We Touchâ and the Grammy Award-winning âSomewhere Out There,â co-written with Weil and film composer James Horner. Inducted into the Songwriterâs Hall of Fame in 1987, Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil received the Ahmet Ertegun award from the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2010. Barry Mannâs wife and songwriting partner Cynthia Weil died on June 1, 2023, at the age of 82.
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