The Elvis Songs of Aaron Schroeder
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The Elvis Songs of Aaron Schroeder
Elvis recorded 17 songs between 1956 - 1961 that were co-written by Aaron Schroeder. Some excellent songs in there. Five of them reached Number 1 in the US/UK charts.
In chronological order:-
I Was The One
Any Way You Want Me (That's How I Will Be)
First In Line
Got A Lot O' Livin' To Do
Don't Leave Me Now
Young And Beautiful
Santa, Bring My Baby Back (To Me)
Dixieland Rock
Young Dreams
A Big Hunk O' Love (US #1)
I Got Stung (UK #1)
Apron Strings (1959 home recording)
Stuck On You (US #1)
It's Now Or Never (US & UK #1)
Shoppin' Around
In Your Arms
Good Luck Charm (US #1)
Schroeder also co-wrote one of the first tribute songs to Presley using the pen name of Doc Rockingham . "My Boy Elvis" was recorded by Janis Martin and released by RCA in 1956.
Andy
In chronological order:-
I Was The One
Any Way You Want Me (That's How I Will Be)
First In Line
Got A Lot O' Livin' To Do
Don't Leave Me Now
Young And Beautiful
Santa, Bring My Baby Back (To Me)
Dixieland Rock
Young Dreams
A Big Hunk O' Love (US #1)
I Got Stung (UK #1)
Apron Strings (1959 home recording)
Stuck On You (US #1)
It's Now Or Never (US & UK #1)
Shoppin' Around
In Your Arms
Good Luck Charm (US #1)
Schroeder also co-wrote one of the first tribute songs to Presley using the pen name of Doc Rockingham . "My Boy Elvis" was recorded by Janis Martin and released by RCA in 1956.
Andy
Elvis - King of the UK charts
Re: The Elvis Songs of Aaron Schroeder
"Santa, Bring My Baby Back (To Me)" a Christmas favorite of mine. Great stuff. Thanks for posting!
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Re: The Elvis Songs of Aaron Schroeder
That's an awesome list to have on any songwriter's resume.
I see "I Was The One"....great song,"Anyway You Want Me".....Elvis wrings every bit of emotion from it,"Santa, Bring My Baby Back (To Me)".....can't be Christmas without it,"Stuck On You"......it's when Elvis Was Back And Best,"It's Now Or Never".....fresh out of the army and totting a double barrel to show them how it's done and "Good Luck Charm".....Elvis was Country to the bone.
Nice post.Thanks for lumping all these tracks together.Would make a great FTD .Maybe if there were enough unused tracks there could be a short series of FTD's to the most written writer's.
I see "I Was The One"....great song,"Anyway You Want Me".....Elvis wrings every bit of emotion from it,"Santa, Bring My Baby Back (To Me)".....can't be Christmas without it,"Stuck On You"......it's when Elvis Was Back And Best,"It's Now Or Never".....fresh out of the army and totting a double barrel to show them how it's done and "Good Luck Charm".....Elvis was Country to the bone.
Nice post.Thanks for lumping all these tracks together.Would make a great FTD .Maybe if there were enough unused tracks there could be a short series of FTD's to the most written writer's.
"Well sir,to be honest with you,we just stumbled upon it." - 1954
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Re: The Elvis Songs of Aaron Schroeder
I was disappointed by the songs Stuck on you and Good luck charm as I didn't feel they were very good singles. Still they got lucky and they both hit number one and you can't argue with commercial success. From a quality standpoint Aaron Schroeder was a better songwriter than that.
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Re: The Elvis Songs of Aaron Schroeder
One has to guess that Parker's publishing concerns must have gotten in the way of that association. That's a fine batch of songs that will be heard for decades to come.
Re: The Elvis Songs of Aaron Schroeder
Lotta good ones in there. Gotta go with Big Hunk. Its one of my favorites ever. My least favorite probably Shoppin Around. I used to think it was a decent rock and roll song, but its really lame. What a drop in quality in 2 years.
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Re: The Elvis Songs of Aaron Schroeder
That's exactly what happened. Good Luck Charm ended up in litigation over which music company (Schoeder's or Hill and Range) owned the song.stevelecher wrote:One has to guess that Parker's publishing concerns must have gotten in the way of that association. That's a fine batch of songs that will be heard for decades to come.
"You go to school. I'm going out to make a buck!"
Elvis as Danny Fisher
Elvis as Danny Fisher
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Re: The Elvis Songs of Aaron Schroeder
Aaron Schroder didn't write very many hit songs after 1962 so it didn't really hurt Elvis.Mike C wrote:That's exactly what happened. Good Luck Charm ended up in litigation over which music company (Schoeder's or Hill and Range) owned the song.stevelecher wrote:One has to guess that Parker's publishing concerns must have gotten in the way of that association. That's a fine batch of songs that will be heard for decades to come.
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Re: The Elvis Songs of Aaron Schroeder
There is an interesting video with Aaron Schroeder:
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I like all of his Elvis' songs very very much, but this one in particular:
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Of all of the versions of Got A Lot O' Livin' To Do! - master, R-13 (Finale) and D-17 (from acetate), I prefer "Finale" version, because of the great vocal backing by the Jordanaires
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I like all of his Elvis' songs very very much, but this one in particular:
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Of all of the versions of Got A Lot O' Livin' To Do! - master, R-13 (Finale) and D-17 (from acetate), I prefer "Finale" version, because of the great vocal backing by the Jordanaires
When your heart gets restless - time to move along,
When your heart gets weary - time to sing a song,
But when a dream is calling you
There's just one thing that you can do...
Follow That Dream (1961)
When your heart gets weary - time to sing a song,
But when a dream is calling you
There's just one thing that you can do...
Follow That Dream (1961)
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Re: The Elvis Songs of Aaron Schroeder
[quote="Stevenson"]There is an interesting video with Aaron Schroeder:
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I got it right! Never saw him before either.
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I got it right! Never saw him before either.
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Re: The Elvis Songs of Aaron Schroeder
Well, I didn't, but he was my 2nd choice.ElvisLife wrote: ..
I got it right! Never saw him before either.
I'm interested in biographies of songwriters, but - sadly - didn't manage to put my hands on Writing For The King, an FTD outing...
When your heart gets restless - time to move along,
When your heart gets weary - time to sing a song,
But when a dream is calling you
There's just one thing that you can do...
Follow That Dream (1961)
When your heart gets weary - time to sing a song,
But when a dream is calling you
There's just one thing that you can do...
Follow That Dream (1961)
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Re: The Elvis Songs of Aaron Schroeder
Stevenson wrote:There is an interesting video with Aaron Schroeder:
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Interesting indeed. It was posted before in the "YouTube section" on FECC, but not many people seem to visit that section. This topic had only 47 views.
To Tell the Truth - Aaron Schroeder (Dec. 19, 1960)
http://www.elvis-collectors.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=13&t=92390#p1475671
For those who never visit that section: there is more interesting footage to be found there.
Some info about Schroeder from an "Independent" article:
Source: http://www.independent.co.uk/news/obituaries/aaron-schroeder-songwriter-who-wrote-for-elvis-presley-frank-sinatra-and-nat-king-cole-1911029.htmlAaron Schroeder: Songwriter who wrote for Elvis Presley, Frank Sinatra and Nat 'King' Cole
The New York publisher and songwriter Aaron Schroeder was one of the key figures around the Brill Building in the 1950s and 1960s. He was a songwriter who preferred to collaborate with others, especially in improving the commerciality of a promising song. Several of his 300 published compositions were recorded by Elvis Presley, including the multi-million seller "It's Now or Never" (1960). He liked to say, not entirely in jest, "I don't read music – that's why I make so much money."
Aaron Harold Schroeder, who was born in Brooklyn in 1926, was a competent pianist, mostly playing by ear, who was first attracted to the big bands of the 1940s. An early success was with "At a Sidewalk Penny Arcade" (1948), which was recorded by both Rosemary Clooney and Guy Lombardo. In 1955, he was working as a staff writer for the publishing company Hill and Range when he learnt that they were supplying songs to Elvis Presley, who had been signed to RCA-Victor Records.
Schroeder was asked to improve a song by other staff writers, "I Was the One", and the result was the B-side of "Heartbreak Hotel" and made the US Top 20 in its own right. Schroeder was so impressed with Presley that he said to another songwriter, Clyde Otis, "I've got a title, 'Anyway That You Want Me (That's How I Will Be)', so let's write the song." It was released as the B-side to "Love Me Tender", and, again, made the US Top 20 in its own right. Schroeder also wrote one of the first tribute songs to Presley, "My Boy Elvis" by Janis Martin.
Presley stockpiled songs to cover his time in the US army and he had great success with Schroeder's songs "I Got Stung" (later recorded by Paul McCartney) and "A Big Hunk O' Love". When Presley returned to civilian life in 1960, Schroeder wrote his first hit, "Stuck on You".
While serving in the US army, Presley developed a taste for Mario Lanza's recordings and took to singing "O Sole Mio" for his own amusement. Presley's publisher, Freddy Bienstock, wanted a new English lyric, and Schroeder and Wally Gold wrote "It's Now or Never" in 30 minutes. The record, which was released in 1960, sold 20 million copies. Schroeder used his windfall to start his own label, Musicor. Whenever Schroeder was away from home, he would buy his wife, Abby, a new charm for her bracelet. This led to him and Gold composing "Good Luck Charm" (1962), another trans-Atlantic chart-topper for Presley.
Schroeder appeared as a songwriter in the rock'n'roll film Disc Jockey Jamboree (1957), in which Carl Perkins sang his song "Glad All Over". Besides writing rock'n'roll songs, Schroeder maintained his contact with more traditional singers. In 1958, Frank Sinatra had a hit with "French Foreign Legion" and Perry Como with "Mandolins in the Moonlight". Nat "King" Cole recorded two of Schroeder's songs, "Sweet Bird of Youth" (1959) and "Time and the River" (1960).
A fledgling songwriter, Gene Pitney, showed Schroeder his work and Schroeder was so impressed that he encouraged him to become a performer as well as a songwriter, effectively establishing the Musicor label through his success. Pitney, who sometimes wrote under his mother's maiden name, Anne Orlowski, co-wrote "Rubber Ball" (a hit for Bobby Vee and Marty Wilde), "Today's Teardrops" (a B-side for Roy Orbison) and "Talkin' in My Sleep" (Billy Fury) with Schroeder, while Schroeder placed his song "Hello Mary Lou" with Ricky Nelson.
Schroeder produced many of Pitney's singles, including the Burt Bacharach and Hal David songs "The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance", "Only Love Can Break a Heart" and "24 Hours from Tulsa", but Bacharach preferred to have control. Schroeder also wanted the publishing rights to the songs and in 1965 there was an argument over Bacharach and David's film song for Pitney, "The Fool Killer". Schroeder's wheeling and dealing let him down and the song (about an axe murderer!) was not used in the film and had little application elsewhere. Instead, Bacharach and David shifted their attention to Dionne Warwick.
Among his other songs were "Apron Strings" (the B-side of Cliff Richard's No 1, "Living Doll"), "Cincinnati Fireball" (Johnny Burnette), "Make Me Know You're Mine" (Conway Twitty), "Wildcat" (Gene Vincent), "Lucky Devil" (Frank Ifield), "Because They're Young" (Duane Eddy) and "Twixt 12 and 20" (Pat Boone).
In 1966, Mike Jeffrey, the manager of the Animals, arranged a publishing deal for Jimi Hendrix with a company, Yameta, which was incorporated in a tax haven in the Bahamas. Yameta, in turn, formed a partnership with Schroeder, ensuring that Hendrix received relatively little for his songs, perhaps as little as £10 in £100.
Schroeder negotiated the music rights for Hanna-Barbera's animated productions and he wrote the theme song for Scooby-Doo, Where Are You! (1969). In 1978, Schroeder wrote a US country No 1, "She Can Put Her Shoes Under My Bed Anytime", for Johnny Duncan, but it was his past successes that consolidated his income. He would tell songwriters, "Your songs are your children – they take care of you when you are old." By promoting celebrity concerts, he and his wife did much to improve the fortunes of the Berkshire Theatre Festival.
Spencer Leigh
Aaron Harold Schroeder, songwriter and music publisher: born Brooklyn 7 September 1926; married Abby (one daughter); died Englewood, New Jersey 2 December 2009.
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Mike
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lay back,
take it easy
And try a smile...
.
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lay back,
take it easy
And try a smile...
.
Re: The Elvis Songs of Aaron Schroeder
More on this subject here :Mike C wrote:That's exactly what happened. Good Luck Charm ended up in litigation over which music company (Schoeder's or Hill and Range) owned the song.stevelecher wrote:One has to guess that Parker's publishing concerns must have gotten in the way of that association. That's a fine batch of songs that will be heard for decades to come.
Good Luck Charm Copyright Dispute
http://www.elvis-collectors.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=82579&p=1279415
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Re: The Elvis Songs of Aaron Schroeder
Wow! Great list of songs there. The only one I don't care for at all is Young Dreams. I don't like the 50s versions of Young & Beautiful, but the 70s rehearsal version is wonderful. Similarly, I like take 1 of Good Luck Charm a lot more than I like the master.
I can't pick a favourite out of the rest, though Shoppin' Around is probably the one I've listened to the most.
I can't pick a favourite out of the rest, though Shoppin' Around is probably the one I've listened to the most.