What was Neil Sedakas number one song?

Neil Sedaka was born in Brooklyn, New York on March 13, 1939. He was a piano prodigy as a child and later attended the Julliard School of Music.

In 1956, he was seleceted by Arthur Rubenstein to perform on New York City’s classical music station, WQXR. However, prior to that, at the age of 13, he had met and befriended Howard Greenfield. Both lived in the same apartment building in Brooklyn's Brighton Beach section. They didn't know of each other's existence until Greenfield's mother had a chance meeting with the young Sedaka in a Catskills Mountain resort. Suggesting to the juvenile pianist that "You should meet my son; he writes great lyrics," Mrs. Greenfield arranged the meeting (in the same apartment complex) and what was to become the most productive and successful team from the Brill Building was formed.

Soon, Greenfield, the budding poet, and Sedaka, the 13-year-old piano student at the Juilliard School, had become a team, and established a regimen of writing a song a day, a routine they continued for nearly two years. At the same time, they began making the rounds together in Broadway's Brill Building, one of several major centers for writers and producers of pop music. During one of their music publisher visits, they met what was to become another brilliant songwriting duo of the era, Mort Shuman and Doc Pomus, who steered them to another office in another music business center known as 1650 Broadway, where a new publishing company was just being formed by the veteran music man, Al Nevins, and his younger partner, Don Kirshner.

Hearing some of the material as Sedaka played the piano and sang, and Greenfield watched for hopeful reactions, Nevins commented, "Where did you steal these songs?" Finally convinced they were on the level, Nevins signed the pair. Thereupon, an association began which was to last, off and on, for the next 36 years, and which was interrupted only by Greenfield's death in 1986.

The new team enjoyed its first major hit in 1958, when Connie Francis recorded their song, "Stupid Cupid," into immortality. In 1959, Sedaka was signed with RCA as a singer. He had a minor hit with “The Diary”, but it was his fourth single, “Oh, Carol!”, a lament to his former girlfriend Carole King, that established Sedaka as a performer. From 1959 to 1963, Sedaka became the second-biggest selling artist, next to Elvis Presley. Sedaka primarily sang those songs composed with Greenfield such as "Happy Birthday, Sweet Sixteen," "Calendar Girl" and "Breaking Up Is Hard to Do."

In the early 1970’s, Sedaka moved to England and performed an oldies show on the northern club circuit. After several years out of the studio, the oldies show revived his career.

In 1975, Greenfield, with Sedaka, enjoyed an immense new run of success, sparked by their song, "Love Will Keep Us Together" a hit not only for Sedaka himself, but for the duo, The Captain and Tenille. The song actually launched their hit record career, and their version went on to be acclaimed "Number One Record of the Year," by The National Academy of Recorded Arts and Sciences (NARAS). The song itself was accorded a tribute by the performing rights organization, Broadcast Music, Inc. (BMI) as the most performed song (on radio) during 1975.

From 1972-1976, Sedaka recorded 5 albums with several hits including “Standing on the Inside”, “That’s Where the Music Takes Me”, “Our Last Song Together,” inspired by the breakup of the Sedaka-Greenfield parnership, and “Laughter in the Rain”.

Sedaka continued writing and producing albums till the end of the 1970’s and through the 1980’s. He teamed with Philip Cody and other lyricists and has continued to achieve recognition as one of the great singer-songwriters of his generation.



Top Pop Songs by Neil Sedaka

official top hits 1960-2014

1 Bad Blood
2 Breaking Up Is Hard To Do
3 Calendar Girl
4 Laughter In The Rain
5 Breaking Up Is Hard To Do
6 Next Door To An Angel
7 Happy Birthday, Sweet Sixteen
8 Stairway To Heaven
9 You Mean Everything To Me
10 Little Devil

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What song is Neil Sedaka famous for?

Sedaka soon recorded chart toppers “The Diary,” “Oh! Carol,” ” Stairway to Heaven,” “Calendar Girl,” “Little Devil,” “Happy Birthday Sweet Sixteen,” “Next Door To An Angel,” and “Breaking Up Is Hard To Do,” songs that have become a part of peoples' lives and can still instantly take listeners back to special moments.

What was Neil Sedaka's first hit?

"Oh! Carol" delivered Sedaka his first domestic Top 10 hit, reaching No. 9 on the Hot 100 in 1959 and going to No. 1 on the Italian pop charts in 1960, giving Sedaka his first No.

How many Top 40 hits did Neil Sedaka have?

Neil Sedaka doesn't need approval from anyone. Sedaka, a gifted and inveterate songwriter, has sold millions of albums, has had 21 Top 40 hits and three No. 1 singles: "Breaking Up Is Hard To Do" (a slower version made the Top 10 in 1975), the lighthearted “Laughter in the Rain” and the intense “Bad Blood.”

Did Neil Sedaka write Solitaire?

"Solitaire" is a ballad written by Neil Sedaka and Phil Cody. Cody employs playing the card game of solitaire as a metaphor for a man "who lost his love through his indifference"—"while life goes on around him everywhere he's playing solitaire". The song is perhaps best known via its rendition by the Carpenters.

Is Neil Sedaka in the Hall of Fame?

With a career spanning six decades, Sedaka has been inducted into the Songwriter's Hall of Fame and also received the Sammy Kahn Lifetime Achievement Award.