10 perfect Cynthia Weil songs (2024)

In a career that stretched more than half a century, Cynthia Weil wrote hits for girl groups, rock bands, country acts and soul singers. Her lyrics captured the many facets of love — its euphoric bloom and its agonizing demise — but also pondered family, friendship and the details of urban American life.

Music

Cynthia Weil, ‘You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feelin’’ co-writer, dies at 82

Weil, in partnership with husband Barry Mann, wrote the lyrics for such hits as ‘You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feelin’,’ ‘On Broadway’ and ‘Here You Come Again.’

June 2, 2023

Weil, who died Thursday in Beverly Hills at age 82, was best known as half of a songwriting team with her husband, Barry Mann, who handled the melodies and with whom she got her start in the early 1960s as part of the bustling pop-music scene based around New York’s Brill Building. (Among the couple’s friends and competitors were two other married duos: Carole King and Gerry Goffin, and Jeff Barry and Ellie Greenwich.) Yet Weil — a member of both the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame and the Songwriters Hall of Fame — collaborated widely over the years, exploring different genres and forging new creative partnerships.

Here, in chronological order, are 10 of her finest songs.

1. The Drifters, “On Broadway” (1963)

10 perfect Cynthia Weil songs (2)

×

Mann and Weil wrote this tale of showbiz ambition with a fresh-faced girl group in mind, and indeed the Crystals released an early version of “On Broadway” in 1962. But it was the Drifters’ slightly bluesier take — for which the couple tweaked their writing with help from Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller — that became a pop staple. According to legend, Phil Spector played the twangy guitar solo in the studio; 15 years later, another guitarist, George Benson, covered the tune and scored a hit of his own.

Advertisem*nt

2. The Righteous Brothers, “You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feelin’” (1964)

Identified by BMI as the most broadcast song of the 20th century, the Righteous Brothers’ Spector-produced smash is the wailing lost-love lament against which all others have been measured for almost 60 years. “Now there’s no welcome look in your eyes when I reach for you,” Bill Medley sings — an image somehow made only lonelier by Spector’s quivering wall-of-sound strings.

3. The Animals, “We Gotta Get Out of This Place” (1965)

10 perfect Cynthia Weil songs (4)

×

The British Invasion slowed many a career associated with the Brill Building, yet Mann and Weil landed a Top 20 hit when the Animals cut this unflinching proto-garage-rock jam about quitting “this dirty old part of the city.” Later the song became an anthem among soldiers increasingly disillusioned by the war in Vietnam.

4. Dusty Springfield, “Just a Little Lovin’” (1969)

10 perfect Cynthia Weil songs (5)

×

Words of sensual wisdom from the opener of Springfield’s famously sultry “Dusty in Memphis” LP: “Just a little lovin’, early in the morning / Beats a cup of coffee for starting off the day.” Also check out Shelby Lynne’s slower-and-lower rendition from her 2008 Dusty tribute album of the same name.

5. Dolly Parton, “Here You Come Again” (1977)

10 perfect Cynthia Weil songs (6)

×

Parton’s bouncy pop-crossover hit is among the most charming singles in her enormous catalog, not least because of the yearning in her vocal performance as she greets an ex who’s returned “looking better than a body has a right to.” What a lyric.

6. The Pointer Sisters, “He’s So Shy” (1980)

Another winning flirtation — “I’m so glad I took the time that I had to take to make him mine” — set to creamy keyboards and cheerful funk bass.

7. Quincy Jones featuring James Ingram, “Just Once” (1981)

10 perfect Cynthia Weil songs (8)

×

Ingram got his big break in music after Jones heard his voice on the demo for this tender R&B ballad and hired him to record it for Jones’ million-selling 1981 album “The Dude.” The singer encountered Mann and Weil again in 1986 when he and Linda Ronstadt cut the Grammy-winning “Somewhere Out There” for the animated mouse movie “An American Tail.”

Advertisem*nt

8. Peabo Bryson, “If Ever You’re in My Arms Again” (1984)

10 perfect Cynthia Weil songs (9)

×

Weil’s early-’80s hot streak in quiet-storm soul music also included this stately Bryson number, which Weil co-wrote with Tom Snow and Michael Masser and which topped Billboard’s adult contemporary chart for four weeks.

9. Chaka Khan, “Through the Fire” (1985)

10 perfect Cynthia Weil songs (10)

×

Two decades after Weil, David Foster and Tom Keane wrote “Through the Fire” for Khan’s “I Feel for You” album, Kanye West remade the song as “Through the Wire,” his debut solo single, in which he rapped about a car crash while his jaw was wired shut.

10. Linda Ronstadt featuring Aaron Neville, “Don’t Know Much” (1989)

10 perfect Cynthia Weil songs (11)

×

Originally recorded by Mann himself for a 1980 solo record, this lush yet forthright soft-rock confession went to No. 2 as one of several duets between Ronstadt and Neville on her Grammy-winning “Cry Like a Rainstorm, Howl Like the Wind.”

More to Read

  • A field guide to the references on Taylor Swift’s ‘The Tortured Poets Department’

    April 19, 2024

  • Column: Was L.A.’s Ellen Beach Yaw the proto-Taylor Swift?

    Feb. 6, 2024

  • Mary Weiss, lead singer for ‘Leader of the Pack’ girl group the Shangri-Las, dies at 75

    Jan. 20, 2024

10 perfect Cynthia Weil songs (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Duane Harber

Last Updated:

Views: 6477

Rating: 4 / 5 (71 voted)

Reviews: 94% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Duane Harber

Birthday: 1999-10-17

Address: Apt. 404 9899 Magnolia Roads, Port Royceville, ID 78186

Phone: +186911129794335

Job: Human Hospitality Planner

Hobby: Listening to music, Orienteering, Knapping, Dance, Mountain biking, Fishing, Pottery

Introduction: My name is Duane Harber, I am a modern, clever, handsome, fair, agreeable, inexpensive, beautiful person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.