Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast - GGACP Classic: Neil Sedaka
Episode Date: May 12, 2022GGACP's celebration of Jewish American Heritage Month continues with this classic interview from 2019 featuring rock ‘n’ roll icon Neil Sedaka, who discusses growing up in Brooklyn, his apprenti...ceship at the famed Brill Building, his chart-topping collaborations with lyricist Howard Greenfield and his memories of Bobby Darin, Elvis Presley, Carole King, Richard Rodgers and Paul McCartney (among others). Also, Bob Dylan offers praise, John Lennon provides inspiration, Mick Jagger buys a Sedaka record and Neil remembers his cousin Eydie Gorme. PLUS: "My Yiddishe Momme"! The Captain & Tennille! Elton John to the rescue! The late, great Len Maxwell! Billy Joel “borrows” a melody!"And Neil demonstrates his songwriting process! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Your teen requested a ride, but this time, not from you.
It's through their Uber Teen account.
It's an Uber account that allows your teen to request a ride under your supervision
with live trip tracking and highly rated drivers.
Add your teen to your Uber account today.
Gifting dad can sometimes hit the wrong note.
Oh. Oh,
instead gift the Glenlivet,
the single malt whiskey that started it all for a balanced flavor and smooth
finish.
Just sit back and listen to the music.
This single malt scotch whiskey is guaranteed to impress dad this father's
day.
The Glenlivet. Live original.
Please enjoy our products responsibly.
TV comics, movie stars, hit singles and some toys.
Trivia and dirty jokes, an evening with the boys.
Once is never good enough for something so fantastic.
So here's another Gilbert and Franks
Here's another Gilbert and Franks
Here's another Gilbert and Franks
Colossal classic
Hi everybody, this is Billy West and I do a lot of cartoon voices
And you're listening to Gilbert Gottfried's Colossal Amazing Podcast.
You're one stop for that sort of thing. Hi, this is Gilbert Gottfried, and this is Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast
with my co-host, Frank Santopadre, and our engineer,
Frank Furtarosa. Our guest this week is a singer, composer, Grammy-nominated recording artist,
classically trained pianist, one of the most gifted and prolific and frequently covered songwriters of the century.
A genuine rock and roll pioneer,
his iconic, instantly recognized songs have filled our ears for decades.
Oh Carol, Breaking Up is Hard to Do, Calendar Girl,
Happy Birthday Sweet Sixteen, Bad Blood, Should've Never Have Let You Go, Laughter in the Rain, Love in the Shadow, Solitaire, and The Hungry Years.
He's also written dozens of hits for other recording artists, including Connie Francis' hit, Where the Boys Are, and the Captain Ant Tennille smash hit Love Will Keep Us Together.
In a career spanning more than 60 years, he's written an astonishing 700 songs,
and many have been covered by some of the greatest musical artists of the century,
by some of the greatest musical artists of the century,
including Frank Sinatra, Johnny Mathis, The Carpenters, Andy Williams,
Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons, Abba, Shirley Bassey, Patsy Cline, Bobby Darin, Barry Manilow, Tom Jones, and Elvis Presley, just to name a few.
You want more from the man?
He's also written children's songs and classical works, performed to sold-out theaters and arenas all over the world.
And in 1983, he was inducted into the prestigious Songwriters Hall of Fame. And after seven decades in showbiz, he's still writing and performing with upcoming concert dates booked in Canada, California, and Hawaii.
Booked in Canada, California, and Hawaii.
Frank and I are genuinely thrilled to welcome to the podcast a living legend.
And a man who Billy Joel calls the Davey Rocket of Rock and Roll.
The pride of Brighton Beach, Brooklyn, Neil Sadaka.
What an introduction.
How do I follow that?
My goodness.
Thank you, Gilbert.
Thank you, Frank.
You're welcome, Neil.
You've done a lot.
And I'm here as a guest, a fellow Brooklyn Jew.
That's right.
I was born in Brighton Beach, right on the water.
As a matter of fact,
I had the honor of having a street named after me
right on the boardwalk,
Coney Island Avenue in Brighton Beach.
And I went on the cyclone in your neck of the woods.
And I had Nathan's frankfurters
and the greasy French fries.
They were delicious.
And that's a wonderful way to grow up on the water.
It is beautiful.
I heard you say you were so Jewish you would go months without seeing a wasp.
I thought the whole world was Jewish.
And it was strange. In Brooklyn, it was me, Barbara Streisand, Barry Manilow, Neil Diamond lived across the street,
Carole King I dated, and it was kind of in the egg creams, I think, in the egg creams.
I remember my parents, we lived in Brooklyn, and once we decided as an exotic vacation to rent a bungalow in Brighton Beach, which is like five minutes away from Coney Island.
That's right, Brighton Beach Baths.
They had the private pools and the paddle tennis, and you had to stamp your hand to go into the public beach so you can come back
into the private beach it was a great way to grow up and can can we well like frank always uh tells
our guests we jump around can you tell us uh well when you were a child the very strange uh
a child, the very strange
thing your mother
confessed to you.
My mother confessed?
Oh, you did your research.
First time a guest
has ever said that to me.
First time he's done his research.
You should be honored.
Shall I say it all?
My mother had a lover
and she asked my sister and I if it was okay.
I was 19 years old.
I said, Mom, if you're happy, go right ahead.
Why not?
My father was a darling, sweet as sugar, but very cheap.
He was Maxie the taxi.
He was a taxi driver.
Maxie the taxi. He was a taxi driver. And he said, oh, if this guy buys you presents and takes you to dinners, wonderful. So he had, my mother had his, his okay. And she had a lover. Unfortunately, as the years went on, I was a mama's boy. Whatever my mother said, I did. She said, I think we should make Benny your manager.
And Benny was an air conditioning salesman.
He knew nothing, nothing, nothing about show business.
And the career went down the hill.
And all the furs and the jewels that my mother, I thought he was buying, I was buying.
And after about four years, I said we had a long enough relationship, and I let him go.
My mother took an overdose of sleeping pills.
It's in the book, wild.
Yeah, she was, you know, very upset.
Her lover and her son were at odds. But we made up, you know, very upset. Her lover and her son were at odds.
But we made up, you know, my mother's my mother.
She was great.
Sure, sure.
You know, one of my favorite parts of the book is how idyllic you describe growing up in Brooklyn,
which you guys were just touching upon, with the egg creams and the doo-wop groups. And the way you describe Brighton Beach, I mean, it sounds like a wonderful getaway.
Stoop ball and stick ball and fireworks and the town turned into an ocean resort
and you had the Dodgers.
Your dad would take you to the Ebbets Field to see the Dodgers.
Ebbets Field, 60 cents, Ebbets Field and the Bleaches.
Yeah.
Jackie Robinson and Roy Campanella.
Sure.
Gil Hodges.
It sounds like a wonderful way to grow up.
Now, when I was growing up in Crown Heights, that was after Coney Island.
To me, Ebbets Field, it was so weird.
Whenever they say, oh, the great baseball place, Ebbets Field.
And to me, it was like this scrappy housing development.
I know, but it was a historical place. Yes. That was the project.
It was. It was. You grew up with women. You grew up with, let's just say in the book,
seven women taking care of you. I lived in a two-bedroom apartment in Brighton Beach
with 11 people. My mother, my father, my sister, my grandparents, and my father's five sisters.
One bathroom.
One by one, the sisters got married, and it was me and my sister, who I adored, and my mother and father.
And it was, I was babied, and, you know and I was the special kid.
Right, right.
You described it as happy years.
Very happy.
Yeah.
And you said, I think in the second grade, it was a very observant teacher.
Yes.
Mrs. Glantz.
Oh, Mrs. Glantz.
Evelyn Glantz.
I have her here.
I was in second grade, and she conducted the choir.
And for some reason or other, she saw that I had some musical ability at eight years old,
and she put me in front of the choir, and I conducted the choir.
And she convinced my parents to buy a piano.
And we couldn't afford a piano.
So my mother took a job at A&S Department Store as a sales lady.
And after she made $500, she bought me a secondhand upright piano.
And I studied with Murray Newman, who was a teacher in Brighton Beach for one year.
And he said, I can't teach him anymore.
He's a genius.
Let's, you know, try out for the Juilliard Prep School.
So I got a scholarship for the prep school as a pianist
and went there from nine years old to 17,
and then two years to the Juilliard College,
studying to be a concert pianist.
But there was no money in it.
There was no money.
I was going to ask you that question later,
if that was something you ever entertained.
My mother said, you're going to be a rock and roller?
And after the first hit, she got used to it.
I bought her the Ming Stole.
She called it the Hadassah Talis.
And she said
I think you should continue
with this rock and roll
I like
you got used to it fast
I like it
when you first heard music
which I found fascinating too
in your story
was your grandma's Turkish records
which you had no
absolutely no interest in
my grandparents came from
Istanbul, Turkey
moved to Lower East Side
in New York
and when they had
friends over, they played these weird Turkish music and it scared the shit out of me. I locked
myself in the bathroom because I heard this crazy music. And my mother tells me that when i was an infant i wouldn't eat until the radio was playing
music wow so neil sadak his introduction to music was to was his first reaction was to run and block
himself in the bathroom in the bathroom yeah that's good press would you remember enough to
play any segment of the tur music. Oh, my God.
That's all I can remember. Wow!
Wow!
Not bad.
75 years later.
Too high.
Not bad.
75 years later.
Too high.
So your aunt started bringing home American records.
Yes.
And everything changed. Plakas.
My Aunt Molly used to take me to the movies, Oceana Theater.
And Doris Day, my God, my favorite.
And she bought Plakas because they spoke Spanish.
The Sephardic Jews spoke Spanish.
So I can speak many words
in Spanish.
And she
introduced me to American records.
Les Paul and Mary Ford.
I listened to
what's his name?
Martin Block's hits
of Make Believe Ballroom.
I heard Les Paul and Mary Ford,
Doris Day.
I heard Rosemary Clooney.
Patty Page.
Patty Page.
All that stuff.
Yes.
And the multiple voices.
I loved when they sang with themselves.
I loved harmony singing.
Of course, I started a group in Lincoln
called the Tokens,
which was a doo-wop group and
I loved harmony singing I learned it from listening to those people how many languages do you speak
I can only speak Spanish and English but I sang in six languages I was the first American rock
and roller to go to all of the foreign countries because Elvis didn't go there.
And I went to
Japan. They thought I was Japanese
because of the name Sadaka.
Love that. And there was a big poster
of me on the Ginza Strip with slanted
eyes. Oh, jeez.
Unbelievable. Because the people
didn't see me. They heard the name
and they thought I was
American-born Japanese.
Okay, I have to put you on the spot again.
Can you sing anything in Japanese
right now? Oh my god,
I can't. Oh, okay.
Can you, Gilbert?
I can't. You stumped me.
Oh my god.
Gilbert.
Gilbert will love this. You auditioned for
Arthur Godfrey's
talent scouts? I did
and they said
there were thousands
of kids with the show business mothers
and I went to three
auditions, I got to the end
there were five people but they only
had four, Godfrey used to have
a Christmas show with children
and there were four left
and they said
they called up my mother
and said
he's very good but can he play with his elbows
because we want
something unusual, gimmicky
something gimmicky
I played
and they said very good but can he play with his elbows?
And thank God I was eliminated because I would have shit in my pants to be on the Arthur Godfrey show.
I was so glad I was eliminated.
That's hilarious.
Neil, your first public singing performance,
and Gilbert will appreciate this as well,
your bar mitzvah.
Oh.
I remember my Haftorah.
Oh, please say something.
You've got a great memory.
V'yehi divar elmo,
e'maylelo benadom,
bes y'surel,
y'shevi meladmasom.
The cantors were crying.
They said to my mother, he's going to be a cantor.
Oh, no.
Oh, no.
He's going to be a concert pianist.
That's what I want.
That's what she wanted.
Wow.
So we have your aunt to thank and Mrs. Glantz.
That's right.
Two turning points.
That's right.
That's an amazing teacher to have that could spot that.
Yes.
Yeah. Evelyn Glantz. And it's sweet that your mom went and got a job so that could spot that. Yes. Yeah.
Evelyn Glantz.
And it's sweet that your mom went and got a job so she could buy you a piano.
She could pay for the music lessons.
Yeah.
That's very touching.
And I, you know, I started to write.
I wrote Stupid Cupid, as you said, Connie Francis, Where the Boys Are.
Sure.
And the teachers at Juilliard said, we're losing you.
We're losing you to rock and roll.
They knew it.
They knew it, yeah.
Tell us about meeting Howard, too, because that's another turning point.
I was at the Catskill Mountains.
Howard Greenfield.
Howard Greenfield lived in the same building.
I was 13.
He was 16.
And his mother, Ella Greenfield, heard me playing at the Kenmore Lake Hotel.
I was practicing my Beethoven.
And she said to Howie, you should try to write songs with him.
And Howie was a little heavy, obese to be exact.
And we called him Fat Howie.
It was terrible. it was disgusting of us
we were kids you know and he rang my bell in i remember the date october the 11th 1952 he's he
rang my bell and i said howie what what do you want so my mother heard you playing classical
music would you like to write a song i said, I don't know how to write songs.
I'm starting to be a concert pianist.
And he convinced me to write this terrible song.
My life's devotion is loving you only.
And my heart says to you, I'll always be true.
You'll never be lonely.
It was like an Xavier Cougat in my head.
Xavier Cougat.
And How He Loved rhymed.
My life is madness.
It's sadness.
It burns with desire.
Yearning, just burning.
My soul is on fire.
Dear, I'm a slave and you're just a sire of love.
And we wrote the song.
And I heard my voice on his tape recorder.
He had a wire recorder.
It was before tape.
Wow.
A wire recorder.
And I heard my voice.
I said, hmm, not bad.
But the song stinks.
The song stinks.
And my sister said, that's the worst song I ever heard.
She was honest.
There's a million people who could write and sing songs.
Forget it.
Go back to your classical music.
So you were not collaborators for a while.
We did start writing.
He came back and the songs got a little better, a little better.
And kids in school, there was a ballet who shows they would sing our
first songs and uh they got a little bit better not much but then i went to atlantic records
i rode the subway from brighton beach to 57th street and i'm at erdogan and jerry wexler were
the presidents of atlantic records and i sold three songs to the Cardinals, the Clovers, the Cookies.
I had two R&B hits at 16 years old.
I had Clyde McFadden, Since You've Been Gone,
and I Waited Too Long by Laverne Baker.
So I was a full-fledged songwriter.
I said, what about my voice?
Why don't you record my voice?
They said, it's a little weird.
Who said it was a little weird?
Jerry Wexler.
He did.
But God rest his soul, before he died, he called me up.
He said, I kicked myself in the shins for not signing you as a singer.
I like that.
Wow.
Wow, wow, wow.
And how did you wind up
in the Brill building?
I went to
school with Mort Schumann,
who was a great writer for
Elvis and the Drifters.
He wrote with
Doc Pommas. And Howie and I
were trying to sell songs
to Hill and Range Music
at 1619,
which was the older writers.
And we were turned down.
And Mort Schumann said,
oh, across the street are young publishers
looking for young writers.
So we went in,
Alan Evans and Don Kirshner,
Alden Music.
Alden Music, sure.
And we went in and we played our songs.
They said, where did you steal these songs?
Because we were pizzalers.
We were little kids.
I played, stupid Cupid, you're a real mean guy.
Likes to clip you.
And Donnie Kirshner said, I know Connie Francis.
I said, Connie Francis?
She had the number one record? Who's sorry now?
And he took me to her house,
and I played all my best ballads,
and she was bored to death.
And then I played Stupid Cupid, eight bars.
She said, that's my next record.
Because at that time in 1958,
a girl didn't sing rock and roll.
So she took Stupid Cupid and went to the top 15.
Now, the Brill Building, I heard that wasn't a place where you waited for your muse to hit or woke up with a melody in your head.
It was like, you know, if you want to get paid, we want this many hit songs a week.
We were, it was a great training.
We had an office with a piano and a desk.
And we went in five days a week.
You and Howie.
Me and Howie.
Ten in the morning till five in the afternoon,
five days a week.
It was a great way to learn the craft.
And the next room was Carol and Jerry,
Carol King and Jerry Goffin,
and then Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil,
and oh my God.
Jack Keller.
Jack Keller, Hank Hunter.
And it was great competition.
The best song won,
and you got the Righteous Brothers or the Chiffons,
and it was great
but it was good competition
Did you guys meet during the day
and schmooze and talk? What are you working on?
Exchange ideas? Absolutely
just like the Carol show, absolutely
and at the end of the day we went into
the red piano, Al Nevins had
a beautiful red piano
and we would play our songs and the
chiffons were up for a new record they had just had he's so fine and i played mine the kids are
singing now happy birthday sweet 16 and so i smile and say i thought it was great. And then Carol came up and sang on the red piano.
Let me think.
What was that song?
She won it anyway.
She won the,
she got the follow up
to He's So Fine.
I think it was called
One Fine Day.
One fine day.
Not as good as mine.
She weren't only trying to write hits
if I understand this correctly
as a classical trained musician
you said you were trying
to write something
a little deeper
than Bubblegum
songs that were
a little bit more
had a little bit more
complexity to them
Yes
and as a matter of fact
Bob Dylan in his book
said
I loved the Brill Building
I loved Neil Sedaka
because he was the first one
to sing
his own songs and I loved Neil Sedaka because he was the first one to sing his own songs.
And I considered Callan's A Girl and Breaking Up Is Hard To Do
and Stairway To Heaven as balabatish songs.
They were not bubblegum songs.
Sure, sure, sure.
They were well-written.
Howie Greenfield was a marvelous lyricist.
He was absolutely great.
And it took me a while to get the confidence to write my own lyrics.
And Johnny Mercer said the most smart thing.
He said, it takes great talent to write a melody,
but it takes great courage to write a lyric.
And he was so right.
Wow.
It took me a couple of years to get the courage.
And to make sure you wrote hit songs,
you actually studied songs.
Like every song that was a hit, you figured out.
Donny Kershaw said, write another Little Darling.
You got to write a Little Darling.
No problem. Without stealing it. And we know Little Darling. You got to write a Little Darling. No problem.
Without stealing it.
And we know Little Darling.
Little Darling.
Oh, Carol.
I am but a fool.
And I was dating Carol King,
so it was very meaningful to me.
And RCA was dropping me.
After the diary, my first hit,
I had two flops, and they said, I had two flops and they said,
we're letting you go. I said, oh, give me another chance. Give me another chance.
And I wrote O'Carroll, which sold 3 million records. Yeah. Yeah. Nice bounce back. Nice
bounce back. I knew Len Maxwell, by the way, a name that turned up in your book. You're kidding.
I knew him. Yeah. I was working at the Lake tarleton club in new hampshire he was a great
comedian do you know who len maxwell gill oh yeah comedian wait a minute he heard me playing was he
the voiceover guy yes yes absolutely he was my first manager a great hawaiian how would you like
he was the voice of the hawaiian punch yes he was the voice in uh Woody Allen picture, Watch Up Tiger Lily.
Very talented.
A lovely man.
I was working in Lake Tarleton Club with a band.
I was 16, 17 years old.
And he heard me.
He said, you could be a star.
You're writing these songs.
And he took me on the Milt Grant Show in Baltimore.
He took me on the Buddy Dean show in Baltimore.
And he was my first manager.
Very clever.
I used to see him at the improv all the time he'd hang out.
And he was one of those guys who,
he did a zillion character voices.
He did, great voice guy.
And I said, do you ever talk in your own voice?
And he says, I have about 10 my own voices so i'd have like 10 voices that
sounded perfectly normal and is that good he was marvelous introduce you to phil ramone
he introduced me to phil ramone i did some demos and phil ramone added instruments to them, two non-hits, but it was a thrill.
He came to my house with a deck of records,
and I had a record called Laura Lee on deck of records,
and he had put all the instruments over my piano demo.
Nice.
And then he wanted money.
He called my mother, and he said,
Neil has a record, a hit, The Diary.
Where's my money?
And my mother said what?
who? who are you?
I love that you're still doing diary in concert
my wife and I saw you Sunday
how I'd like to look
into that little book
that's great to have the first hit record
it still sounds great.
And you said that you had this thing,
the way you would write your own hits,
was like the sandwich.
It was a sandwich song.
Howie and I would start with a little introduction,
then the meat of the song,
and end with the same riff.
So, uh...
I love, I love, I love, I love my calendar girl
Each and every day of the year
That was the beginning, and then the meat.
January, you start the year off fine
And it ended, I love, I love, I love my calendar girl
We did that with eight hits in a row.
We overdid it.
I love how you were playing the other night
and you said, I have no ending for this
so I faded out the record.
We had no ending.
We could tell a whole story in two and a half minutes.
And in those days, that's all the disc jockeys would play, two a half minutes and i had no ending so we faded out the record we will return
to gilbert godfrey's amazing colossal podcast but first a word from our sponsor hear that
quarter pounder fans that silence is two friends enjoying the new creamy parmesan and bacon
quarter pounder at McDonald's because adding crispy bacon and creamy
parmesan sauce to our 100% Canadian beef makes it impossible to have a
conversation.
Try the new creamy parmesan and bacon quarter pounder today and discover how
words are so unnecessary.
For a limited time only at participating McDonald's restaurants in Canada.
What happens when 20 extremely athletic Canadians who thrive on competition and won't settle for less than number one find themselves on a team? Taking on jaw-dropping obstacles all across Canada is one thing.
Working together on a team with some pretty big personalities is another.
It's a new season of Canada's Ultimate Challenge,
and sparks are going to fly.
New episode Sundays.
Watch free on CBC Channel.
And you said one time Billy Joel was saying that he came up with a great melody.
Yes.
Let's see.
I was in a restaurant in the Hamptons, and he came over.
He was a little high.
And he said, I wrote a melody a couple of months ago,
and I called my band in the middle of the night the great he
said you got to come over the greatest melody I ever wrote and he played this melody and they said
Billy it's great but it's Neil Sedaka's melody Mrs. O'Leary's grocery store works at an hour for a penny.
They said,
it's great,
but it's Neil Sedaka strolling along
country roads
with my babe.
And then,
Mrs. O'Leary's
grocery store
works at an hour
for a penny.
He had to change
the melody.
Otherwise,
I would have sued him.
Hilarious.
That's great, Neil.
We had,
as I told you,
we had Ron Dante,
we had Tony Orlando here.
We're talking about
those Brill Building days.
Oh, great.
And it's just,
and your book paints
such a vivid picture.
You know,
you described
Carole King's
carrying her baby
in a harness
and you could hear
other composers
from down the hallway it just it
must have been such a you taking the train from from from brooklyn every day and punching that
clock and it was a marvelous time great the song sounded alike because the walls were very thin
so after a while the song sounded alike but it was young people writing for a young market. The magic was we would go in, write a song, have an artist sing it,
and three weeks later it was on the chart.
Amazing.
It was amazing.
And you hung out at Hanson's Drugstore, which has come up on this show.
With Bobby Darin.
With Bobby Darin.
May God rest him, yes.
Everybody hung out there.
Every comedian we've had, old school comedian we've had on this show,
hung out at Hanson's.
Bobby said, why are you so attached to your mother?
Stop it.
Stop it.
Don't give money to your mother.
And he loved the way I played, so I played on Dream Lover, and I played on many of his records.
He was a great, great artist.
And I heard, like they always said, with Bobby Darin, he knew he was going to die young,
and he wanted to get everything done really quick.
And he could have been the next.
He was on his way to be the next Frank Sinatra, no doubt about it.
And he dated Connie Francis.
Her father didn't like him, and he broke it up.
But he knew that he didn't have a long life.
Unfortunately, he was, I saw him at the Copacabana.
I'll never forget it.
One of the great entertainers.
He could tell jokes.
He could play the drums.
He could play the piano.
He was marvelous.
Gilbert, you never saw him live, did you?
No, I wish.
I came along too late.
I know he did. We're great admirers.
He did invitations too.
Yeah.
Did he say to you at Hanson's,
you're a hit songwriter,
why are you taking the subway?
Yes, he did.
He did.
I gave it all to my mother.
Hilarious.
Tell us about your process with Howard
before you found the courage years later
to write your own lyrics.
I would come in with three melodies,
and I would play all three complete melodies,
and it depended on his mood.
He would choose the one that that was the one his mood was in.
And he was one of these geniuses
where he could tell a whole story,
tie it with a ribbon, and hungry years.
Love will keep us together.
Breaking up is hard to do.
It was a perfect marriage of words and music.
And we fought.
We had a fight.
Change that melody.
I won't.
I said, change that lyric. It doesn't work. Change that melody. I won't. I said, change that lyric.
It doesn't work.
So that's the process of it.
That's healthy too in a way.
It is.
They're pushing back against each other, part of the creative process.
It is.
Yeah.
Was Calendar Girl inspired by a TV guide listing?
We saw an old movie and TV guide called Calendar Girl.
I don't remember who was in it.
Cary Grant?
I'm not sure.
And Howie and I said, oh, that'll be a great idea for a pop song going from January through December.
And I played it on the piano.
And his mother, Howard Greenfield's mother, Ella, said, that's a hit.
Even before you get in the studio, it's a hit.
But you never knew because on the piano it was one thing.
But when you got into the studio with the musicians, they had to feel it.
They had to feel it.
And that one took about three hours to record.
And I was a real pushy Jew.
I went into the balancing.
I went into the production.
I went into the...
You were all hands-on.
Yeah.
Hands-on.
I said, I can't hear the months of the year.
I can't hear the months.
And it was every step of the way, yeah.
I have to share with our listeners, Neil, too,
that I was saying before,
my wife and I saw you Sunday night
at Westbury Music Fair.
You were wonderful.
Thank you.
But when you played Calendar Girl
and you took a break,
you left the stage for a minute,
you put up that wonderful video,
which is possibly the first music video.
Yes.
Of you in all of those changing outfits.
You're like Cher, by the way.
You changed outfits about 12 times.
I know.
In that video.
Did your mom really compare you to Cary Grant? Yes. I love that. And the story is true. I was having lunch in Los Angeles
and this gal walked up to me and said, I was Miss January in your video. This is just a few months
ago. And I said, oh, really? And she said, yes.
I said to the audience,
she looked like an old, old woman.
An old, old woman.
But I look the same.
Can you play a little bit more
of Calendar Girl for us?
Can we put you in a pose?
I love, I love, I love my calendar girl
Each and every day of the year
January
You start the year off
five
You're my little valentine
I'm going to march you
down the aisle
You're the Easter bunny
when you smile
Yeah, yeah, my heart's in a whirl
Love, I love,, love my little calendar girl
Every day
And so on and so on and so on.
Wow, wonderful.
Wow.
What a treat.
Now, you said something, and you're proving it on the show.
You said something Pavarotti said to you.
I met Pavarotti in Hawaii several years ago.
He said, once you're 70, the voice goes.
Well, he was wrong.
I still have a voice.
It sounded great, Sunday.
And you baby it.
I mean, I was reading interviews with you.
You do the honey and the tea and the lemon, and you really take care of it.
No air conditioning in my face and no loud
rooms where you have to shout to be heard absolutely no ice drinks wow you got a whole
process yeah tell us a little bit more about carol klein and uh because i love too that you
guys used to go uptown to find the original versions the black versions of these of these
of white cover well you you guys would go record hunting we did to find these these rarities we did
and they weren't being played on the radio that's right and uh the first rock and roll record
carol and i heard was earth angel by the penguins we went to andrea's pizza parlor on
brighton beach avenue and uh i said to howie we're writing in the style of richard rogers and george
gershman i like rock and roll it's young it's spontaneous and he said oh it's off key it's off
key it's not good and i i convinced him but But Carol and I used to go looking for records.
We used to go to the Apollo Theater.
We saw, oh, my God, Sarah Vaughan and Ray Charles and so many greats.
Yeah.
And you guys became high school celebrities too.
We always got up and sang in in brighton beach on the on the boardwalk
or we sang in bar mitzvahs and weddings and lakewood new jersey and up in the catskills
yeah we always we sang together it really wasn't just a matter of i'm not going to become a
classical musician because there's no money in it i mean this music was inside of you i wanted to be famous no shame in it i wanted to be famous because i was teased as a kid
i wasn't a jock in school and um i every time the film broke in the auditorium and And now Neil will get up and play.
And everybody went, oh.
So I said, I'm going to write rock and roll.
Of course.
And I wrote a song called Mr. Moon.
And I did it in the first show at the Ballyhoo in Lincoln High School.
And Abe Lass, who was the principal, said,
you cannot do that in the second show.
It's rock and roll.
It's bumping and grinding.
And the kids wrote a petition.
It's like a movie.
Wow.
The kids wrote a petition.
We want Neil Sedaka to sing Mr. Moon again.
And I did.
I did.
And you said you're like one of the,
we've had a few guests like this.
I think it was Bruce Stern was on the show,
and he says he still wants to be a better actor.
Well, Neil says he still hasn't written his greatest song.
You'd have to develop and grow.
You have to raise the bar. You have to raise the bar.
You have to reinvent Neil Sedaka.
I wrote over 700 songs,
and I don't think I wrote the greatest one ever.
I really don't.
But now there's no incentive, unfortunately.
You know, the billboard and hearing it on the radio
and getting the royalties.
Now there's really no record system anymore.
So I just did my 50th studio album called I Do It For Applause.
I did it that night.
It was great.
Thank you.
Yeah, really wonderful.
So let's talk about that string of hits leading up to 63,
the dreaded 1963, but you had that string of hits leading up to 63, the dreaded 1963.
But you had a run of hits.
The Diary, Stairway to Heaven before Led Zeppelin.
That's right.
Not Led Zeppelin, Stairway to Heaven.
Right next door to an angel.
Next door to an angel.
Calendar Girl, Little Devil.
Right.
Stupid Cupid.
Stupid Cupid.
Yeah.
It was a great run.
A really wonderful run.
Breaking Up is hard to do, obviously.
And then 63, the Beatles came in, and I was finished.
They didn't want any more solo American singers.
And people would say, didn't you used to be Neil Sedaka?
Whatever happened to you?
And I waited.
I knew there were more hits in me.
And I waited for the 70s.
Cat Stevens, Joni Mitchell.
The singer-songwriter.
Singer-songwriter.
Yeah.
And Carol had tapestry.
I said, I can do that.
And I went to Elton John.
Actually, I was touring in England.
And Elton John was a fan.
And he said, I'm going to make you a star again.
And he had Rocket Records. he was starting in in New York and um another turning point he said uh
what do you have and I played him country roads but he said I'm going to make that number one
and he did thanks to him yeah and And it seemed like America had given up
on the American singers
but England still wanted to hear them.
That's right.
They were very faithful
to the American original rock and rollers.
They loved the...
And appreciation for those guys,
for Chubby Checker
and Chuck Berry
and all of those people.
Absolutely.
And yourself.
Little Richard.
Yeah.
Paul McCartney said to me,
we used to want to write like the Brill Building.
We wanted to write like Neil and Howie and Carol and Jerry.
That's what they were raised that way.
Elton John.
I met Mick Jagger.
He said, the first record I bought was I Go Ape.
I go ape every time I see you smile.
I'm a ding-dong gorilla.
Carry on, caveman style.
Funny, funny.
We had those 45s in the house, Neil.
Yeah.
So you had dealings with the Beatles later on.
Later on, we had parties.
Elton had parties for us, and Paul McCartney was there, John Lennon.
And I wrote a song dedicated to John Lennon called The Immigrant.
Oh!
It's a favorite.
Which was a top 20 hit.
And it's strange.
I wrote it with Phil Cody in 1976, and it's more relevant today than it has ever been.
It really is.
Can I bother you for that? Oh, it's more relevant today than it has ever been. It really is. Can I bother you for that?
Oh, it's beautiful.
Harbors open their arms
to the young searching foreigner
Come to live in the light
of the beacon of liberty
The chorus is
There was a time when
strangers were welcome
here.
Music would play,
they'd tell me the days
were sweet, sweet and
clear. It was a sweeter tune
and there was so much room that
people could come from everywhere.
It's on this wonderful DVD.
Yes.
The show goes on.
John was flattered that you dedicated that to him.
Yes, we were on WNEW.
We did an interview together.
He said, people always called me to ask for a favor.
And he said, Neil Sedaka, you called me and said you dedicated a song to me.
He was having trouble getting a green card because of the drugs.
Sure.
I remember those days, too.
I remember when EJ the DJ, when Elton would DJ on local stations,
and he played the hell out of your records.
Yeah.
But I want to go back to 63, too,
and I was saying this to Gilbert.
You're very funny on stage.
And when you introduced the Beatle thing,
when you introduced 1963, you said,
and then the Beatles
came.
And then your face
dropped and you
went, not good.
The crash to the
bottom, as you call
it in the book.
But I like a lot of
the songs that you
were writing.
You were using that
time to write for
other people.
Puppet Man.
Yes.
Working on a
groovy thing.
Yeah.
Rainy Jane.
Some of my favorite Neil Sedaka songs you wrote during that period.
Thank you.
So you were certainly making the best of a difficult situation.
Peggy Lee, Andy Williams.
Amarillo.
Amarillo, which was the biggest single in English history.
It's a great song.
It wasn't even a hit in Amarillo, Texas.
Yeah, it's a great song.
It wasn't even a hit in Amarillo, Texas.
And you've kept up on like current songwriters and singers.
I think you have to bounce off each other.
Talented people get inspiration from others.
You bounce off each other when you hear a great piece of work.
Absolutely.
One of the things that's fascinating about the book, obviously, is the journey.
Is all of this wonderful success followed by what you describe,
I said there's a chapter in the book you call The Crash to the Bottom,
and then, you know, your ambition, it's inspiring.
How you are determined, you are hell-bent to get back to that mountaintop.
Anyone else would have quit.
I was off the charts 11, 12 years.
Anybody else would have quit.
But I knew that there were more stuff in me.
I knew that I could emulate the culture of the time.
As you said, Gilbert, you hear people,
well, I could be like Gordon Lightfoot or Cat Stevens,
and you emulate it.
Yeah.
I mean, and I have to ask you about the first comeback album,
if I may, Emergence.
My favorite.
Yeah, which is a terrific record,
and shows your love of the movies, I might add. Silent movies.
Yeah, there's a song, Gilbert, which is a tribute to Chaplin and Keaton.
Oh, jeez.
And Laurel and Hardy.
Okay, okay.
I can't play it now.
But it was inspiring to see that.
Howie Greenfield, he was great.
Wow.
Yeah, it's an unusual record.
I can't remember it offhand.
What are your memories of going to the movies as a child?
I loved
the Lana Turner,
Betty Grable,
Betty Davis, Joan Crawford.
I loved
the
sad movies, the romantic
movies.
Tearjerkers. Tearjerkers.
Tearjerkers.
A Good Cry.
A Good Douglas Sirk movie.
Imitation of Life.
Oh, did I cry?
I saw it five times.
I cried. That's a good one.
Mahalia Jackson sang at the funeral.
I cried.
Oh, my God.
Did you meet the great Richard Rogers right around this period?
I was a friend of Mary Rogers, Richard Rogers' daughter.
We had homes up in Marywell Park.
And she said, when she heard the Emergence album,
she said, you have to meet my father, Richard Rogers.
And I was very nervous.
I got my best suit on.
He had an office on Madison Avenue in the 50s.
And I went in and I played songs.
He said, get away from the piano.
That's too easy for you.
Bring me a project.
Bring me a story.
And we'll write a show together.
And I said, oh, my God.
And I was very involved in my career, doing concerts.
I didn't know theater.
Were you tempted at least?
I was a schmuck.
I was a real schmuck i should have come up with a with a a project yeah how about that yeah what what what a guy to have a to be a fan of what to be a fan of yours what a thrill yeah and now you've
won loads of awards over the years but you don't really look too highly on awards
Well, you know, it's nice to get them
But you have to look forward
I have a star in the Hollywood Walk of Fame
And I'm in the Songwriters Hall of Fame
And I have a street named after me
You just got an honorary doctorate?
I did
I wore the cap and the gown
Yes!
Moravian College.
Very impressive.
In Bethlehem, Pennsylvania.
I was very, very excited.
Because I really never finished Juilliard.
I only went three years to the college.
But I went back to my roots.
I started writing again, for the first time, classical music.
I wrote a piano concerto called Manhattan
in Temezzo and
it was just recorded by Jeffrey Beagle
a great concert pianist
and I wrote my first symphony
called Joie de Vivre
Joy of Life. My piano concerto
is And so on and so on.
It's a 20-minute piece with the symphony.
I listened last night. It's a little Gershwin-esque where it starts to pick up and so on. It's a 20-minute piece with the symphony. I listened last night.
It's a little Gershwin-esque, where it starts to pick up and change tempo.
Yeah, very ambitious.
I did it.
I recorded it in London with the London Symphony,
and I did it in Hyde Park for 45,000 people.
I played in Hyde Park with the symphony.
It was great.
When you met McCartney,
didn't he start singing a Neil Sedaka song?
That's when the music takes me.
Yes, yes.
How flattering.
And he invited me, my son, and my grandson
to his show a few years ago at the MGM Grand in Vegas.
Wow.
And we went backstage.
My grandson is a big fan. And he was about eight
years old at the time. He had pictures of Paul McCartney on the wall. And I said, Michael,
when you go in, he's a little bit older. He looks a little older than the photos you have on your
wall. So don't say anything. And afterwards he said, my heart was going paul mccartney i met
paul mccartney and paul couldn't be sweeter he was just lovely just a lovely guy willing to forgive
him now yes yes yes for 63 and yes it's interesting that the beatles kind of ended your career for a while,
and they were influenced by you.
I think so.
The DACA fans.
Well, you know, we were the pioneers.
Who was it?
Elvis and Buddy Holly and Roy Orbison.
I was very lucky to be part of that group.
Tell us about meeting Elvis in 76 since you brought it up.
He invited Lieber and I to the show.
Your wife, Lieber.
My wife, Lieber.
And we went backstage and he gave Lieber a scarf.
He said, I think this will match your outfit.
She still has the scarf.
And he sat down and played some gospel songs.
And he said, I have a record of him singing solitaire with the outtakes.
Wow.
And one of the outtakes, he said, I can't stand that Sadaka. He has too many high notes.
I can't hit them. I have an outtake of Elvis saying that in the studio.
One of my favorite parts of the show Sunday
was when you took the audience through the process
of writing a song.
In particular, Love Will Keep Us Together.
Yes, I start with a beat
because I was from Dick Clark's American Bandstand.
You had a beat.
You had to have a beat to dance to it.
You have to dance.
I give it a 92.
I love it. And then with my voice, I look for a melody. It's kind of a spontaneous improvisation.
And the melody comes from listening to singers. If I hear a singer like Diana Ross,
from listening to singers.
If I hear a singer like Diana Ross,
that timbre of that beautiful voice,
so I'm inspired.
I can write a melody for that.
And the Beach Boys,
the great Brian Wilson, the genius,
he had...
I stole it. Oh, do it again.
I stole it.
You stole it.
Just the beat, just the beat.
And then Al Green used to do augmented chords like this.
So I put together Al Green, Diana Ross, and the Beach Boys.
Love, love will keep us together.
That's how I wrote it.
Perfect.
Wow.
I love that.
I love how you revealed the process. Well, you know how I wrote it. Perfect. Wow. I love that. I love how you revealed the process.
Well, you know, that's it.
Yeah.
It's great hearing that song,
and I must have heard that song 200 times before I realized.
And by the way, we did a live sing-along show.
Did you tell Neil?
Dara?
We did a live sing-along show,
episode of this show about a week ago.
Rob's here, too.
For about 70 people.
And the whole room,
we did a sing-along
of Love Will Keep Us Together.
Oh my God.
With Gilbert leading.
Yes.
We'll send you the tape.
Oh my God.
Yeah.
I put it in an album,
Elton's Rocket Records,
Sadaka's Back.
Sadaka's Back.
And Kip Cohn was a producer on A&M
and a new group called
The Captain and Tennille
were just signed to A&M,
and Kip Cohn played my record of Love Will Keep Us Together, and Tony Tennille fell off her chair.
She said, we're going in tomorrow. We're going in to record this tomorrow, and they sent me the
record. I almost fell off my chair because it was such a great record. Yes. God. I was going to say, I heard it 200 times before I heard,
Sadaka is back.
At the end.
That Tony Tennille put in.
Spontaneously, she's saying, Sadaka is back at the end of that record.
Wow.
Really great.
Yeah.
And we will return to Gilbert Gottfried's amazing colossal podcast after this.
And now here's something just for me.
Uh-oh.
Can you and I, even if you don't want to do the whole song,
can you and I together sing Breaking Up is Hard to Do?
Why not?
Why don't you let him start, Gil, and take this middle part.
Down, doobie-doo, down, down.
I was the king of the tralala's and doobie-doos.
What are you going to sing?
Which part?
Why don't we give him the middle part from Remember When You Held Me Tight?
Okay.
You can start it.
If you start it, that way he'll get on board.
Remember When You Held Me Tight.
You start.
Remember when.
Well, you'll see.
Oh, he wants you to stick it from the top.
Don't take your love away from
me.
Don't you leave my heart in misery.
If
you go, then I'll be
blue. Breaking up
is hard to do.
Remember when
you held me
tight
and you kissed me all through
the night.
Think of all that we've
been through and breaking
up is hard to do.
They say that breaking
up is
hard to do.
Now I know,
I know that it's true.
Don't say
that this is the end.
Instead of breaking up,
I wish that we were making up
again. Now you, I
beg of you.
Don't quit your job.
He begs of you.
That was good to That was good
That was good
Oh thank you
Very good
Oh thanks
And then I re-recorded it
Don't take your love
Away from me
I had number one both times
Yeah it's great
Who came up with the idea
Was it John Reed Elton's manager
Of putting you in the Godfather getup for the Sadaka's back?
Yes, John Reed wanted me in a Godfather hat and suit.
And it was, I went through all those years with Elton,
the beginning years and the drug years,
and he bought me a gorgeous diamond watch.
He used to go on those spending sprees in those days.
He used to open up Cartier
on Rodeo Drive at
8 o'clock in the morning. They opened up
just for Elton and he would
buy gifts for people.
He bought me a gorgeous diamond face watch.
Beautiful. He was very generous.
Did you see the Elton John movie?
It was marvelous.
And the Pavarotti beautiful he was very generous very generous did you see the Elton John movie it was marvelous yeah it was marvelous
and the Pavarotti
the Ron Howard documentary
the Ron Howard documentary
I haven't seen it yet
oh my god
I cried
I cried through it
but the Elton John movie
is better than
Bohemian Rhapsody
I loved it
better
here's an odd one Neil
you co-hosted
the Mike Douglas show
yes
with Gene Kelly
and Fred Astaire
I did.
Jeez.
Any memories?
They didn't know who the hell I was.
I knew them.
I saw all their movies.
I saw their movies.
But I co-hosted the Mike Douglas Show many times.
And I think the producer was, who was the Fox guy?
Roger Ailes.
Roger Ailes produced when I was on the Mike Douglas Show.
You ain't kidding.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
A couple other things about the, one of my favorite parts of the book, too, is you and Elton and the Sadaka's Back period and all of these people.
I mean, it's an adventure.
You're going to these parties, and you're meeting Peter Sellers and Rod Stewart.
And tell us about that Troubadour show, because that's also a big moment.
Lieber and I were at the Beverly Hills Hotel getting ready for the Troubadour.
It was my big comeback show.
And we were listening to...
And everybody was there everybody was there
andy williams james taylor elton everybody was there and i was scared stiff uh i went up
and it was funny just before on the radio going in the car casey casem said, and now the new number one song
is Laughter in the Rain
by Neil Sedaka.
And Lieber and I cried.
It was just so,
it was an unbelievable,
unbelievable feeling.
It all came back.
Yeah.
Have a number one record again.
Do you remember,
we've asked this of the musicians
that we've had on the show.
Do you remember hearing
one of your songs,
either one of your vocals
or a song you wrote
for somebody else on the radio for the first time because that had to be a life-changing yes moment
uh the diary first time i wrote in a 1958 chevy impala convertible a white car with the fins in
the back and i rode down king's highway in bro. Yeah. And I turned my top down.
I turned the radio all the way up so everybody can hear me singing.
How I'd like to look into that little book.
The one that has the lock and key.
It was a dream come true.
It was a miracle.
Did you ever see that movie that Tom Hanks directed about the young group, That Thing You Do?
Yes.
There's that great scene where they hear their song on the radio for the first time.
It's a thrill.
Actually, the one before was The Cookies.
Passing Time was the first R&B hit I had.
And I heard it on the radio. that was a great that was a great thrill
yeah can you tell me personally because I love this song and my wife and I actually got teary
listening to you sing it the other night and that's the hungry years which is my favorite
and I watched videos of you singing it and you look like you actually get emotional from singing the song.
Is it about, do you care to reveal anything about, is it about you and Howie?
No, it's about Sonny and Cher, who were breaking up, and they...
Wow, never knew that.
They, Howie and I, were inspired by their story.
You know, they struggled, and when they hit the top,
they started to break apart.
And there hasn't been any song
with that particular subject.
Beautiful.
Michael Feinstein said he played it
for Patty Andrews
before she died from the Andrews sisters.
And she was crying
because she and her sisters
didn't talk anymore.
Going up to the fame, they were close.
And then once they got big, they started to break apart.
And Patty Andrews started to cry on that song.
It must touch everybody who went through a similar experience that way.
Yes, I remember finishing it with Howie,
and he brought in his partner, Tori,
and I brought in Lieber into the room,
and we sang The Hungry Years.
There wasn't a dry eye.
And fair to say that you and Howie also,
I mean, it could almost be about you guys.
You had Hungry Years.
Oh, yeah, absolutely.
And eventually went your separate ways.
And the last song we wrote was called Our Last Song Together. That's hungry years. Oh, yeah. Absolutely. And eventually went your separate ways. And the last song we wrote was called
Our Last Song Together. That's another
beauty. Yeah. And now, can I
put you on the spot for
hungry years?
I'm gonna cry.
Girl, we made it to the top.
We went so high.
We couldn't stop.
We climbed the ladder
leading us nowhere
Two of us together
Building castles in the air
We spun so fast
We couldn't tell
The gold ring from the carousel.
How could we know the ride would turn out bad?
Everything we wanted was everything we had.
had. I miss the hungry years, the once upon a time, love we long ago, we didn't have a dime.
Those days of me and you, we lost along the way, and so on and so forth and so on and so on
Fantastic.
Wow.
You sound wonderful.
You sound better than ever.
Well, Pavarotti was wrong.
He was wrong, damn him.
And you underrated as a singer.
And that song was covered by everybody.
By Rita Coolidge, by Engelbert, by Andy Williams, by Johnny Mathis.
Peggy Lee. Beautiful. covered by everybody by rita coolidge by engelbert by andy williams by johnny mathis peggy lee beautiful now you say i far be it for me to disagree with the maestro but you say you
haven't written your your best song and i i think that one's going to be hard to top maybe
maybe i i'm going more now for the classical music because it's more challenging. You have more creative freedom
when you write a classical piece.
The changes, the chords, the form.
But, you know,
there's nothing like this two-and-a-half-minute song.
Can we ask you one question from a listener
who's a rabbi?
Ah.
David Komarowski, our friend.
Does Neil have any fond memories of his cousin,
the great Edie Gourmet?
My cousin was Edie Gourmet. The original name, Gourmezano. Edie Gourmezano, also Sephardic Jew.
Her parents came from Istanbul, Turkey as well. One of the great singers of our time, one of the
belters. She's in the class of Streisand absolutely she recorded a couple of my
songs round and round I go in circles trying to be free since you went away the world is closing
in on me and my world keeps getting smaller every day Edie Gourmet was one of the greatest.
And when she passed away, Steve and I cried and reminisced.
Yes, we were very sad to hear the news, the recent news about Steve.
We've tried to get him here since we started this damn thing in 2014.
Oh, one of the great male voices, absolutely.
And a wonderful raconteur.
Funny.
Great storyteller and funny and very sad.
I'm sorry to hear that. And I think Frank Sinatra admired Steve Lawrence's singing. Absolutely.
I think besides Sinatra, Tony Bennett, Victor Moan was the greatest technical singer and Steve
Lawrence was another great technical, beautiful singer.
Yeah.
He could do anything.
Yeah.
One last question from a guest.
You might enjoy this one.
From Paul Byrne.
Given that Neil seems like a very nice, perfectly pleasant fellow,
what's the most rock and roll thing he's ever done?
Well, we all took a little drugs in the old days.
We did a little here.
And Andy Warhol and me and Liza would go into Studio 54,
a little toot here and there.
Wow.
And then I got some grass from...
I'm loving this.
I got some grass from VG's...
Barry Gibb.
That must have been good grass.
Gave me some grass.
He said, try writing a song on the grass.
And he was correct.
Because I came up with something great.
But the next morning, when you listen to it, it was shit. He was correct because I came up with something great.
But the next morning when you listen to it, it was shit.
Perfectly honest answer.
We appreciate your honesty.
Tell us about your life now.
You got grandchildren.
They call you Papa Neil.
Papa Neil. I heard you say the other night.
I have a twin girl, 16, and a boy, 13. I'm Papa Neil. Papa Neil. I heard you say the other night. I have twin girls, 16, and a boy, 13.
I'm Papa Neil, and I did an album called Waking Up is Hard to Do
because they wanted me to change the words to be child-friendly.
Yeah, kids' songs.
Kids' songs.
They sang the doo-wop vocals.
They were eight, nine years old.
And then I said, I'm going to write a book.
And I wrote a children's book called Dinosaur Pet, which was number three on the New York Times bestseller.
One and two.
Remember, that's the first time we met.
You were on the Joy Behar show plugging that book.
That's right.
Yes.
Number one and two with Fifty Shades of Grey.
Yes.
And can we just sing the comma, comma, down, doobie, do, down, down part together?
Just that
You're making it work.
Ready? Do do do down
doobie doo down down
comma comma down
doobie doo down down
comma comma
down doobie doo down
down. Breaking
up is hard to
do. And I was the king
of, every time we ran out of lyrics, we'd put
in a doobie-doo.
Oh, you're the king of tra-la-las
and doobie-doos. And I kept it in the
record. It became a Neil Sedaka trademark.
Right. So many records had doobie-doos.
And then you named one of those 70s
records, The Tra-La Days Are Over.
That's correct. Yes, yes, yes, yes.
That is correct correct you were wonderful
the other night and if people so it's a it's a limited tour schedule these days i want to we
want to tell our listeners where to go see you thank you i just to uh uh isolated at maybe eight
or nine concerts a year at this age the traveling is hard but i love when i get up on the stage it's
that adrenaline endorphin rush but if people go to the website
Rob is here too, he's nodding
they can see the upcoming dates
you're going to be in Canada
I saw you're going to be in California
in Washington State and in Hawaii
so you're traveling pretty long distances
well, Liba wants to wear nice clothes
is that what it is?
and Frank was at the concert it was wonderful nice clothes. Is that what it is? And Frank
was at the concert.
It was wonderful.
And he told me,
and I hadn't said anything
to Frank about this
when you heard the song.
And what was your reaction?
You know,
he's talked,
what have we had,
260 guests on the show?
He's brought up
My Yiddish Mama
probably 10 times
with 10 different guests.
Oh, was it Jessel
that used to sing it?
Yeah.
My Yiddish Mama.
You heard his Jessel?
Yeah.
And Sophie Tucker,
I did a Yiddish album
called Neil Sedaka
sings Brighton Beach Memories
and I did it
My Yiddish mama Es gibt nicht besser in der Welt
A Yiddish mama
Oy vey, wie bitter wenn sie fällt
Wie schön und lichtig
Ist ein Hals
Wenn die Mama ist du Wie traurig finster wird The gorgeous song.
Beautiful.
Oh, thank you.
It's a gorgeous song.
He's brought it up 20 times.
I wish I wrote it.
Now we got a live version.
Wow.
Plugs.
Neil, I'm going to plug this book,
even though it's hard to find.
Neil Sedaka, Laughter in the Rain, My Own Story.
There's a better one by Rich Podolsky
called Neil Sedaka,
The Rock and Roll Survivor. It's about three or
four years old. Okay. I was going to get that one,
but I thought I'd get the one in your own voice.
The other one is even
better. And this wonderful
CD, which I picked up at the concert,
Neil Sedaka by Popular Demand.
Thank you.
And this one, I don't know if this is out of print too,
but the show goes on, which has you and Tony Christie
doing a wonderful duet on Amarillo.
On the Albert Hall.
I did the Albert Hall, yes, many times.
And we'll do a lot of promotion for this
on a lot of social media.
We want people to go see you.
It was such a delight, really.
A delight. I've been a great
admirer of yours. Oh, thank
you. And, you know, we know what
it is to be in this business.
It's not easy. Not easy.
Two Brooklyn kids made good. That's right.
That's right. And
you do it, why? Because
of the applause,
the adoration, the
love. And the check at the end.
Why not?
The Emmys.
You do it for the applause, Dan.
He does it for the shekels.
The Emmys is true.
That's the bottom line.
I don't know when I've had more fun doing one of these.
And your wife is the same name as my daughter, Dara.
Yes.
I have a daughter dara wow
they had a hit record and what was your your father's name mac max was my father's name you're
kidding and now it's my son's name wonderful but you guys be cousins too uh i don't know
but dara is a beautiful name beautiful she's a beautiful lady these people who came out to see
you we do a lot of these shows and we don't usually have an audience and there's a in fact
you might recognize that gentleman way in the back does he look familiar to you uh yeah dave
milstein yes hi dave how are you your old assistant this i can't remember having more fun
this doing one of these great these Neil this was an absolute treat
I loved it especially having a keyboard in front of me
it was so wonderful
well we have to thank Dave Seidel
and Jared O'Connell and the nice people here at Earwolf
for providing that
we didn't do a whole song next time we'll do a whole song
you'll come back?
I've got more cards
and as Frank will tell you
I always love to have a Jew guest
on the show
better than the Goyim Shkutz Frank will tell you, I always love to have a Jew guest on the show.
Better than the Goyim Shkutz.
The man is
the consummate entertainer. I have to say,
and I'm repeating myself now, but your show
is also very funny.
There's some physical, there's some dancing,
there's some schtick, there's a little bit of
everything. I don't know.
Maybe I did the wrong thing all these years.
Maybe I should have done something else.
You're a great entertainer.
Thank you.
My wife and I were thrilled at the show.
And this was a blast.
Darren, did you have fun?
Yes.
The best.
We won't top this one for a while, Neil.
So this has been Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal podcast with my co-host, Frank Santopadre and the great, great Neil Sataka.
Thank you both.
Thank you.
Thank you. I can feel my soul exploding There's a good feeling
Helping me to find my way
My, my, my way
When the bluebird sings her sad, sad song
And the wind brings the cold to tag along
Oh yeah, I can feel the spirit moving
I can almost touch the sky
Reaching for a new tomorrow
I know it's hard
But music makes me wanna try, wanna try
And that's when the music takes me, takes me to a brighter day
That's when the music takes me, helping me to find my way.
That's when the music takes me.
That's when the music takes me.
That's when the music takes me Closer to a brighter day
I can feel my soul exploding
There's a good feeling
Helping me to find my way
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah
And then I'm saying
That's when the music takes me
Takes me to a brighter day
That's when the music takes me
Helping me to find my way
Happy, happy, happy day
Happy, happy, happy day.
Happy, happy, happy day.
Happy, happy, happy day. That's when the music takes me.
That's when the music takes me.
That's when the music takes me.
And that's when the music takes me. Happy, happy, when the music takes me. Music Music
Music
Music
Music
Music
Music
Music
Music
Music
Music