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  1. Hear what made them so special in this set of hits and overlooked gems from their songbook. “Sweet Things” is Ace’s third volume of songs written by the uncrowned king and queen of the girl group era. Although Ellie Greenwich and Jeff Barry first met when they were children, their mutual love of music drew them closer in the early 1960s ...

  2. This collection of songs written by Ellie Greenwich & Jeff Barry is amazing for the great engineering and re-mastering. From the opening Beach Boys' track "I Can Hear Music," the set cooks. I've been having a Lesley Gore resurgence since the release of her delightful new set Ever Since sent repeated tracks to the top of my personal top ten. Her ...

  3. Ellie can be heard singing background on many of these tracks. Many songs are great, some are goofy, and one ( "Give Us Your Blessing") is insufferably mawkish. More good news is that several Spector tracks that could not be included in the previous Barry/Greenwich collection are here in terrific sound. A must for anyone who grew up listening ...

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  4. I Can Hear Music est une chanson pop écrite par Jeff Barry, Ellie Greenwich et Phil Spector. À l'origine elle est enregistrée par les Ronettes en 1966. La chanson est plus tard reprise par les Beach Boys en 1969, puis par Larry Lurex , un pseudonyme de Freddie Mercury en 1973, et par José Hoebee en 1983.

  5. View credits, reviews, tracks and shop for the 2008 CD release of "Do-Wah-Diddy (Words And Music By Ellie Greenwich And Jeff Barry)" on Discogs.

  6. About I Can Hear Music "I Can Hear Music" is a song written by Jeff Barry, Ellie Greenwich and Phil Spector for American girl group the Ronettes in 1966. This version spent one week on the Billboard Pop chart at number 100. Three years later, American rock band the Beach Boys released a cover version as a single from their album 20/20 (1969 ...

  7. About I Can Hear Music "I Can Hear Music" is a song written by Jeff Barry, Ellie Greenwich and Phil Spector for American girl group the Ronettes in 1966. This version spent one week on the Billboard Pop chart at number 100. Three years later, American rock band the Beach Boys released a cover version as a single from their album 20/20 (1969 ...