Slacker Logo

Bruce Sudano

Advertisement
Advertisement

Biography

Songwriter Bruce Sudano was born on September 26, 1948, in Brooklyn, New York, where he co-founded the pop/rock band Alive N Kickin' in 1968. A protégée of Tommy James, he co-wrote Tommy James and the Shondells' Top 20 hit, "Ball of Fire," one year later. James returned the favor by writing Alive N Kickin's signature song, "Tighter, Tighter," which peaked at Number 7 on the American charts in 1970. Following the band's breakup, Sudano formed the R&B group Brooklyn Dreams and began a series of collaborations with disco queen Donna Summer. Brooklyn Dreams' three members appeared on Summer's "Heaven Knows," which climbed to Number 4 in 1977, and co-wrote her Grammy-nominated disco classic "Bad Girls," which topped the American charts for five weeks in 1979. Sudano and Summer became romantic partners, too, marrying in 1980 and starting a family shortly thereafter. Although Brooklyn Dreams disbanded that same year, Sudano's songwriting career flourished throughout the 1980s, with his biggest successes including Dolly Parton's chart-topping country hit "Starting Over Again" and Jermaine Jackson's Grammy-nominated duet with Michael Jackson, "Tell Me I'm Not Dreamin' (Too Good to Be True)." He performed as a solo artist, too, releasing his debut in 1981 landing a string of adult contemporary hits with latter-day albums like 2004's Rainy Day Soul and 2009's Life and the Romantic.
Read All Read Less

Albums


Artists Related to
Bruce Sudano

Joe Esposito

FEATURED

Donna Summer

FEATURED

Wayne Watson

FEATURED

Benny Hester

FEATURED

Boz Scaggs

FEATURED

Julia Fordham

FEATURED

Sade

FEATURED

Joe Cocker

FEATURED

Paolo Nutini

FEATURED

Bee Gees

FEATURED

John Oates

FEATURED

David Soul

FEATURED

Gordon Haskell

FEATURED

Peter Wolf

FEATURED

Charlie Puth

FEATURED
See All Related Artists

LIVE STREAM... SOCIAL RADIO STREAM...