Ernie Maresca was a fairly successful songwriter in the New York doo wop/rock roll scene in the first half of the 1960s, most known for writing several of
Dion's biggest hits (by himself or in collaboration with
Dion): Runaround Sue, The Wanderer, Lovers Who Wander, A Lover's Prayer, and Donna the Prima Donna. He also wrote for a great deal of other artists throughout the 1960s, usually in a style that combined doo wop with the developing sounds of girl groups or
Dion's boastful Bronx pop/rock; the Regents' modest modern doo wop hit Runaround was the biggest of these. Although he didn't think of himself as a singer, and was an average nondescript vocalist at best, he was persuaded to record as a solo artist. In mid-1962, he ended up with his one and only hit under his own name, Shout Shout (Knock Yourself Out). A fun if extremely basic rocker that used the same chord pattern that anchored
Dion hits like Runaround Sue and added the dance-rock energy of bands like
Joey Dee the Starliters, it made number six.
Maresca made an album in 1962, and continued to record, without success, for Seville through 1965 and then for Laurie during the remainder of the 1960s. He kept on writing for plenty of artists, too (often on the Laurie roster), and in that capacity had some modest hits with Reparata the Delrons (Whenever a Teenager Cries), Bernadette Carroll (Party Girl), and Jimmie Rodgers (Child of Clay, co-written with Jimmy Curtiss). While some of his songs for Dion were classics, Maresca was a limited songwriter, many of his compositions limited to variations (or replicas) of the ascending, circular basic doo wop chord structures heard on Dion's Runaround Sue, The Wanderer, Lovers Who Wander, and Donna the Prima Donna. By the 1970s he was head of Laurie Records' publicity department, which concentrated on reissuing the label's catalog, and as of 2000 was working as a consultant to EMI and administrator for Laurie's publishing. ~ Richie Unterberger, Rovi