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You may not know him by name, but you know his songs

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INDUCTEES

Along with Desmond Child, other 2008 inductees into the Songwriters Hall of Fame are Albert Hammond, Loretta Lynn, Alan Menken and John Sebastian. For more information, go to www.songhall.org.

mhamersly@MiamiHerald.com

Desmond Child might not get the adulation the biggest musical acts of the past three decades are slathered with, but for those who know the industry, the prolific songwriter and producer, who spent much of his childhood in Miami and maintains a home here, is a true superstar.

Child is the man behind the curtain of some of the world's biggest hits, including Bon Jovi's Livin' On a Prayer and You Give Love a Bad Name, Aerosmith's Angel and Crazy, Joan Jett's I Hate Myself for Loving You, KISS' I Was Made for Loving You and Ricky Martin's Livin' La Vida Loca and The Cup of Life.

He also made a name on his own with the group Desmond Child & Rouge, which released two albums in the late-'70s and will reunite Thursday night in New York when Child is inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame.

The 54-year-old musician -- whom Aerosmith frontman Steven Tyler called ''a genius'' -- talked to The Miami Herald about his impending honor, his beginnings as a songwriter and reuniting with Rouge at Thursday's ceremony.

Q: How does it feel to be inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame?

A: It's hard to believe it because I've dreamed about it for so long. It was funny because I had been nominated twice before but I hadn't made it, and I spoke to the heads of it and they said, ''Well, we always thought you were too young to get it, but then we recently looked at your bio and realized you are old. You just looked young.'' So I don't know if that was a compliment.

Q: At the ceremony, you're going to reunite with Rouge?

A: Yes, by default. I couldn't get any of the big stars that I've worked with because they're all on tour this summer, so it was kind of a tough scheduling situation. For months, we thought Ricky Martin was gonna do it and then at the last minute he pulled out. Even Alice Cooper couldn't make it. So what can I say -- I can count on myself, right? Maybe we can make it again, now that it doesn't matter what you look like.

Q: What made you realize you were meant for the music industry?

A: My mother's a songwriter -- her name is Elena Casals -- and my uncle had married one of the top singers in Cuban music, named Olga Guillot, and music was always going on in my home. And so I didn't know that not everybody wrote songs. Ever since I was little, I'd sit at the piano and compose melodies. I wrote my first formal song when I was 14, for a girl in my junior high -- I went to Nautilus Junior High School [in Miami Beach], and there was a girl named Laura Stern. She had a birthday party, and I didn't have any money whatsoever to buy her a gift, so I wrote her a song instead and played it for her. My very first song was called Birthday Blues.

Q: You've worked with so many stars. Are there any you regret not having had the chance to work with?

A: I regret not having worked with Madonna, George Michael -- these are my idols -- Shakira. I would love to have one of my songs performed by Barbra Streisand. There are so many -- Aretha Franklin.

Q: Have you asked any of them to work with you?

A: I've met George Michael and I kind of hinted, but he wasn't in a space to be co-writing. And Madonna usually uses track guys, the guys who come up with the background music, and she's writing the melodies and the lyrics. So she doesn't need a person like me. I'm really not a person that they would require.

Q: What's the typical process for getting together with an artist? Who approaches whom?

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