Darling Be Home Soon
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"Darlin' Be Home Soon" | ||||
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Single by The Lovin' Spoonful | ||||
from the album You're a Big Boy Now soundtrack | ||||
B-side | "Darlin' Companion" | |||
Released | January 1967 | |||
Recorded | 1966 | |||
Genre | Pop | |||
Length | 3:32 | |||
Label | Kama Sutra 220 | |||
Songwriter(s) | John Sebastian | |||
Producer(s) | Erik Jacobsen | |||
The Lovin' Spoonful singles chronology | ||||
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"Darlin' Be Home Soon" (or "Darling Be Home Soon") is a song written by John Sebastian of The Lovin' Spoonful for the soundtrack of the 1966 Francis Ford Coppola film You're a Big Boy Now. It appeared on The Lovin' Spoonful's 1967 soundtrack album You're a Big Boy Now and was released as a single, reaching #15 on the US pop charts.[1]
Sebastian performed his composition at Woodstock; it was the fourth song out of the five he performed at the 1969 music festival in White Lake, New York.
Writing and recording
Coppola commissioned Sebastian to write music for the film, and for one scene wanted a song with a similar mood and tempo to "Monday, Monday" by the Mamas and the Papas. Sebastian said that he wrote the song as "pleas for a partner to spend a few minutes talking before leaving.... [but] you never knew if the other person was actually there listening or was already gone". Coppola approved the song, and it was recorded by the band but with session musician Billy LaVorgna rather than Joe Butler on drums. The arrangement was by Artie Schroeck. After the recording was completed and the musicians left, the producer, Erik Jacobsen, discovered that an engineer had mistakenly erased Sebastian's vocal track, so he had to re-record it the next day. Sebastian said: "What you hear on the record is me, a half hour after learning that my original vocal track had been erased. You can even hear my voice quiver a little at the end. That was me thinking about the vocal we lost and wanting to kill someone."[2] It has been described as "...one of the most heartfelt songs about being away from a loved one, written from the point of view of a musician on the road writing a letter."[3]
Personnel
- John Sebastian - vocals, acoustic guitar
- Zal Yanovsky - electric guitar
- Steve Boone - bass
- Billy LaVorgna - drums
- Artie Schroeck - piano, arranger
- Erik Jacobsen - producer
Other recordings of the song
In 1967, a version by Bobby Darin reached #93 on the US charts.
In 1969 "Darlin' Be Home Soon" appeared on Joe Cocker's Joe Cocker! album; it became a standard of Cocker's, appearing on many compilations and "best of"s. The song was performed by Slade and appears on their successful 1972 live album Slade Alive!. In the same year The Association almost made the top 100 in the US with a single (#104) taken from Waterbeds in Trinidad!
The other charting versions of the song are by the Barra MacNeils (1993, #23 Canadian and on their album Closer to Paradise) and Let Loose (1996, #65 UK as a single, and on the album Rollercoaster).
- 1967 - Bobby Darin
- 1967 - Bud Shank on his album A Spoonful of Jazz
- 1967 - Billie Davis, b/w on UK single "Angel of the Morning" – Decca F 12696
- 1969 - Joe Cocker on his album Joe Cocker!
- 1970 - Barry Allen on his album Barry Allen
- 1970 - The Brothers Four on their album 1970
- 1970 - Maxine Brown, single
- 1970 - Samantha Jones on the B-side of her single "My Way (Comme d'habitude)"
- 1972 - Slade on their live album Slade Alive!
- 1972 - The Association on single and their album Waterbeds in Trinidad!
- 1974 - Gigliola Cinquetti on her album Go (Before You Break My Heart)
- 1989 - Phoebe Snow on the Rude Awakening soundtrack album
- 1990 - Anne Richmond Boston (of The Swimming Pool Q's) on her album The Big House of Time
- 1993 - The Barra MacNeils on their album Closer to Paradise
- 1996 - Let Loose on their album "Rollercoaster"
- 1999 - Jules Shear on the compilation Bleecker Street: Greenwich Village in the 60's
- 2001 - Jimmy Ibbotson on Hummingbirds of the Americas.
- 2005 - Cass Elliot on The Complete Cass Elliot Collection: 1968-71 (recorded in 1968)
- 2006 - Matt Costa on his Sunshine single
- 2008 - Starsailor on their Boy in Waiting EP
- 2009 - Bruce Hornsby on the album The Village: A Celebration of the Music of Greenwich Village
- 2012 - Tedeschi Trucks Band on the album Everybody's Talkin'
References
- ^ Whitburn, Joel (2013). Joel Whitburn's Top Pop Singles, 14th Edition: 1955-2012. Record Research. p. 518.
- ^ a b Myers, Marc (2016). Anatomy of a Song. Grove Press. pp. 72–79. ISBN 978-1-61185-525-8.
- ^ Matthew Greenwald. "Darling Be Home Soon - Joe Cocker | Song Info". AllMusic. Retrieved 2016-07-26.