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Baby Blue (Badfinger song)

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"Baby Blue"
Song
B-side"Flying"

"Baby Blue" is a song recorded by the band Badfinger for inclusion on their 1971 album, Straight Up. The song was written by Pete Ham, produced by Todd Rundgren, and released on Apple Records. It regained fame four decades later upon being featured in the series finale of AMC's Breaking Bad, which uses the track's title lyric as a reference to the special and iconic blue methamphetamine produced by main character Walter White.

Writing

Ham wrote the song about a woman named Dixie Armstrong, whom he had dated during Badfinger's last US tour.[2]

Release

"Baby Blue" was released as a single in the US on 6 March 1972, in a blue-tinted picture sleeve and featuring a new mix. Because Al Steckler, the head of Apple US, felt that it needed a stronger hook in the opening, he remixed the track with engineer Eddie Kramer in February 1972, applying heavy reverb to the snare during the first verse and middle eight.[2] It was the group's last Top 20 single, peaking at number 14 on the Billboard Pop Singles chart.[3]

However, the chaos that was enveloping the Apple UK operation at the time was strongly evident with regard to this song. While Apple US gave the song a picture sleeve and a remix to ensure that it was a hit, Apple UK remained unaware of its commercial potential. Although the single was even assigned a release number for the UK (Apple 42), "Baby Blue" was never actually released as a UK single.[2]

Despite Badfinger's four top-20 Apple singles, Badfinger would only release one more single on Apple Records, "Apple of My Eye" in December 1973.

Personnel

  • Pete Ham - lead vocals, rhythm guitar
  • Tom Evans - backing vocals, bass guitar
  • Joey Molland - lead guitar
  • Mike Gibbins - drums, percussion

Other uses and resurgence of popularity

Aimee Mann covered the song as the B-side to her 1993 single "I Should've Known".[4]

Singer-songwriter Barbara Manning covered the song with her band, S.F. Seals, on the 1994 album "Nowhere" (Matador Records).[5]

"Baby Blue" made an appearance in Martin Scorsese's 2006 Oscar-winning film, The Departed.

"Baby Blue" made an appearance in season 3 of The OC.

Phil Keaggy covered the song in his EPIC Records LP "Blue" in 1994.

The song later achieved fame when it played during the closing scene of the series finale of Breaking Bad.[6] Online streams increased in popularity strongly almost immediately following the broadcast.[7] The song is, according to Nielson SoundScan,[8] selling over 5,300 downloads since the broadcast. Billboard.com predicts that the song "could return to the Billboard charts as well, most likely with a placing on the Rock Digital Songs chart."[9] Joey Molland, the last surviving member of the classic line-up of Badfinger, took to Twitter to express his excitement at the song's use in the finale[10] and subsequently began to retweet news articles about the song's usage in the finale. This appearance led to a 2,981 percent increase of sales of the song as well as 9,000 percent increase in streaming over Spotify.[11] It became a top-selling song on iTunes following the broadcast.[12]

References

  1. ^ "Badfinger - Straight Up". Allmusic. Retrieved 20 January 2015.
  2. ^ a b c Matovina, Dan. Without You: The Tragic Story of Badfinger. ISBN 0-9657122-2-2.
  3. ^ Whitburn, Joel (2004). The Billboard Book of Top 40 Hits: Eighth Edition. Record Research. p. 42.
  4. ^ Aimee Mann – "I Should've Known", Discogs.
  5. ^ Barbara Manning with the San Francisco Seals – Nowhere, Discogs.
  6. ^ "Why 'Breaking Bad' Chose Badfinger's 'Baby Blue'", rollingstone.com
  7. ^ Hickey, Walter (30 September 2013). "Everyone Is Listening To Badfinger's 'Baby Blue' From The 'Breaking Bad' Finale". Business Insider. Retrieved 1 October 2013.
  8. ^ Kafka, Peter (3 October 2013). "How to Sell Songs on iTunes If You're Not Miley Cyrus or Katy Perry". All Things Digital. Retrieved 4 October 2013.
  9. ^ Caulfield, Keith (30 September 2013). "'Breaking Bad' Finale's Last Song Surges With 3,000% Sales Gain". Billboard. Retrieved 1 October 2013.
  10. ^ Molland, Joey (29 September 2013). "Thank you #BreakingBad for choosing Badfinger's original recording of BABY BLUE for the final song. First, the Departed film ... now THIS!". Twitter. Retrieved 2 October 2013.
  11. ^ Subramanian, Courtney (2 October 2013). "Breaking Bad's Final Scene Boosts Sales for 1970's Band Badfinger". TIME. Time Inc.
  12. ^ Suddath, Claire (4 October 2013). "Breaking Badfinger: Who's Getting the Baby Blue Money?". Bloomberg Businessweek. Retrieved 20 June 2014.