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Muskrat Love

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"Muskrat Love" is a soft rock song written by Willis Alan Ramsey depicting a romantic liaison between two anthropomorphic muskrats named Susie and Sam. The song was first recorded by Ramsey himself on his sole album release Willis Alan Ramsey (1972) on which the song was entitled "Muskrat Candlelight" referencing the song's opening lyric. A 1973 cover version by America—reëntitled "Muskrat Love" for the lyrics that close the chorus—was a minor hit. However, the 1976 cover by Captain & Tennille resulted in the song's highest profile, peaking at number four on the Billboard Hot 100. It also reached number two on the Cash Box chart, which ranked it as the 30th biggest hit of 1976.[1]

America version

"Muskrat Love"
Song

America recorded "Muskrat Love" for their 1973 album Hat Trick, marking the second time the band had recorded a song not written by a member of America. In putting together ten songs to comprise the eventual Hat Trick album, America's members Gerry Beckley, Dewey Bunnell, and Dan Peek had agreed to each contribute three compositions with a mutually agreeable cover song being recorded as the tenth track. David Dickey who played bass for America brought Ramsey's "Muskrat Candlelight" to the group's attention: according to Beckley—"to us it sounded like a very bluesy, quirky tune. We just felt it was quirky and commercial, and we worked it up."[2]

"Muskrat Love" was issued as an advance single from Hat Trick in July 1973 although Dan Peek would recall that America's label Warner Bros. "hated" the track and "begged us not to release it as a single...We were stupid to press the issue but we liked the song for its easy, acoustic, harmonic beauty not realizing that perhaps it was badly cast for us in order to retain the fairly hip image we had eked out". Peek adds that the single "easily hit the Top 40 on the strength of our past successes"[3] although "Muskrat Love" in fact marked a downturn in America's popularity with a low peak on the Hot 100 in Billboard at #67; the single did better on the Billboard Adult Contemporary chart reaching 11.

In a 2012 interview Gerry Beckley said of "Muskrat Love": "It's a polarizing little number. After concerts, some people tell us they can't believe we didn't play it, while others go out of their way to thank us for not performing it."[4]

Charts (America Release)

Chart (1973) Peak
position
US Billboard Easy Listening 11
US Billboard Hot 100 67
US Cash Box Singles Chart 33
US Record World Singles Chart 69

Captain & Tennille version

"Muskrat Love"
Song
B-side"Honey Come Love Me"

Captain & Tennille recorded "Muskrat Love" for their 1976 album release Song of Joy. According to Toni Tennille, who comprised Captain & Tennille with her husband Daryl Dragon, the duo had added the song to their nightclub set list a few years earlier after hearing the America single on their car radio: "I said to Daryl: 'Did you hear that? I swear they're singing about muskrats.' I had to know what the lyrics were so the next day we went out and found the sheet music. I said to Daryl: 'This song is hysterical; why don’t we add it to our club-act?' And [the audience] went nuts for it."[citation needed] Being short one track for Song of Joy, Captain & Tennille made an impromptu decision to record "Muskrat Love", including the synthesizer generated sound effects that Dragon had created for the song's performance in their nightclub act, these sound effects meant to evoke the imagined sound of muskrats mating: the eventual 7" single version of Captain & Tennille's "Muskrat Love" would feature an "endless loop" of these sound effects created by having the song's end run into the locked groove of the 45.

Despite Captain & Tennille's stated disinterest in highlighting "Muskrat Love" as an item in their repertoire, it was the song they chose to sing at a July 1976 White House dinner honoring Queen Elizabeth II: the press subsequently ran a statement from a dinner guest who opined it was "in very poor taste" to sing of mating muskrats before the Queen. Toni Tennille responded to this charge saying: "only a person with a dirty mind would see something wrong. It's a gentle Disneyesque kind of song."[6]

Purportedly there were no plans to issue a third single off Song of Joy following the Top Ten success of "Lonely Night (Angel Face)" and "Shop Around": however A&M Records decided to issue "Muskrat Love" as a single after WISM, a Madison WI radio station that had been airing the album cut reported phenomenal listener response to the song in September 1976. Captain & Tennille's "Muskrat Love" reached a #4 Hot 100 peak that December, also spending four non-consecutive weeks at #1 on the Easy Listening chart.[7]

Based on the Captain & Tennille version, "Muskrat Love" has become a staple on "worst song" lists, including a 2006 poll by CNN.com.[8] Gerry Beckley of America cited "Muskrat Love" as "a fine example of where the closer you go back to the original seed, the nicer it is. Ours was once removed, and the Captain & Tennille's was even more removed."[2] In a 2001 interview with Reno News & Review, Toni Tennille said of Captain & Tennille's "Muskrat Love": "I don’t know why people are so polarized about this tune. People either love it, or they loathe it."[9]

The song was also featured in "The Annotated History of American Muskrat," a 2014 production of the Circuit Theatre Company in Boston, Massachusetts.[10] It appears in the 2013 film Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues.

Chart performance (Captain & Tennille Release)

Other versions

The first cover version of "Muskrat Candlelight" was an abridged version entitled "Sun Down" recorded by Lani Hall for her 1972 album Sun Down Lady: with composition credit to Willis Alan Ramsey with "additional lyrics" by Lani Hall and her husband Herb Alpert, "Sun Down" recasts Ramsey's original song as a straightforward romantic ballad omitting Ramsey's motif of muskrats courting. It was on A&M Records, which Herb Alpert founded and ran, that "Muskrat Love" with its original lyrics would become a major hit for Captain & Tennille in 1976.

A parody version of "Muskrat Love" entitled "Hamster Love" was written and performed by Big Daddy and included on Dr. Demento's 30th Anniversary album.[12] Another parody called "Muskrat Gloves" was recorded by comedian Tim Cavanagh.[13]

See also

References

  1. ^ The Cash Box Year-End Charts: 1976 Retrieved March 30, 2015
  2. ^ a b "accessbackstage". Retrieved July 29, 2011.
  3. ^ Peek, Dan (2004). An American Band: the story of America. Xulon Press. pp. 174–175. ISBN 1-594679-29-0.
  4. ^ "Q&A with America Singer Gerry Beckley". ShermanOaks.patch.com. Retrieved November 8, 2013.
  5. ^ The 10 Ickiest Soft-Rock Hits of the '70s Retrieved March 30, 2015
  6. ^ Windeler, Robert (October 18, 1976). "Year of the Dragons", People vol. 6 no. 16.
  7. ^ Whitburn, Joel (2002). Top Adult Contemporary: 1961–2001. Record Research. p. 45.
  8. ^ "The Worst Songs of All Time, Part II". CNN. 2006. Retrieved 2009-01-10.
  9. ^ "Toni! Toni! Toni!". NewsReview.Com. Retrieved August 26, 2013.
  10. ^ "The Annotated History of the American Muskrat". CircuitTheatre.com. Retrieved August 15, 2014.
  11. ^ Chartjunkie Top Songs of 1977 Retrieved March 30, 2015
  12. ^ "Hamster Love by Big Daddy". The Mad Music Archive. Retrieved 2010-01-12.
  13. ^ "Muskrat Gloves by Tim Cavanagh". Retrieved 21 October 2012.

External links