As far as gender in songs goes, how about Joan Baez on "The Night they Drove Old Dixie Down," Cher on "You'd Better Sit down, Kids," and Joni Mitchell on "Free Man in Paris"? They all referred to themselves as males.
As great as Soul and Inspiration and You've Lost That Lovin' Feelin' are this tune is still the best thing the Righteous Bros. EVER did. The lyrics are what gives it the edge. A man who have one last chance that only this female listener can grant. Mixed with the vocal inflections by the Bros. makes it the winner.
BEAUTIFIUL!!!!!!!! Did she write the words or the music or help with both? Was this made to show potential artists, like the RB? Thanks!! Where the hell did you get this???
@nicodagger I believe Carole did music and Gerry was the words man. This is from an acetate disc that I don't personally own! ( I wish) . Yes she used to do a demo version to show the artist how to sing it. This one I believe was written especially for The Righteous Bros.
@richardsnow Thanks!! Now I take back all the nasty thoughts I've had about "Tapestry"....CArol had a real genius for melody/harmony...I can hear how this was written for the RB...but why is Phil Spector listed, on some sites, as the co-writer? He produced it, did a great job...but did he also help write it? As a songwriter myself, this shows again that a great song can shine without any production or a lot.
@nicodagger From A book I read , I get the impression that Phill's input on the songs he recorded was less than Goffin/ king or Mann/weil or whoever he was writing with. Although of course he did write "To Know him is to love him" and "When I Saw you" on his own. I recall reading that on "River Deep" he was responsible for the middle 8 R&B flavoured section.
I'd take a guess that his input on the Goffin/king songs he produced was minimal. His contribution being providing his "hit sound"
@richardsnow - It smells like the deal back in the day when Elvis would automatically get co-writing credit on tunes, the big tradeoff: "If you want my boy to make your song a hit he gets to be cowriter". I've never heard this demo before, it's surprising how much of Brian Wilson's orchestration for the Beach Boys' version came directly from her piano arrangement
Listening to this, is there any doubt that only the Righteous Brothers were in mind to do this?...I can't imagine them having written this for another artist.
Absolutely incredible. The two other great versions are of course the Righteous Brothers hit version & the Beach Boys version from '76 off 15 Big Ones. This is truly magical though.
Oh my god, there is NOTHING I find more fascinating than these brill building demos. It's FANASTIC to hear the piano-and-vocal origins of these songs. They really show off Carole's genius, as well as the rich variety of 60s pop orchestrations that would help these songs realize their potential.
Please post any more Carole demos you have! Do you by any chance have any of Ellie Greenwich? I've heard that she and Carole were the "demo queens" of the brill building set.
Fantastic! I love how she uses that bass line all the way through the song...genius!
MrKat65 2 months ago
so good. i like the beach boys version too, although it's fade out is hasty.
mbullo 5 months ago
As far as gender in songs goes, how about Joan Baez on "The Night they Drove Old Dixie Down," Cher on "You'd Better Sit down, Kids," and Joni Mitchell on "Free Man in Paris"? They all referred to themselves as males.
grammarita1 6 months ago
Bill Medley, after the Righteous Brothers did this one in concert, exclaimed that the show could end right then because this is such a great song.
grammarita1 6 months ago
Just Beautiful , Beautiful , Beautiful , Beautiful , Beautiful , Beautiful , Beautiful , Beautiful , Beautiful , Beautiful , Beautiful , Beautiful , Beautiful , Beautiful , Beautiful , Beautiful , Beautiful , Beautiful , Beautiful , Beautiful , Beautiful , Beautiful , Beautiful ,
TheKunig 8 months ago
She must written this song especially for them since she says "girl" insteas od "boy."
MIKECNW 10 months ago
As great as Soul and Inspiration and You've Lost That Lovin' Feelin' are this tune is still the best thing the Righteous Bros. EVER did. The lyrics are what gives it the edge. A man who have one last chance that only this female listener can grant. Mixed with the vocal inflections by the Bros. makes it the winner.
harvey1954 1 year ago 2
BEAUTIFIUL!!!!!!!! Did she write the words or the music or help with both? Was this made to show potential artists, like the RB? Thanks!! Where the hell did you get this???
nicodagger 1 year ago
@nicodagger I believe Carole did music and Gerry was the words man. This is from an acetate disc that I don't personally own! ( I wish) . Yes she used to do a demo version to show the artist how to sing it. This one I believe was written especially for The Righteous Bros.
richardsnow 1 year ago
@richardsnow Thanks!! Now I take back all the nasty thoughts I've had about "Tapestry"....CArol had a real genius for melody/harmony...I can hear how this was written for the RB...but why is Phil Spector listed, on some sites, as the co-writer? He produced it, did a great job...but did he also help write it? As a songwriter myself, this shows again that a great song can shine without any production or a lot.
nicodagger 1 year ago
@nicodagger From A book I read , I get the impression that Phill's input on the songs he recorded was less than Goffin/ king or Mann/weil or whoever he was writing with. Although of course he did write "To Know him is to love him" and "When I Saw you" on his own. I recall reading that on "River Deep" he was responsible for the middle 8 R&B flavoured section.
I'd take a guess that his input on the Goffin/king songs he produced was minimal. His contribution being providing his "hit sound"
richardsnow 1 year ago
@richardsnow - It smells like the deal back in the day when Elvis would automatically get co-writing credit on tunes, the big tradeoff: "If you want my boy to make your song a hit he gets to be cowriter". I've never heard this demo before, it's surprising how much of Brian Wilson's orchestration for the Beach Boys' version came directly from her piano arrangement
negriljerry 1 year ago
One of the most beautiful things I've ever heard.
caraquinha 1 year ago 2
Another unique version of this song was the 1966 Album by Ex-Animal keyboard
player, Alan Price,"This Price is Right." I
have Righteous Bros power vocal version,
but favor Price's arrangement. Perhaps it is on YouTube, or some kind soul will ad
it. Give a listen, enjoy! Thank you.
movingon4ever 1 year ago
@movingon4ever Would like to hear that, it's not on you tube
richardsnow 1 year ago
Listening to this, is there any doubt that only the Righteous Brothers were in mind to do this?...I can't imagine them having written this for another artist.
pls9927 2 years ago
Absolutely incredible. The two other great versions are of course the Righteous Brothers hit version & the Beach Boys version from '76 off 15 Big Ones. This is truly magical though.
houseofhits 2 years ago
God...this is Great !!!!
barney906 2 years ago
Oh my god, there is NOTHING I find more fascinating than these brill building demos. It's FANASTIC to hear the piano-and-vocal origins of these songs. They really show off Carole's genius, as well as the rich variety of 60s pop orchestrations that would help these songs realize their potential.
Please post any more Carole demos you have! Do you by any chance have any of Ellie Greenwich? I've heard that she and Carole were the "demo queens" of the brill building set.
OmeletteThePuppy 2 years ago 2
I only have 2 others, porpoise song, which is already on you tube from another user. The other is "Sharing You". I'll get that uploaded soon
;-)
richardsnow 2 years ago
Thanks so much! It's really great of you to upload this stuff. Can never give too much exposure to the genius that is Carole :-D
OmeletteThePuppy 2 years ago
IT SOUNDS GREAT! Thanks for posting another carole king demo! HUGE FAN! Please post more when you can!
cbfall 2 years ago
This is terrific...helluva find!
Rainwhisker167 2 years ago
GREAT!
cbfall 2 years ago
Where did this come from?
blau45 2 years ago
It's from an acetate demo disc.
richardsnow 2 years ago
Thanks!
hibiring 2 years ago