I Want You Back Again I Cant Remember When

1965 single by the Zombies

"I Want You Back Again"
The-zombies-i-want-you-back-again-1965.jpg
Unmarried by the Zombies
B-side "Recollect When I Loved Her"
Released 12 June 1965
Recorded two March 1965
Studio Decca, London
Genre
  • Jazz rock
  • R&B
Length ii:14
Characterization Parrot
Songwriter(s) Rod Argent
Producer(s) Ken Jones
The Zombies US singles chronology
"She'southward Coming Home"
(1965)
"I Want You Back Once more"
(1965)
"Whenever You're Ready"
(1965)

"I Want You lot Back Again" is a song written by keyboardist Rod Argent and originally recorded past his ring the Zombies. Initially laid downwardly during a session at Decca Studios on 25 November 1964, the group was unsatisfied with the result and the vocal was not re-recorded until 2 March 1965, together with several other songs. The song largely departs from the soft rock sound of their before singles and ventures into jazz stone. Characterized by an unusual rhythmic melody, the song was liked past lead vocalist Colin Blunstone, who didn't like the genre.

Due to contract obligations, along with a principal fixation on the American market, "I Want You Back Once more" was released equally a single in the United States through Parrot Records on 12 June 1965. Backed by "Retrieve When I Loved Her", the song was a commercial failure, reaching only the lower parts of both Billboard Hot 100 and Cashbox Top 100. Due to this, the single never got a Uk release, where it remained unreleased until 1984, when it finally was released on a compilation album with a different championship. It was generally well received upon release and retrospectively.

Background [edit]

By mid-1965, the Zombies had established themselves as respected artists, with their singles "She's Not There" and "Tell Her No" (both 1964) both reaching the top-x on Billboard Hot 100 and Cashbox Tiptop 100.[1] [2] This led the group'due south direction to focus on the American market place,[3] as their singles released in the UK proved to exist commercial failures,[iv] the follow-upward to these singles, "She's Coming Home" was a although a critical success, it failed to reach the summit-20 in the US.[1] [two] This once once more led their tape visitor, Decca Records, along with their American analogue Parrot Records to put pressure on the grouping'south ii primary songwriters, keyboardist Rod Argent and bassist Chris White in order to go them to achieve a hitting.[5] This led Argent to compose "I Want You Back Again",[6] which at the time had the working championship "Somebody Help Me".[7]

The initial version of the vocal was laid down at Decca Studios number ii on 25 November 1964,[8] together with their standard producer Ken Jones.[5] Because 7 tracks where recorded during that session, the Zombies were tired upon the time "I Want You Back Again was recorded, which led to them getting unsatisfied with the terminate result.[viii] The group would only attempt the song again on 2 March 1965, in one case over again at Decca together with Jones.[9] During that session, the ring laid downwardly several songs, including "She's Coming Home."[9] "I Want You lot Back Again" was recorded in xi takes during that session,[six] after which, the grouping satisfied, shelved the recording in Decca'southward vault.[6] Author Claes Johansen writes that the song was rhythm and blues-inspired, which in his optics worked well when information technology was written by the group.[7] Both Matthew Greenwald from AllMusic and Michael Galluci of Ultimate Classic Rock identify the single every bit "jazzy",[10] [eleven] with Greenwald adding that information technology has characteristics of waltz too.[10]

Release and reception [edit]

Equally the grouping'due south management primarily focused on the American market place at the time, "I Want You Back Again" was blitz-released as a follow-up to "She'south Coming Home".[6] Al Gallico, who published the Zombies songs for Parrot Records, chose the single to be released.[vi] The single, backed by another Argent composition "Call back When I Loved Her" was released on 12 June 1965 through Parrot.[7] Just similar "She's Coming Habitation", the single failed to achieve the height-ten on neither Billboard Hot 100 nor Cashbox Top 100.[ane] [2] The song entered Billboard on 26 June 1965 at a position of 98, and peaked at number 95 on 10 July before finally dropping out.[1] The song was a marginally bigger hit in Cashbox, where it reached number 92.[two] Though the single was also released in Canada and Australia, information technology failed to chart in both territories.[7] Because of the single's lack of commercial success it was never released on single in the UK,[6] although "Remember When I Loved Her" had appeared on the grouping'south UK debut album Begin Here (1965)[7]

Upon release, the single garnered several positive reviews. In Billboard magazine, the song's "jazz waltz feel backs upward a strong slice of material", while comparing information technology to their previous single "She'southward Coming Home".[12] In Cashbox magazine, the unmarried was called as a pick of the week, writing that the song predictably would become a hit.[xiii] They call the song a "powerful presentation of blues in a throbbing drum-guitar groundwork.",[xiii] which Cashbox but like Billboard links to their previous single, which in their words had "a catchy alloy of rock and blues waltz on the plug side."[thirteen] Lead vocalist Blunstone was a fan of the song,[six] though he never thought waltz was a skillful music "considering people tin't trip the light fantastic toe to them."[half-dozen]

In a retrospective review by Matthew Greenwald for AllMusic, he writes that the song flopped due to the Zombies being "but a bit also adventurous at times for their own good.".[ten] He states the American tape buyers didn't expect this "aggressive jazz-tinged waltz".[10] Though, he positively ends by stating that the song "has aged very, very well and is one of their early on creative peaks."[10] Brett Callwood of The Village Phonation called the song a "fascinating heed",[14] Similarly, Michael Gallucci of Ultimate Classic Rock ranked the vocal at number 9 on his list of Top x Songs By The Zombies, citing "incorporating rhythmically catchy melodies non ordinarily heard on popular radio" as a main source.[15] Though the B-side was initially included on the grouping's UK debut anthology Begin Hither, [vii] "I Desire You Dorsum Again" never got a studio album release in the United kingdom of great britain and northern ireland.[16] Information technology was first issued in the U.s.a. 3 years after the initial release, on an compilation album titled Early Days, which compiled several early on recordings by the band.[17] In the U.k. yet, information technology remained unissued for decades, first being issued on an eponymous compilation album in 1984, where it was titled "I Want Her Back".[18]

Charts [edit]

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e "The Zombies Chart History - Hot 100". Billboard . Retrieved xiv May 2021.
  2. ^ a b c d e Hoffman 1983, p. 661.
  3. ^ Johansen 2001, p. 104.
  4. ^ Roberts 2006, p. 618.
  5. ^ a b Johansen 2001, p. 92.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h Zombie Sky (liner notes pg. 45). Alec Palao. Zombies. Big Shell Records. 1997.
  7. ^ a b c d due east f Johansen 2001, p. 125.
  8. ^ a b Johansen 2001, p. 105.
  9. ^ a b Johansen 2001, p. 122.
  10. ^ a b c d east Greenwald, Matthew. "The Zombies – I Want You Back Again – Vocal Review past Matthew Greenwald". AllMusic. Retrieved 14 May 2021.
  11. ^ Gallucci, Michael (21 Oct 2016). "5 Reasons The Zombies Should Be In The Hall Of Fame". Ultimate Classic Rock. Retrieved 13 June 2021.
  12. ^ "Single Reviews" (PDF). Billboard (5 June 1965): 35.
  13. ^ a b c "Tape Reviews: Pick Of The Calendar week" (PDF). Cashbox: 12.
  14. ^ Callwood, Brett (12 June 2021). "Tape Shop Mean solar day Highlights Include Gun Club and Rolling Stones". The Village Voice. Retrieved 13 June 2021.
  15. ^ Gallucci, Michael (xix Dec 2018). "Elevation 10 Songs By The Zombies". Ultimate Classic Rock. Retrieved 13 June 2021.
  16. ^ Russo 1999, p. 75.
  17. ^ Johansen 2001, p. 112.
  18. ^ Russo 1999, p. seventy.

Sources [edit]

  • Johansen, Claes (2001). The Zombies: Hung Up on a Dream: a Biography - 1962-1967. SAF Publishing. ISBN978-094-671-93-41.
  • Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). Guinness World Records Limited. ISBNi-904994-10-v.
  • Hoffman, Frank (1983). The Cash Box Singles Charts, 1950-1981. The Scarecrow Press. ISBN978-081-081-59-57.
  • Russo, Greg (1999). Fourth dimension of the Flavor: The Zombies Collector's Guide. Crossfire Publications. ISBN978-096-481-57-59.

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I_Want_You_Back_Again

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