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Elton John - Love Song |
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eric_a ![]() Music Fan ![]() Joined: 29 June 2005 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 0 |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Posted: 26 March 2018 at 12:13am |
I found this promo 45, taken from Elton's 1976 live album
"Here And There." I thought I was really familiar with the EJ '70s canon but didn't know this single existed. Did it get much attention at the time? It looks like MCA didn't release it commercially, which seems surprising, given Elton's hot streak at the time. I was also surprised to see that it's a long/short promo (5:32/4:40 listed), considering how many Elton singles pushed the 5- and 6-minute frontiers without edits. But the short version here is a pragmatic edit, just removing the stage banter and applause. |
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Brian W. ![]() Music Fan ![]() Joined: 13 October 2004 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 6 |
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Yes, but the applause at the end seems to be removed in the
mix, not just faded before the applause. They reverb trail from the final note overlaps into the applause just a hair on the album version, and that reverb trail is allowed to complete on the short promo 45 version.. I'm trying to see if I can find a way to fix that. Edited by Brian W. |
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Paul Haney ![]() Music Fan ![]() ![]() Joined: 01 April 2005 Status: Offline Points: 31 |
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"Love Song" hit #18 on Billboard's Adult Contemporary chart in June 1976. Because it was a promo single only, it was ineligible for the Hot 100 at the time. Probably wouldn't have charted very high anyway. I don't remember hearing it on the radio at all back then, although it did make some radio station charts (according to ARSA).
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radiofan16 ![]() Music Fan ![]() Joined: 18 March 2016 Status: Offline Points: 0 |
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From the late great Jim_CT:
Steve, you are correct in that the early 1976 long/short promo 45 for "Love Song" (MCA 1938) was never commercially released. It was one of the first "perks" I ever received from the owner of my local mom-and- pop record shop, during my first year of college. The store owner seemed to have some pretty detailed background info as to MCA's thinking here, for being just a retailer. He told me that MCA didn't think that the new live LP that "Love Song" came from (Here And There) had a song on it that was strong enough to be released as an official single. And since "Grow Some Funk Of Your Own" had just snapped EJ's streak of 8 Top 10 BB singles in a row, MCA didn't want to have a second consecutive EJ "non-smash 45 release". So he was told that MCA's "Spring '76 EJ Plan" was to publicize the live set's release mainly through print/media ads and in-store play. (That's probably why the store owner was so "in the know" on this situation.) And while MCA did send "Love Song" promo 45 copies to selected radio stations, they weren't going for any "official radio adds". (Despite this, at least 6 Top 40 stations added it anyway, with KRIZ/Phoenix peaking it as high as #3.) Besides, the retailer said, he was told that a new, non- LP single, also a duet, would be coming out from EJ in a few weeks (which turned out to be "Don't Go Breaking My Heart"), since Elton's next studio album/45 wasn't expected until late in the year (right again, with "Blue Moves" and "Sorry Seems To Be The Hardest Word".) I remember being especially inquisitive about the "Love Song" 45 release situation at the time. I was not yet well versed in such unusual stock/promo 45 release patterns. I was also a big EJ fan at the time, and I was still upset that I had to buy the entire "Tommy" LP the year before, just to get "Pinball Wizard" (which I did later manage to acquire the Polydor promo-only 45 for, but far too late to prevent my high school years, nearly budget-busting purchase.) And I sure didn't want to see this no-stock-45s thing become any sort of trend for Elton John. I always appreciated Wayne (the owner) clearing that "Love Song" situation up for me. And also him giving me *two* copies of it. I kept buying stock 45s from him, for many years after, even after I starting working in Top 40 radio. And the tables got turned. He would ask me how certain songs were doing for us, whether I thought he should re- order/not re-order an iffy 45 title or not, or ask what I'd heard from the labels as to what the next single might be an album, or certain concert info rumors, etc. I know a lot of us had our own "Wayne-eqivalent", in our local areas. I miss those mom-and-pop days... |
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eric_a ![]() Music Fan ![]() Joined: 29 June 2005 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 0 |
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Funny, I had a feeling that Jim would have had the
inside scoop on this one. Thanks for bumping up our old friend. |
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radiofan16 ![]() Music Fan ![]() Joined: 18 March 2016 Status: Offline Points: 0 |
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No problem. I also disagree with MCA's claim that there wasn't a strong single on the live record. A live version of "Border Song" would've done just fine, or "Take Me To The Pilot". |
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Yah Shure ![]() Music Fan ![]() Joined: 11 December 2007 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 0 |
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I would have made that same argument half a decade earlier, when "Take Me To The Pilot" led off Elton's 11-17-70 LP. |
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