Love Alone Again or Used in

Song by the rock grouping Love

"Alone Again Or"
Alone Again Or cover.jpg
Single past Honey
from the album Forever Changes
B-side "A House Is Not a Motel"
Released January 1968 (1968-01)
Recorded September 10, 1967
Genre Psychedelic folk[1]
Length iii:16
Label Elektra
Songwriter(s) Bryan MacLean
Producer(south)
  • Bruce Botnick
  • Arthur Lee
Dearest singles chronology
"¡Que Vida!"
(1967)
"Lone Again Or"
(1968)
"Your Mind and We Belong Together"
(1968)

"Alone Over again Or" is a song originally recorded in 1967 by the rock grouping Dear and written by ring member Bryan MacLean. It appears on the anthology Forever Changes, and was released as a single in the United states of america, Great britain, Commonwealth of australia, France and kingdom of the netherlands.[2]

Versions take later on been recorded by an eclectic variety of bands and singers including UFO (1977), the Damned (1986), Sarah Brightman (1990), The Boo Radleys (1991), the Oblivians (1993), Chris Pérez Band (1999), Calexico (2004[ commendation needed ]), Matthew Sweet and Susanna Hoffs (2006), Les Fradkin (2007) and Sara Lov (2014). Two demo versions by MacLean himself were released in 1997 on his album Ifyoubelievein.

Original version [edit]

MacLean originally wrote the song, then called "Lonely Again", in 1965 for Dearest's debut album. However, he did not complete it until the recording of "Forever Changes" in the summer of 1967. The vocal was inspired by his memory of waiting for a girlfriend, and, co-ordinate to Barney Hoskyns, the melody drew loosely on Sergei Prokofiev'due south Lieutenant Kije Suite.[three] The essence of the song is the contrast betwixt the positivity of the tune and the bleakness of the lyrics, with the chorus "And I will be solitary again this night, my honey" finishing with a lone audio-visual guitar, endmost the song with the opening melody that sounds annihilation but ecstatic,[4] catastrophe with an E minor plus ii chord.

For the recording session, which took place on September ten, 1967 at Sunset Sound Recorders in Hollywood, arranger David Affections worked with MacLean, adding a string section and a horn function for a mariachi band whom co-producer Bruce Botnick had recently used on a Tijuana Contumely album. MacLean later said, "That was the happiest I ever was with anything we always did as a band - the orchestral arrangement of that song".[3] Yet, Botnick, with co-producer and band leader Arthur Lee, remixed the track to bring Lee's own unison song to the forefront of the song, at least partly on the grounds that MacLean'due south own vocal lead was likewise weak.[iii] Lee also added to the mystery of the song by changing the championship to "Alone Again Or".

With Lee at present on co-lead vocals, "Alone Once more Or" became the opening rails of Forever Changes. Information technology was the sole single released from the anthology to reach the Billboard singles chart. Its 1968 B-side was Lee'south "A House Is Non a Motel", although the 1970 reissue of the single featured "Expert Times" from the 1969 Four Sail album instead.[v] "Alone Again Or", in an edited version in early on 1968, initially peaked nationally at No. 123 (and at No. seven on both Los Angeles station KHJ-AM and San Diego station KGB-AM), while the longer, original anthology version spent three weeks on the singles chart in 1970, peaking at No. 99, according to Joel Whitburn's Top Pop Singles: 1955–2010.

MacLean'due south composition (likewise equally the recording itself) has come to be considered a classic. In 2004, "Solitary Again Or" came in at No. 436 in the Rolling Stone 500 Greatest Songs of All Fourth dimension poll.[vi] In the magazine's 2010 version, the song ranked at No. 442.[seven]

The song has been featured in several films, almost notably the 1996 films Bottle Rocket and Sleepers. It appeared at the close of the 2009 British comedy movie Bunny and the Balderdash, playing as the lead character finally breaks gratis of his obsessions. Solitary Again Or was as well featured in the climactic parade scene catastrophe the last episode of season ane of the 2022 Netflix series Russian Doll.

The Damned version [edit]

"Alone Again Or"
Damned AloneAgainOr.jpg
Single by the Damned
from the anthology Anything
B-side "In Dulce Decorum (Alive)"
Released 6 Apr 1987
Recorded 1986
Studio Hammersmith, Kingdom of denmark
Genre Psychedelic stone, gothic rock
Length 3:38
Label MCA
Songwriter(south) Bryan MacLean
Producer(south) Jon Kelly
The Damned singles chronology
"Gigolo"
(1987)
"Alone Again Or"
(1987)
"In Dulce Decorum"
(1987)

"Lone Again Or" was released as a unmarried past the Damned on six April 1987 by MCA. They recorded it as an acknowledgement of Love being one of their influences. Boosted by multi-format releases (including the band'due south commencement CD unmarried, which included the first release of their version of "Eloise" on this format) and a surreal video helmed by Gerard de Thame, the unmarried peaked at No. 27 in the Uk – the Damned'southward concluding Peak 40 hit to date. The United kingdom of great britain and northern ireland B-side "In Dulce Decorum" was recorded live at the Hammersmith Odeon on 12 November 1986.

MCA also issued the single in the U.s.a., their first single to exist issued in the territory since "Dr Jekyll & Mr Hyde" in 1981. This release added the studio version of "In Dulce Decorum" in place of the live version on the United kingdom release.

Charts [edit]

Chart (1987) Peak
position
UK Singles (OCC) 27

References [edit]

  1. ^ Barker, Emily (31 January 2014). "The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time - 200-101". NME . Retrieved 10 October 2020.
  2. ^ "Love Singles". Honey.torbenskott.dk. 4 March 2002. Retrieved i October 2016.
  3. ^ a b c Barney Hoskyns, Arthur Lee: Alone Again Or, 2001, ISBN 1-84195-085-five
  4. ^ "Alone Once again Or". Everything2.com. iii July 2002. Retrieved 1 Oct 2016.
  5. ^ Billboard. 15 August 1970. p. 78. Retrieved one October 2016.
  6. ^ "The Rolling Stone 500 Greatest Songs of All Time". Stone List Music . Retrieved 15 April 2018.
  7. ^ "500 Greatest Songs of All Fourth dimension: 442. 'Alone Over again Or'". Rolling Rock. Wenner Publishing. Retrieved 15 Apr 2018. [ dead link ]

External links [edit]

  • Disquisitional appraisal of Love's version, with lyrics

brownprourting1939.blogspot.com

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

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