Brown Eyed Girl Explained

Brown Eyed Girl
Cover:BrownEyedGirl.jpg
Caption:Dutch 7-inch vinyl single
Type:single
Artist:Van Morrison
Album:Blowin' Your Mind!
B-Side:Goodbye Baby
Recorded:28 March 1967
Studio:A & R, New York City
Genre:
Length:3:05
Label:
Producer:Bert Berns
Next Title:Ro Ro Rosey
Next Year:1967

"Brown Eyed Girl" is a song by Northern Irish singer and songwriter Van Morrison. Written by Morrison and recorded in March 1967 for Bang Records owner and producer Bert Berns, it was released as a single in June of the same year on the Bang label, peaking at No. 10 on the Billboard Hot 100. The song spent a total of sixteen weeks on the chart.[1] It featured the Sweet Inspirations singing back-up vocals and is considered to be Van Morrison's signature song.[2]

Recording and title

After finishing his contract with Decca Records and the mid-1966 break-up of his band, Them, Morrison returned to Belfast seeking a new recording company. When he received a phone call from Bert Berns, owner of Bang Records, who had produced a number of recordings with Them, he flew to New York City and hastily signed a contract (which biographer Clinton Heylin says probably still gives him sleepless nights).[3] During a two-day recording session starting 28 March 1967, he recorded eight songs intended to be used as four singles.[4] The recording session took place at A & R Studios and "Brown Eyed Girl" was captured on the 22nd take on the first day.[5] Of the musicians Berns had assembled, there were three guitarists – Eric Gale, Hugh McCracken,[6] [7] and Al Gorgoni – plus bassist Russ Savakus and organist Garry Sherman, as well as Gary Chester on drums.[8] It was released as a single in mid-June 1967.[9]

Originally titled "Brown-Skinned Girl",[10] Morrison changed it to "Brown Eyed Girl" when he recorded it. Morrison remarked on the title change: "That was just a mistake. It was a kind of Jamaican song. Calypso. It just slipped my mind [that] I changed the title."[11] "After we'd recorded it, I looked at the tape box and didn't even notice that I'd changed the title. I looked at the box where I'd lain it down with my guitar and it said 'Brown Eyed Girl' on the tape box. It's just one of those things that happen."[12] [13]

Composition

The song's nostalgic lyrics about a former love were considered too suggestive at the time to be played on many radio stations. A radio-edit of the song was released which removed the lyrics "making love in the green grass", replacing them with "laughin' and a-runnin', hey hey" from a previous verse. This edited version appears on some copies of the compilation album The Best of Van Morrison. However, the remastered album seems to have the bowdlerised lyrics in the packaging but the original "racy" lyrics on the disc. Lyrically, it "shows early hints of the idealized pastoral landscapes that would flow through his songs through the decades, a tendency that links him to the Romantic poets, whom Morrison has cited as an influence".[14]

Aftermath

Because of a contract he signed with Bang Records without legal advice, Morrison states that he has never received any royalties for writing or recording this song.[15] The contract made him liable for virtually all recording expenses incurred for all of his Bang Records recordings before royalties would be paid.[16] Morrison vented frustration about this unjust contract in his sarcastic nonsense song "The Big Royalty Check". Morrison has stated that "Brown Eyed Girl" is not among his favourite songs, remarking "it's not one of my best. I mean I've got about 300 songs that I think are better".[17]

To capitalise on the success of the single, producer Berns assembled the album Blowin' Your Mind! without Morrison's input or knowledge. Released in September 1967, the album contained the single as its lead-off track as well as songs recorded by Morrison at the March recording sessions for Berns. The album peaked at No. 182 on the Billboard 200.[18]

Legacy

Morrison's original recording of "Brown Eyed Girl" has remained widely familiar, as the uncensored version of the song is regularly played by many "oldies" and "classic rock" radio stations. In 2011, "Brown Eyed Girl" was honoured for having 10 million US radio air plays; it was one of only ten songs registered with BMI to have received that number of radio plays.[19] As of 2015, "Brown Eyed Girl" remains the most downloaded and most played song of the entire 1960s decade.[20] As of 2020, the song remains one of the longest-surviving songs from the 1960s in recurrent rotation in an era when the music of that decade has become increasingly rare as oldies stations have transitioned to 1970s and 1980s classic hits.[21]

Paul Williams included "Brown Eyed Girl" in his book Rock and Roll: The 100 Best Singles,[22] writing that:

I was going to say this is a song about sex, and it is, and a song about youth and growing up, and memory, and it's also—very much and very wonderfully—a song about singing.

This song proved to be the impetus for Morrison's career.[23] It was his first single after leaving his position as lead singer for the Belfast-formed Them and led to his relocation to the United States and an eventual contract with Warner Bros. Records.

Critical acclaim and influence

In a contemporaneous review, Billboard described the single as an "exciting debut" and a "groovy piece of original rock material that should fast establish [Morrison] as a top disk seller and writer".[24] Cash Box said that "scores of deejays and consumers should dig this hard, thumping lid."[25] Record World said that Morrison "socks across 'Brown Eyed Girl' with plenty of beat."[26]

In his 1989 book The Heart of Rock and Soul, The 1001 Greatest Singles Ever, Dave Marsh rated "Brown Eyed Girl" No. 386.[27] In 1999, Broadcast Music, Inc. (BMI) listed it as one of the Top 100 Songs of the Century.[28] In 2000, it was listed at No. 21 on the Rolling Stone/MTV list of 100 Greatest Pop Songs[29] and as No. 49 on VH1's list of the 100 Greatest Rock Songs.[30] In 2001, it was ranked No. 131 as one of the RIAAs Songs of the Century, a list of the top 365 songs of the 20th century chosen with historical significance in mind.[31] [32]

In 2010, "Brown Eyed Girl" was ranked No. 110 on the Rolling Stone magazine list of 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.[33] It was listed as No. 79 on the All Time 885 Greatest Songs compiled by WXPN from listeners' votes.[34] In January 2007, "Brown Eyed Girl" was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame.[35] It is also one of The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's 500 Songs that Shaped Rock and Roll.[36]

Charts

YearBillboardCanadaUK Singles Chart
Hot 100Hot RingtonesRPM
196710[37] 13[38]
200618[39]
201360[40]

Personnel

The musicians include:[8]

El Chicano version

Brown Eyed Girl
Type:single
Artist:El Chicano
Album:Celebration
B-Side:Mas zachate
Released:May 1972
Recorded:1972
Studio:Sound Factory (Hollywood)
Genre:Brown eyed soul
Label:Kapp
Producer:Don Buday
Prev Title:Sugar, Sugar
Prev Year:1971
Next Title:Satisfy Me Woman
Next Year:1972

El Chicano remade "Brown Eyed Girl" for their 1972 album Celebration. Kapp Records had invited music journalist Don Buday to produce the album, being impressed by Buday's writings on El Chicano: Buday had the group remake "Brown Eyed Girl" and also the Cream hit "I Feel Free" "[to try] to give [El Chicano] more of a rock-and-roll identity".[41] Journeyman recording engineer Val Garay, who had his first engineering assignment producing Celebration, would recall that "Don got this brilliant idea of [remaking] 'Brown Eyed Girl'

...kind of like the 'Mexican Everly Brothers'."[42] Released as the album's lead single, "Brown Eyed Girl" peaked at No. 45 on the Billboard Hot 100. Chicanismo scholar Dionne Espinoza opined that the El Chicano version of "Brown Eyed Girl" turned the song into "an affirmation of the beauty of brown[-skinned] women".[43]

Iain Matthews version

Brown Eyed Girl
Type:single
Artist:Ian Matthews
Album:Go for Broke
B-Side:Steamboat
Released:May 1976
Recorded:1976
Studio:Quadrafonic Sound Studio, Nashville, TN[44]
Genre:Soft rock
Label:Columbia
Producer:Norbert Putnam, Glen Spreen
Prev Title:I Don't Want to Talk About It
Prev Year:1975
Next Title:A Fool Like You
Next Year:1976

British singer/songwriter Iain Matthews remade "Brown Eyed Girl" for his 1976 album Go for Broke[45] from which it was issued as the lead single, becoming a hit in the Netherlands (No. 22)[46] and in New Zealand (No. 25).[47]

Other versions

An Adult Contemporary hit (No. 13) for Jimmy Buffett as recorded for his One Particular Harbour album (1983),[48] "Brown Eyed Girl" was a 1984 C&W hit for Joe Stampley (No. 29).[48]

Freddy Curci reached number 31 in Canada with his version in July 1994.[49]

"Brown Eyed Girl" has been performed by a wide variety of other artists, including Adele,[50] John Anderson,[51] the Black Sorrows,[52] Busted,[52] Billy Ray Cyrus,[53] Ellert Driessen (nl),[52] Everclear,[52] Caroline Jones,[54] Roberto Jordán (as "La Chica De Los Ojos Cafés" Spanish),[55] Bertie Higgins,[56] Ronan Keating,[57] Brian Kennedy,[58] Lagwagon,[59] Glen Medeiros,[52] Reel Big Fish,[60] Johnny Rivers,[52] Shooting Gallery,[61] Bruce Springsteen,[62] Steel Pulse,[52] U2[63] and Els Pets.[64]

In popular culture

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Van Morrison Brown Eyed Girl Chart History. Billboard.
  2. Yorke, Into the Music, p. 42
  3. Heylin, Can You Feel the Silence. p.144-147
  4. Turner, Too Late to Stop Now. p.76
  5. Heylin, Can You Feel the Silence?, p. 152
  6. Web site: Interview: Jeff Barry. music-illuminati.com. 29 January 2010. 21 January 2012.
  7. Rogan, No Surrender. p.199
  8. Heylin, Can You Feel the Silence?. p. 150
  9. Rogan, No Surrender. p.201
  10. Web site: Smithsonian Folkways - Joseph Spence: The Complete Folkways Recordings, 1958. 11 March 2016.
  11. Collis, Inarticulate Speech of the Heart. p81.
  12. Rogan, No Surrender. p.43
  13. News: Independent on Sunday, Decoded songs and their meanings. 21 November 2010. 24 October 2013. London. The Independent. Paul. Bignell.
  14. Hage, The Words and Music of Van Morrison, pp. 33-34
  15. Web site: Van Morrison at Rancho Nicasio. martaypix.com. 27 August 2008.
  16. Heylin, Can You Feel the Silence. p.148
  17. Time Magazine Interviews . Van Morrison . . 26 February 2009 . https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211222/QVHbUPNcTiU . 2021-12-22 . live. 4:14 . 13 February 2010.
  18. Chart Beat Bonus . .
  19. News: My 10 million radio plays Brown Eyed Girl. Irish Independent. 5 October 2011. 21 January 2011.
  20. Revisionist History, Valentine's Day Edition: Captain & Tennille Crunches Aerosmith, Van Morrison Boots Lulu . Appel . Rich . . . 14 February 2015 . 15 February 2015.
  21. Web site: "Lost Factor" 1967: Everything but the (Brown Eyed) Girl. 21 October 2020 .
  22. Williams, Rock and Roll: The 100 Best Singles. p. 122
  23. Web site: Relive Van Morrison's 'Brown Eyed Girl' On American Bandstand. I Love Classic Rock. 25 January 2021 .
  24. News: Billboard. 2021-02-25. May 20, 1967. 18. Spotlight Singles.
  25. CashBox Record Reviews . May 20, 1967 . 30 . 2022-01-12 . Cash Box.
  26. Sleepers of the Week. Record World. May 13, 1967. 1. 2023-07-11.
  27. Web site: Dave Marsh the 1001 greatest Singles Ever . rocklistmusic.co.uk . 8 April 2007 . 1 December 2023 . https://web.archive.org/web/20231201030614/https://www.rocklistmusic.co.uk/dmarsh_1001.htm . dead .
  28. Web site: Complete list of Top 100 Songs. archer2000.tripod.com. 21 January 2012. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20120215221253/http://archer2000.tripod.com/sbs/awardsbmi.html. 15 February 2012. dmy-all.
  29. Web site: Rolling Stone's and MTV's 200 Greatest Pop Songs. rockonthenet.com. 21 January 2012.
  30. Web site: VH1: 100 Greatest Rock Songs. rockonthenet.com. 21 January 2012.
  31. Web site: 365 Songs by Rank . tcotrel.com . 1 January 2009 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110130045416/http://tcotrel.tripod.com/365songsbyrank.html . 30 January 2011 .
  32. Web site: The Association Admiration Aggregation. theassociation.net. 8 July 2015.
  33. Web site: Rolling Stone Magazine's Top 500 Songs . 24 October 2010 . unfit . https://web.archive.org/web/20130524154958/http://www.metrolyrics.com/rs/4 . 24 May 2013 . dmy .
  34. Web site: All-Time 885 Greatest Songs. https://web.archive.org/web/20070531080329/http://www.xpn.org/music/885ATGS.php. dead. 31 May 2007.
  35. Web site: Grammy Hall of Fame Award . . 20 October 2010 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20150707235113/http://www.grammy.org/recording-academy/awards/hall-of-fame . 7 July 2015 . dmy .
  36. Web site: The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's 500 Songs that Shaped Rock and Roll. listsofbests.com. 23 October 2010. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110304151913/http://www.listsofbests.com/list/37752-500-songs-that-shaped-rock-and-roll. 4 March 2011. dmy-all.
  37. Van Morrison - Chart history . Billboard . 25 October 2013 . 9 January 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160109091207/http://www.billboard.com/artist/277711/van-morrison/chart?page=1&f=379 . dead .
  38. Web site: RPM Top 100 Singles - September 16, 1967.
  39. Web site: Van Morrison - Awards. AllMusic. 16 June 2013.
  40. Web site: VAN MORRISON. The Official Charts Company. 16 June 2013.
  41. Cashbox Vol 33 #45 (29 April 1972) "Insight & Sound" pp.14,32
  42. Web site: Saxon. Jonathan. Val Garay: Linda Ronstadt, Kim Carnes, James Taylor. tapeop.com. Tape Op. March 2016. 17 November 2021.
  43. Book: Espinoza, Dionne. Velvet Barrios: popular culture & Chicana/o sexualities. Tanto Tiempo Disfrutamos..": revisiting the gender & sexual politics of Chicano/a youth culture in East Los Angeles of the 1960s . Alicia Gaspar De Alba. Macmillan Palgrave. Basingstoke Hants. 2003. 90. 978-1403960979.
  44. Go for Broke . Matthews . Ian . 1976 . album back cover .
  45. Web site: Go for Broke. Brett. Hartenbach. AllMusic. 6 October 2015.
  46. Web site: Dutch Charts - dutchcharts.nl. dutchcharts.nl.
  47. Web site: The Official New Zealand Music Chart. The Official NZ Music Chart.
  48. Book: Whitburn, Joel. Hot Country Songs 1944–2012. Record Research, Inc. 318. 2013. 978-0-89820-203-8.
  49. Web site: RPM Top 100 Singles - July 25, 1994.
  50. Web site: BBC - Radio 2's Great British Songbook: Brown Eyed Girl. BBC Radio 2. 21 January 2012.
  51. Web site: [{{AllMusic|class=album|id=r307480|pure_url=yes}} Takin' the Country Back > Overview]. AllMusic. 25 October 2009.
  52. Web site: Archivio Cover - Plagi Musicali .Net. www.plagimusicali.net.
  53. Billboard Billboard Vol 119 #30 (28 July 2007) p. 47
  54. Web site: 'Bare Feet' in February: An interview with Caroline Jones. 4 February 2019. Herald-Whig.
  55. Web site: CD Album: Roberto Jordán - Serie Del Recuerdo 2 En 1 (2016). www.45worlds.com.
  56. Web site: Singer and Songwriter Bertie Higgins Takes the RSR Readers on a Journey from Key Largo to the World of Boxing. 14 April 2010. Ringside Report.
  57. Web site: Ronan Keating at Blickling. bbc.co.uk. 27 October 2009.
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  59. Web site: [{{AllMusic|class=artist|id=p39945|pure_url=yes}} Lagwagon: Songs> All Songs]. AllMusic. 25 October 2009.
  60. Web site: Reel Big Fish Cover Songs. coversproject.com. 23 January 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20120615214828/http://www.coversproject.com/artist/reel%20big%20fish/. 15 June 2012. dead.
  61. Web site: Hanoi Rocks: la vita dopo il più bel disastro del Rock And Roll (Part 2) - SLAM!. Slam!. 5 April 2016 .
  62. Web site: Bruce Springsteen - High Hopes Tour 2014. Discogs. 2018 .
  63. Web site: U2 3 Nights Live: Second Night. 11 March 2009 . u2gigs.com. 25 October 2009.
  64. Web site: Ulls de color mel - Vine a la festa (1995). viasona.cat. 2 January 2024.
  65. Web site: Fimtracks: Born on the Fourth of July. filmtracks.com. 27 October 2009.
  66. Web site: Van Morrison. IMDb. 8 July 2015.
  67. Web site: Desert Island Discs – Boris Johnson. BBC. 9 October 2009. 11 February 2009. https://web.archive.org/web/20090211235321/http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/factual/desertislanddiscs_20051030.shtml. dead.
  68. Web site: Desert Island Discs – Betty Jackson. BBC. 9 October 2009.
  69. Web site: Desert Island Discs – Castaway: Hugh Laurie . BBC . 25 September 2013.
  70. Renaissance Van. https://web.archive.org/web/20090114081855/http://www.rollingstone.com/news/story/7371946/renaissance_van . 14 January 2009 . Rolling Stone. dead . 23 January 2012.
  71. Web site: Clinton picks Morrison & Simon for charity iPod. . 9 March 2009. 23 January 2011. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20131001204604/http://star-magazine.co.uk/posts/view/9191. 1 October 2013. dmy-all.
  72. Web site: Rik Mayall funeral attended by stars of comedy. Morris. Steven. 2014-06-19. The Guardian. 2016-05-10.
  73. Web site: Rock Band 4 Core Soundtrack. 21 February 2018.
  74. Web site: A playlist for reading The Best of Adam Sharp. Penguin. 1 August 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170801162359/https://www.penguin.co.uk/articles/book-talk/soundtrack/2017/best-of-adam-sharp-playlist/. 1 August 2017. dead.