Don't Bring Me Down (The Animals song) explained

Don't Bring Me Down
Cover:Animals Don't Bring Me Down.jpg
Caption:Scandinavian picture sleeve
Type:single
Artist:the Animals
B-Side:Cheating
Released:May 1966[1]
Recorded:13 April 1966
Label:Decca Records (UK), MGM Records (U.S.)
Producer:Tom Wilson
Prev Title:Inside-Looking Out
Prev Year:1966
Next Title:See See Rider
Next Year:1966

"Don't Bring Me Down" is a song composed by Gerry Goffin and Carole King and recorded as a 1966 hit single by the Animals. It was the group's first release with drummer Barry Jenkins, who replaced founding member John Steel as he had left the band in February of that year.

History

"Don't Bring Me Down" was one of a series of Animals renditions of Brill Building material, following the 1965 hits "We Gotta Get Out of This Place" and "It's My Life". According to one account, all three came out of one call in 1965 that the Animals' then-producer Mickie Most made for songs.[2]

The Animals had always had a somewhat contentious relationship with such songs, knowing they gave them hits but preferring the more straightforward R&B numbers they used for album tracks. Moreover, now they were performing a Goffin and King selection; although the couple was already legendary for their pop songwriting prowess, Animals lead singer Eric Burdon had previously seemingly mocked Goffin-King's "Take Good Care of My Baby" in the Animals' 1964 stream-of-consciousness rock history "Story of Bo Diddley". Furthermore, they were now using Tom Wilson as a producer, who promised them more artistic freedom than they had had under Mickie Most.

The Animals' arrangement is led by a pulsating organ riff from Dave Rowberry, which is then set against a prominent bass guitar line from Chas Chandler. Hilton Valentine decorates the song with fuzz guitar chords. Eric Burdon sings the verses in a quiet manner:

When you complain and criticize

I feel I'm nothing in your eyes

It makes me feel like giving up

Because my best just ain't good enough

Girl, I want to provide for you

And do all the things that you want me to

before sliding into a loud, pleading voice on the chorus:[3]

Oh oh no!

Don't bring me down

No no no no

Oh babe oh no

Don't bring me down

Billboard called the song an "emotional ballad wailer."[4]

Rolling Stone later wrote that "Don't Bring Me Down" represented one side of the Goffin-King "boy-girl, loneliness-togetherness" duality.[5] Allmusic considers "Don't Bring Me Down" an exemplar of the Animals' "brutally soulful inspiration."[6]

Chart performance

"Don't Bring Me Down" was a solid hit, reaching the Top 10 (#6) in the UK pop singles chart, and falling just short of that on the U.S. pop singles chart, reaching number 12 during June and July 1966. It was also popular in Canada, reaching number 3 on the CHUM Chart and number 5 on the RPM Chart.[7] [8] It was also one of their most popular singles in Germany, reaching number 17.

Later versions

Similarly titled songs

Some websites erroneously claim the song has earlier been recorded by Pretty Things in 1964; in fact, that "Don't Bring Me Down" was a different song, written by Johnny Dee, manager of British band The Fairies, that was a Top 10 hit in the UK.

There also are two subsequent songs by the same title: the pop hit "Don't Bring Me Down" by Electric Light Orchestra in 1979, and an R&B/dance hit "Don't Bring Me Down" by Spirits in 1995.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Chrome Oxide - Music Collectors pages - Animals - 05/12/2018.
  2. Web site: Songwriter Carl D'Errico Interviewed by Mick Patrick . Spectropop . 2007-02-18.
  3. News: 'Don't Bring Me Down' . Sullivan, Denise . . 2009-11-04 . 2010-04-01.
  4. News: Billboard. 2021-03-04. May 7, 1966. 18. Spotlight Singles.
  5. Carole King: Writer . . 1971-04-29 . Jon . Landau . Jon Landau . 2007-04-07 . https://web.archive.org/web/20071002075845/http://www.rollingstone.com/artists/caroleking/albums/album/122443/review/5940689/writer . 2007-10-02 . dead .
  6. Web site: [{{Allmusic|class=album|id=r651023|pure_url=yes}} Don't Bring Me Down: The Decca Years ]. . Thom Jurek . 2007-04-07.
  7. Web site: CHUM Hit Parade - July 4, 1966.
  8. Web site: RPM Top 100 Singles - July 4, 1966.