Ha! Ha! Said the Clown explained

Ha! Ha! Said the Clown
Cover:Manfred-mann-ha-ha-said-the-clown-1967-12.jpg
Caption:UK picture sleeve
Type:single
Artist:Manfred Mann
Album:Mighty Garvey!
B-Side:Feeling So Good
Studio:Philips, Marble Arch, London
Genre:Pop rock
Length:2:25
Label:Fontana
Producer:Shel Talmy
Prev Title:Semi-Detached, Suburban Mr. James
Prev Year:1966
Next Title:Sweet Pea
Next Year:1967

"Ha! Ha! Said the Clown" is a song written by Tony Hazzard, first recorded by British pop group Manfred Mann. Hazzard claims the song "came out of the blue" though he did not demo it for weeks. Following recording a demo, he approached manager Gerry Bron, who liked it enough to want one of his groups, Manfred Mann, to record it. Manfred Mann recorded their version of the single on 10 February 1967 at Philips Studio in Marble Arch, London, together with producer Shel Talmy. It was the second of three singles Manfred Mann recorded to feature the Mellotron.

Upon release by Fontana Records on 24 March 1967, the single received mixed reviews by critics, who deemed it inferior to their previous single "Semi-Detached, Suburban Mr. James", and criticized its lightweight pop sound. Despite these critical setbacks it became a huge commercial success, reaching number 4 in the UK and number one in several other European, African and Oceanian countries. As it failed to chart in the United States, Mickie Most released a version by the Yardbirds there, becoming a minor hit for them.

Background and recording

Throughout 1966, Manfred Mann had been through a bit of crisis, losing both their lead singer Paul Jones and numerous other line-up changes hampering their efforts. However, riding on the charts with the number-one single "Pretty Flamingo", their commercial success was not declining. After securing a line-up featuring vocalist Mike D'Abo and bassist Klaus Voormann they signed with Fontana Records in June of that year.[1] After their cover of Bob Dylan's "Just Like a Woman" reached the top ten, it established their "commercial credibility" according to Bruce Eder of AllMusic. Following the success of their second single on Fontana, October 1966's Semi-Detached, Suburban Mr. James" the group began to "reshape their sound and image" to incorporate a more "pop-sound" into their music. However, both these tracks were written by outside writers, something which was standard for Manfred Mann. This led the group to look for new material from outside writers following the success of "Semi-Detached".

In the May 1967 issue of Beat Instrumental, Tony Hazzard claims to have "Ha! Ha! Said the Clown" in his head "out of the blue" but states that it took him weeks to finally record a demo of it.[2] Peter Dunbavan states that Hazzard then entered the offices of Manfred Mann's manager Gerry Bron, who had signed him in 1966. There, Hazzard played three demo recordings for Bron, who deemed them uncommercial. Following this, Hazzard became reluctant to play the fourth song he'd demoed, "Ha! Ha! Said the Clown", though at the insistence of Bron he did so. Bron liked the song well enough to almost demand Manfred Mann to record the song. Manfred Mann himself, however, was not keen on recording it:

On 10 February 1967, the group recorded the song at Philips Studio in Stanhope House, Marble Arch, London. The production was handled by Shel Talmy, who had collaborated with Manfred Mann on all their releases since the June 1966 recording of "Just Like a Woman". Neil Innes has claimed that the recording of the song took eight hours, as Gerry Bron would constantly nag about it to him. Drummer Mike Hugg instead states that the entire recording session lasted 22 hours, 12 of which were dedicated to the final master take of the song.[3]

The song is rhythmically more complex than it appears; as Hazzard told Songfacts:[4]

As with "Semi-Detached, Suburban Mr. James", Manfred Mann plays the Mellotron Mark II on the recording, the second of three of their single A-sides featuring the instrument. However, Andy Thompson believes Mann's performance of the Mellotron on "Semi-Detached" is superior to the playing heard on "Ha! Ha! Said The Clown", though notes it is "still well worth hearing".

Release and commercial performance

In the United Kingdom, "Ha! Ha! Said the Clown" would be released on 24 March 1967 through Fontana Records.[5] Unusually for the UK at the time, the single was released in a picture sleeve, depicting a clown's makeup. The B-side "Feeling So Good" was written by Mann and drummer Mike Hugg, and once again followed the pattern of having self-composed B-sides contrasting to A-sides written by outside writers. According to Greg Russo, "Feeling So Good" was an "experiment with Mann and Hugg on lead vocals" where guitarist Tom McGuinness was mixed high and Klaus Voormann provided background vocals. Russo notes however that the nature of the record was never attempted again by the group. In the United States, "Ha! Ha! Said the Clown" was released through Mercury Records on 30 March 1967. It would be the final Manfred Mann release until "Mighty Quinn" was released there in February 1968.Nonetheless, "Ha! Ha! Said the Clown" entered the Record Retailer chart two weeks after it was released on 5 April 1967 at a position of number 46. It peaked at number 4 on 26 April, staying there for two weeks before beginning its descent down the charts again. On the chart, it was last seen on 14 June at a position of number 50, having spent 11 weeks. In the charts published by rival magazines Melody Maker, New Musical Express and Disc and Music Echo, it also peaked at number 4.[6] [7] However, on pirate radio station Radio London's own list, Fab 40, it peaked at number one on 16 April 1967. The single saw extended appeal in Europe, reaching number one in Austria,[8] Belgium,[9] [10] the Netherlands,[11] [12] and West Germany.[13] In Africa, it also reached number one in South Africa,[14] while it reached number 3 in Rhodesia. In Oceania, the single peaked at number 10 in Australia,[15] and 2 in New Zealand.[16] It did however fail to make the US chart despite being released there.

Both sides of the single got their first album released in November 1967 when it was released on the compilation album One Way, which was released by Fontana in Holland. In the United Kingdom, the song would first get an album release on Manfred Mann's fourth studio album Mighty Garvey!, released in the UK on 28 June 1968, almost one and a half years after it was recorded. On the album, it is sequenced between "Cubist Town" and "Harry the One-Man Band" on side two.The B-side's first UK release came on the compilation album What A Mann, released on 16 March 1968. In the United States, it was first released on the US equaivalent to Mighty Garvey!, The Mighty Quinn through Mercury Records on 6 May 1968, where it is sequenced as the second song on side one, following the title track.

Critical reception and legacy

In the UK, the single was met by mixed reviews. Writing for Disc and Music Echo, Penny Valentine states that the song "is excellently made" and "very well written", though she believes the title is a "little macabre".[17] She writes that although "D'Abo sings well", she thinks there's "something about the record that doesn't quite click as a smash single." She believed the first half of the song was "marvellous", though she lost focus halfway through. She ends by claiming that it will be a hit, "though it doesn't sound top-5". The staff writer for Melody Maker believes that "Manfred Mann and his men have been around long enough now to know what's happening",[18] noting that the band seemingly stopped making bad or "uncommercial records", and that Mike D'Abo has settled down. They claim that the single will become a hit, while also speculating over how big of a hit it will be, which they deem impossible without repeated listens. They end by claiming that the single has "catchy lyrics" and a "clever chorus" without sounding corny.

Manfred Mann, interview, Beat InstrumentalIn New Musical Express, Derek Johnson writes that the song was "conceived in much the same style as 'Semi-Detached, Suburban Mr. James'", comparing their falsetto harmonies, Mellotron sound, and "shake beat".[19] Johnson calls the chorus "whistling" while simultaneously praising D'Abo's vocal performing, stating that he's handling it in style. Musically, however, he deems "Semi-Detached" to be better as it had a direct impact but ends with the notion that "it's a disc that grows on you." In Record Mirror, Peter Jones calls it "light-toned and very pacey".[20] He writes that the song features some notable "instrumental tricks behind", while stating that it is musically different from the group's earlier material. Though he claims it most likely will become a hit "due to sheer professionalism and a sense of style", it most likely won't be a smash.

Retrospectively, the single has also received mixed reviews. Mike d'Abo, singer of the song, claims that he sang the song "10,000 times" while never liking it.[21] McGuiness states that the record was "alright" as it was a big hit across Europe. Hugg also stated difficulty in performing the number on stage, owing to the multiple studio effects the song was dependent on. Greg Russo claims that "Ha! Ha! Said the Clown" predated the Moody Blues album Days of Future Passed by at least a few months. However, Russo also states that the Moody Blues saw great success with their albums because of the Mellotron, while Manfred Mann were confined to playing it on their singles and some album tracks.

The Yardbirds version

Background and recording

Ha Ha Said the Clown
Cover:HaHaSaidTheClownYardbirds.jpg
Caption:2011 reissue picture sleeve
Type:single
Artist:the Yardbirds
B-Side:Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Sailor
Recorded:13 & 19 June 1967
Studio:
Genre:Pop rock
Label:Epic
Producer:Mickie Most
Prev Title:Little Games
Prev Year:1967
Next Title:Ten Little Indians
Next Year:1967

By 1967, English rock group the Yardbirds had become a quartet with Jimmy Page as the sole guitarist, but their record chart performance had begun to falter. To bolster the group's chances at another top 40 hit, successful pop singles producer Mickie Most was brought in to oversee their recordings. Most managed Manfred Mann at the time and tried to interest the Yardbirds in recording "Ha Ha Said the Clown". Manfred Mann's version failed to chart in the US, which gave the Yardbirds a new opportunity to try. Most was quoted as saying "Just try it and if you don't like it, we won't release it."

When the Yardbirds decided against recording the song, Most arranged for studio musicians to record it, to which singer Keith Relf later overdubbed a vocal. Yardbirds' chronicler Greg Russo described the version as "a carbon copy of Manfred Mann's #3 UK pop hit written by Tony Hazzard. With its British success, it made no sense to record a Yardbirds version for UK consumption." Relf later commented:

Release and reception

Released by Epic Records in the US in July 1967 as a Yardbirds single, it appeared at on the Billboard Hot 100. In Canada, it was released by Capitol, where it reached number 38 on the RPM singles chart.[22] Page biographer Chris Salewicz believed the song was "utterly inappropriate for the market they were trying to build in the United States"; the group were performing at popular counter culture venues, where they were developing more experimental fare, such as "Dazed and Confused". Several music journalists had similar opinions: "substandard" (Buckley); "lightweight" (Case); "inferior US-only cover" (Clayson); "downright bad... bubblegum number" (Prown and Newquist); "gobsmackingly awful" (Shadwick, who also noted that Manfred Mann had even felt the song was "feeble"); and "particularly crass and inept" (Williamson).

Except for the original single, for years the Yardbirds' "Ha Ha Said the Clown" was relatively scarce. However, in 1992, it was included on the expanded Little Games Sessions & More double CD and in 2001, on the comprehensive group retrospective Ultimate!. Additionally, it was reissued, together with their next US single "Ten Little Indians", through Sundazed Records in time for Record Store Day 2011, a release which was housed in a picture sleeve.[23]

Personnel

The instrumental backing was provided by session musicians in New York City; Keith Relf, the only Yardbird to appear on their release, later overdubbed the vocal in London.

Chart performance

Manfred Mann version

Weekly chart performance for "Ha! Ha! Said the Clown"!Chart (1967)!Peak
position
Australia (Go-Set)10
Australia (Kent Music Report)[24] 11
Austria (Disc Parade)[25] 1
Denmark (Danmarks Radio)[26] 2
Finland (Suomen Virallinen)40
France (IFOP)[27] 3
New Zealand (Listener)2
Norway (VG-Lista)[28] 2
Rhodesia (Lyons Maid)3
South Africa (Springbok Radio)[29] 1
Sweden (Kvällstoppen)[30] 5
Sweden (Tio i Topp)[31] 2
UK (Disc and Music Echo)[32] 4
UK (Melody Maker)[33] 4
UK (New Musical Express)[34] 4
UK (Record Retailer)[35] 4

Year-end charts

Year-end chart performance for "Ha! Ha! Said the Clown"!Chart (1967)!Peak
position
Austria (Disc Parade)[36] 9
Belgium (UltraTop 50 Flanders)[37] 10
Netherlands (Dutch Top 40)[38] 9

The Yardbirds version

Weekly chart performance for "Ha! Ha! Said the Clown"!Chart (1967)!Peak
position
Canada Top Singles (RPM)[39] 38
US Cashbox Top 100[40] 52
US Record World 100 Top Pops[41] 45

References

Notes

  1. Web site: Manfred Mann Biography . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20201111203234/https://www.allmusic.com/artist/manfred-mann-mn0000674662/biography . November 11, 2020 . July 23, 2022 . . en.
  2. Songwriter's Column . . May 1967 . 28.
  3. Walsh . Alan . Hugg . Mike . Mike Hugg . None of us wanted to record 'Ha, Ha Said The Clown' . . 22 April 1967 . 10.
  4. Web site: Wiser . Carl . 2016-01-15 . Tony Hazzard . Songfacts.
  5. New discs from Cat Stevens and Manfred Mann . . 18 March 1967 . 5.
  6. Disc Top 50 . . 22 April 1967 . 3.
  7. Melody Pop 50 . . 15 April 1967 . 2.
  8. Web site: Discographie Manfred Mann's Earth Band . 12 May 2011 . . Hung Medien . de . ASP.
  9. Web site: Ha! Ha! Said the Clown . 14 September 2022 . . dutch.
  10. Web site: Ha! Ha! Said the Clown . 14 September 2022 . . fr.
  11. Web site: Nederlandse Top 40 – week 20, 1967 . 14 September 2022 . . dutch.
  12. Web site: Manfred Mann – Ha! Ha! Said The Clown . 14 September 2022 . . dutch.
  13. Web site: Ha! Ha! Said the Clown . 2020-11-29 . Offizielle Deutsche Charts.
  14. Web site: June 4, 1965 . SA Charts 1965–March 1989 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190325202623/http://www.rock.co.za/files/springbok_top_20_(M).html . 2019-03-25 . January 21, 2020 . Rock.co.za.
  15. Web site: 21 June 1967 . Go-Set Australian charts . Go-Set.
  16. Web site: Manfred Mann - Listener . 2020-08-27 . Flavour of New Zealand . New Zealand Listener.
  17. Valentine . Penny . Penny Valentine . Manfreds: Was it worth the wait? . . 25 March 1967 . 15.
  18. Another excellent hit for Manfred . . 25 April 1967 . 13.
  19. Johnson . Derek . Another 'Semi' from Manfred - But it must be a big one . . 25 March 1967 . 6.
  20. Jones . Peter . Catchy solo debut from Jeff Beck, and a typical but powerful Four Tops. Better showcase for Jimi Hendrix on his newie, and best yet from Cat Stevens, plus a simple new Peter and Gordon. . . 25 March 1967 . 9.
  21. Web site: 2021-10-14 . 60s hitmakers Manfred Mann: 'I've sung this 10,000 times and never liked it!' . 2022-09-13 . the Guardian . en.
  22. Web site: RPM Top 100 Singles - September 9, 1967.
  23. Web site: With Black Friday, Record Store Day goes twice a year . 13 September 2022 . psychedelicsight.com.
  24. Book: Kent, David. Australian Chart Book 1940–1969. David Kent (historian). Australian Chart Book Pty Ltd, Turramurra, N.S.W. . 2005. 0-646-44439-5. Kent Music Report.
  25. Web site: Discographie Manfred Mann's Earth Band . . Hung Medien . de . ASP . 12 May 2011.
  26. Web site: Ha! Ha! Said the Clown - chart position . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20141231104905/http://danskehitlister.dk/?song_id=2057 . 2014-12-31 . 2022-08-21 . Danske Hitlister.
  27. Web site: InfoDisc : Les Tubes de chaque Artiste commençant par M . 6 May 2022 . infodisc.fr.
  28. Web site: Ha! Ha! Said The Clown. 21 August 2022. VG-List. nb-NO.
  29. Web site: June 4, 1965 . SA Charts 1965–March 1989 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190325202623/http://www.rock.co.za/files/springbok_top_20_(M).html . 2019-03-25 . January 21, 2020 . Rock.co.za.
  30. Book: Hallberg, Eric . Eric Hallberg presenterar Kvällstoppen i P3: Sveriges Radios topplista över veckans 20 mest sålda skivor . Drift Musik . 1993 . 9163021404.
  31. Book: Hallberg . Eric . Eric Hallberg, Ulf Henningsson presenterar Tio i topp med de utslagna på försök: 1961–74 . Henningsson . Ulf . Premium Publishing . 1998 . 919727125X . 238.
  32. Disc Top 50 . . 22 April 1967 . 3.
  33. Melody Pop 50 . . 15 April 1967 . 2.
  34. NME Top 30 . . 22 April 1967 . 7.
  35. Book: Brown, Tony. . The Complete Book of the British Charts . Omnibus Press . 2000 . 0-7119-7670-8 . 545.
  36. Web site: Jahreshitparade Singles 1967. 21 August 2022. Ö3 Austria Top 40.
  37. Web site: Jaaroverzichten 1967. 21 August 2022. UltraTop.
  38. Web site: Top 100-Jaaroverzicht van 1967. 21 August 2022. Dutch Top 40.
  39. RPM 100. RPM. 5. 9 September 1967.
  40. Cash Box TOP 100. Cashbox. 4. 2 September 1967.
  41. 100 Top Pops. Record World. 23. 2 September 1967.

References

Sources