Oh Well (song) explained

See also: Oh Well (disambiguation).

Oh Well
Cover:Ohwell.jpg
Caption:Cover of the French release:
(back row, L-R) McVie, Kirwan, Green
(front row L-R) Spencer, Fleetwood
Type:single
Artist:Fleetwood Mac
A-Side:Oh Well (Part 1)
B-Side:Oh Well (Part 2)
Released:26 September 1969
Recorded:Summer 1969
Genre:
Length:3:22 (Part 1 single)
2:22 (Part 1)
5:39 (Part 2)
8:56 (Then Play On version)
Label:Reprise
Producer:Fleetwood Mac
Prev Title:Man of the World
Prev Year:1969
Next Title:The Green Manalishi (With the Two-Prong Crown)
Next Year:1970

"Oh Well" is a song by British rock band Fleetwood Mac, released in 1969 and composed by vocalist and lead guitarist Peter Green. It first appeared as a single in various countries in 1969 and subsequently appeared on US versions of that year's Then Play On album and the band's Greatest Hits album in 1971. The song was later featured on the 1992 boxed set 25 Years – The Chain, on the 2002 compilation album The Best of Peter Green's Fleetwood Mac, and on the 2018 compilation 50 Years – Don't Stop.

"Oh Well" was composed in two parts, with "Part 1" as a fast electric blues song with vocals (lasting 2:19), and "Part 2" as an entirely different instrumental piece with a classical influence (lasting 5:39). The original 1969 single features the first minute of part 2 as a fade-out coda to the A-side and then part 2 begins again on the B-side. Later releases varied in length. During concerts, only the first part was played, and live versions of the song have been released on a handful of Fleetwood Mac live albums throughout their career such as Live and Live at the BBC, as well as the B-sides of singles. After Green's departure from Fleetwood Mac, the song was sung by various other members, including Bob Welch, Dave Walker, Lindsey Buckingham,[2] Billy Burnette, and Mike Campbell.[3]

Composition

Peter Green wrote what would be part 2 of "Oh Well" on a Ramirez Spanish guitar, which he purchased after hearing the instrument on the radio. Part 1, which Green dismissed as a "throwaway riff", was intended to appear on the B-side of part 2, but part 1 was ultimately selected as the A-side instead.[4]

The first part of the song features a fast blues guitar riff played by Green, then joined by Danny Kirwan and bassist John McVie, before a musical silence, punctuated only by Mick Fleetwood's cowbell percussion. Green sings a brief verse with no musical accompaniment, before the riff begins again and Kirwan plays a solo. Another silence precedes a second verse, and a replay of the riff.[5]

Where the second part follows, there is a brief pause before Green's sombre, Spanish-style acoustic guitar and low electric guitar, leading into further instrumental passages of cello and recorder, played by Green's then-girlfriend, Sandra Elsdon,[6] and piano, the latter played by Jeremy Spencer. It was Spencer's only contribution to the song, as he was absent from the recording of part 1, and Green played all the other instruments in part 2[7]

During live performances with the original lineup, Spencer frequently played supplemental percussion during the song, often maracas.[8]

Release

Instead of including "Oh Well" on the UK track listing of Then Play On, the label chose the song as the band's next single, which came as a surprise to the song's writer, Peter Green, who expected Kirwan's "When You Say" to receive that designation.[9] Hesitant to release "Oh Well (Part 1)" as a single, Green lobbied to make "Oh Well (Part 2)" the A-side instead, but to no avail. Fleetwood and McVie bet Green eight pounds apiece that "Oh Well" would flop, but the single instead went on to chart in several territories.[10]

After the single was released, US versions of Then Play On were updated to include the song. The album edit of "Oh Well" simply joined the two sides of the single as one track, entitled "Oh Well" (lasting 8:56), so that the second part's beginning is heard twice. It was repeated on the worldwide original CD release. A 1972 US reissue of the single featured just the electric "Oh Well (Part 1)" without the coda. Other reissues of the song, including on the Greatest Hits album and the 2013 deluxe Then Play On, feature the original single releases of part 1 (with coda) and part 2 as two separate tracks.

Chart performance

The single's peak position on the UK Charts was No. 2 for two weeks in November 1969, spending a total of 16 weeks on the chart.[11] In the Dutch Top 40, the song peaked at No. 1 and spent a total of 11 weeks in the top 40.[12] It also reached the top 5 in Ireland, Norway, New Zealand, and France, as well as the top 10 in Germany and Switzerland.[13]

"Oh Well" was a minor hit in the United States, where it reached No. 55, becoming Fleetwood Mac's first single to reach the Hot 100, as well as their only pre-Buckingham/Nicks song to earn this distinction. It did receive a lot of airplay on some FM album-oriented stations[14] and its reputation has grown in the years since its release.

In Canada, the song reached No. 54.[15] It was their second charting single after Albatross in March 1969.

The single was also issued in Argentina, Brazil, India, Italy, Japan, Lebanon, Mexico (as "Ah Bueno"), Portugal and Spain (as "Muy Bien"), and South Africa and Venezuela (as "Oh Bien") on Reprise Records. Other countries included Greece on Warner Bros. Records and Malaysia on Jaguare Records.

Legacy

"Oh Well (Part 1)" has been viewed by music critics as one of the early crossovers between blues rock and heavy metal. The Led Zeppelin song "Black Dog" (1971) also features a call and response with a cappella vocals - Jimmy Page was inspired to structure the song like "Oh Well".[16] John Brackett, a former professor from the University of Utah, notes that both songs employ "a syncopated ascending chromatic motif that finishes with a long sustained note."[17]

In 1972, Record World said the song "shows [the] group in its finest moment."[18]

Personnel

Oh Well (Part 1)

Oh Well (Part 2)

Additional Personnel

Charts

Weekly charts

Chart (1969–70)Peak
position
Australia[19] 17
Austria[20] 6
Canada (RPM)[21] 54
France2
Germany[22] 5
Ireland[23] 5
Norway[24] 3
Switzerland[25] 6

Cover versions and other uses

"Oh Well" has been covered by various other artists and groups, including Billy Gibbons, Deep Purple, Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, 2Cellos, Kenny Wayne Shepherd, Monks of Doom, Gordon Giltrap, Joe Jackson, The Rockets, Big Country, Tribe of Gypsies, Ratt, Tourniquet, McCoy, John Parr, Oh Well, Haim, Aerosmith, Darrell Mansfield, Zona B and Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit,. The song has also been played live by Jimmy Page & the Black Crowes and released on their 2000 album Live at the Greek. The Australian singer-songwriter Rick Springfield performed a version of the song in July 2013 for The A.V. Club's A.V. Undercover series.[26] Eels included a cover of the song on the bonus-disc edition of their 2014 album The Cautionary Tales of Mark Oliver Everett, and it is also found on the 2012 album Fifteen by Colin James.

Former Fleetwood Mac member Bob Welch recorded a version of the song for the 2003 His Fleetwood Mac Years & Beyond album.[27] To outline the sections, Welch played his guitars along to the original recording so his cover would "closely match the original, but not be exact copies." After the guitars were tracked, Welch gradually muted the original recording as he filled out the song with samples and MIDI. Over the course of a couple weeks, Welch had amassed between 64 and 96 individual tracks. For the master mix, he whittled it down to 32 tracks because he found it too difficult to monitor all of the parts he recorded.[28]

An excerpt from the song can be heard in the Doctor Who story Spearhead from Space. It was filmed around the same time that the single was on the chart, and transmitted in January 1970. The song was omitted from later video releases of the story, but was reintroduced on the DVD release in 2011. The beginning of the song from Live in Boston by Fleetwood Mac can be heard in the second season of the television show Fargo.Part 2 was also sampled by the KLF for their Chill Out album.

In 2021 Deep Purple did a cover version of "Oh Well", which appears on the album Turning to Crime.

In April 2024 Slash released a cover of "Oh Well" featuring vocals by Chris Stapleton, which appeared on Slash's album Orgy of the Damned.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Thinking About Tomorrow Edition. Hit Parade Music History and Music Trivia. Slate. Molanphy. Chris. January 14, 2023. February 10, 2023.
  2. Fleetwood Mac Clicks Without Nicks. Swenson. John. 1978-10-05. Rolling Stone. en-US. 2019-06-24.
  3. Web site: Here's how Fleetwood Mac survived without Lindsey Buckingham at N.J. concert: review. Olivier. Bobby. 2019-03-14. nj.com. en-US. 2019-06-24.
  4. Web site: The Blue Letter Archives . Bla.fleetwoodmac.net . November 1994 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160307220039/http://bla.fleetwoodmac.net/index.php?page=index_v2&id=6611&c=15. 2016-03-07. dead. 2016-10-02.
  5. Web site: Oh Well . 2 May 2011 . Allmusic.
  6. Book: Fleetwood Mac: The Complete Guide to Their Music – Rikky Rooksby – Google Books . 9781844494279 . Rooksby . Rikky . 2004 . Omnibus Press .
  7. Web site: 2023-07-14 . The Fleetwood Mac song Peter Green "used to hate playing" . 2023-07-27 . faroutmagazine.co.uk . en-US.
  8. Web site: Ariza. Sergio. Peter Green Era Fleetwood Mac, So Great But Oh Well.... NO RECESS! Magazine: Not The Last Word In Anything. 24 May 2017. en. 2019-06-24.
  9. Fleetwood Mac . The Vaudeville Years . The Vaudeville Years . CD booklet notes . 1998 . Receiver Records .
  10. Book: Evans, Mike. Fleetwood Mac: The Definitive History. Sterling. 2011. 978-1-4027-8630-3. New York. 62.
  11. Web site: Official Charts Company . . 2011-05-02 .
  12. Web site: Stichting Nederlandse Top 40 . Fleetwood Mac – Oh Well! | Top 40 . Top40.nl . 2016-10-02 . 2016-09-20 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160920195047/http://www.top40.nl/fleetwood-mac/fleetwood-mac-oh-well_6046 . dead .
  13. Web site: Songs from the Year 1969 . Tsort.info . 2016-10-02.
  14. Web site: Two Songs By Fleetwood Mac Before They Were "Fleetwood Mac". Dunphy. Dw. 2019-02-14. en-US. 2019-06-11.
  15. Web site: RPM Top 100 Singles – March 28, 1970.
  16. Book: Led Zeppelin, All the Songs: The Story Behind Every Track . Black Dog & Leventhal Publishers . New York . Jean-Michael . Guesdon . Philippe . Margotin . 2018 . 246-247 .
  17. Brackett . John . Examining Rhythmic and Metric Practices in Led Zeppelin's Musical Style . Popular Music . January 2008 . 27 . 1 . 61 . Cambridge University Press. 10.1017/S0261143008001487 . 40212444 . 55401670 .
  18. Record World. April 1, 1972. 2023-04-01. Single Picks. 10.
  19. Book: Kent, David. Australian Chart Book 1940–1969). Australian Chart Book. Turramurra, N.S.W.. 2005. 0-646-44439-5.
  20. Web site: Fleetwood Mac – Oh Well. Hung. Steffen. austriancharts.at. 2019-06-04.
  21. Web site: RPM 100 Singles – Mar. 28, 1970. Library and Archives. 17 July 2013. Canada.ca. June 4, 2019.
  22. Web site: Offizielle Deutsche Charts – Offizielle Deutsche Charts. www.offiziellecharts.de. 2019-06-04.
  23. Web site: Search the Charts . . 3 May 2010 . enter "Fleetwood Mac" into the "Search by Artist" box, then select "Search" . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110721125210/http://irishcharts.ie/search/placement . 21 July 2011 .
  24. Web site: norwegiancharts.com – Fleetwood Mac – Oh Well. norwegiancharts.com. 2019-06-04.
  25. Web site: Fleetwood Mac – Oh Well – hitparade.ch. hitparade.ch. 2019-06-04.
  26. Web site: Modell . Josh . Rick Springfield covers Fleetwood Mac · A.V. Undercover: Summer Break · The A.V. Club . Avclub.com . 2013-07-16 . 2016-10-02 . 2013-10-29 . https://web.archive.org/web/20131029003357/http://www.avclub.com/articles/rick-springfield-covers-fleetwood-mac%2C100132/ . dead .
  27. Web site: His Fleetwood Mac Years & Beyond. . 2017-06-25.
  28. Web site: Bob Welch, August 4 – 17, 2003. The Penguin. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20190103113107/http://www.fleetwoodmac.net/penguin/qa/bobwelch2_qa1.htm. Jan 3, 2019. October 5, 2019.