Soul Coaxing | |
Cover: | Soul_Coaxing_-_Raymond_Lefèvre.jpg |
Type: | single |
Artist: | Raymond Lefèvre |
Album: | Soul Coaxing |
B-Side: | "If I Were a Carpenter" (U.S.) "A Man and a Woman" (UK) |
Released: | February 1968 (U.S.) |
Recorded: | 1967 [1] |
Label: | 4 Corners Records (U.S.) Riviera Records (UK) |
Prev Title: | The Day the Rains Came |
Prev Year: | 1958 |
"Soul Coaxing" or French: "Âme câline", written in 1967 by French singer/songwriter Michel Polnareff,[2] provided Raymond Lefèvre and His Orchestra with a 1968 instrumental hit.
Released in the States in January 1968, "Soul Coaxing" peaked at No. 4 on the Easy Listening chart and at No. 37 on the Billboard Hot 100,[3] in April, near the end of its 12-week run - though it reached the Top Ten in Boston, San Francisco, Pittsburgh, Columbus and other markets. "Soul Coaxing" debuted on Billboards Hot 100 during the five-week run at No. 1 of the instrumental smash hit "Love Is Blue (L'Amour Est Bleu)" by Paul Mauriat and His Orchestra. As with Lefèvre, Mauriat was a well-known orchestral leader in his native France.
In Britain the single was issued on the Major Minor label and in May 1968 stalled at No. 46 in the singles chart,[4] though it served as a theme tune for certain radio stations including Chiltern Radio Supergold, Radio Caroline and Radio Luxembourg.
. Top Adult Contemporary: 1961-2001. Joel Whitburn . 2002 . Record Research . 143.