Soul Coaxing Explained

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.

Chart performance

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. BBC World Service used the tune to introduce the documentary series, Network UK, in the 1980s.

Other recordings

Use in other media

Notes and References

  1. Discogs
  2. Web site: Performance: Âme câline by Michel Polnareff | SecondHandSongs. SecondHandSongs .
  3. Book: Whitburn, Joel . Joel Whitburn

    . Top Adult Contemporary: 1961-2001. Joel Whitburn . 2002 . Record Research . 143.

  4. Web site: RAYMOND LEFEVRE | full Official Chart History | Official Charts Company. .