Take Out Some Insurance Explained

Take Out Some Insurance
Cover:Insurancebaby.jpg
Caption:"Take Out Some Insurance" single
Type:single
Artist:Jimmy Reed
B-Side:You Know I Love You
Genre:Chicago blues
Label:Vee-Jay (Cat. no.314)

"Take Out Some Insurance" is a blues song released in 1959 by Jimmy Reed written by Charles Singleton and Waldenese Hall but originally credited to Jesse Stone. The copyright registration for the song lists its title as "Take Out Some Insurance on Me, Baby".. Tony Sheridan recorded it with different lyrics in 1961 with The Beatles as his backing band. Misidentified, it was released in Germany in 1964 as "If You Love Me, Baby (Take Out Some Insurance on Me, Baby)" but subsequently as "Take Out Some Insurance on Me, Baby (If You Love Me, Baby)", "Take Out Some Insurance on Me, Baby" or erroneously as "If You Love Me, Baby" .

Original recording by Jimmy Reed

Riding a string of popular releases, Jimmy Reed recorded this song in early 1959 and it was released as a single in April with the title "Take Out Some Insurance" (Vee Jay 314). It was Billboard's R & B "Best Buy" for the week of May 11. According to this magazine, the song sold well in Louisiana but never made the national charts.[1]

The Beatles with Tony Sheridan

If You Love Me, Baby
Cover:File:Ifyoulovemebaby.png
Caption:B-side label of UK single
Type:single
Artist:The Beatles with Tony Sheridan
A-Side:Ain't She Sweet
Released:29 May 1964
Recorded:24 June 1961
Studio:Studio Rahlstedt, Hamburg, Germany
Genre:Rock
Length:2:52
Label:Polydor Records NH 52-317 (UK)
Producer:Bert Kaempfert

The song was covered by Tony Sheridan and The Beatles in Hamburg while they were playing at the Top Ten Club. On June 22, 1961, they recorded a version of the song. Bert Kaempfert produced the session for Polydor, of which a single with the songs "My Bonnie" and "The Saints" was issued in 1961. The other recordings were not immediately released. After the Beatles became popular, Polydor prepared three more singles of unreleased material, one of which contained their recording of this song (German Polydor NH 52-317, released in mid-April 1964). These songs were also compiled in the album The Beatles' First! that same month. Due to the song's relative obscurity and the fact that the lyrics that Sheridan sang are almost entirely different from Reed's version, the song was mistitled at first as "If You Love Me, Baby" (even being credited as traditional without authorship on early German[2] and British[3] pressings). When the singles were sent to Atlantic Records in the United States for release in that country, apparently someone recognized the song (and copyrighted it to Singleton and Hall). Corrected labels of the June album, The Beatles' First! (German Polydor LPHM 46-432), show the proper title; this album was released in England in 1967, in Canada in 1969 and in the US in 1970.

The American release of the single came slightly later due to Atlantic/Atco's decision to overdub drum (possibly by Bernard Purdie) and guitar (possibly by Cornell Dupree).[4] Due to one brief use of language that was inappropriate for radio in 1964, Atco also edited the song.[5]

Release details

Singles

Released 15 April 1964 on Polydor NH 52-317 (Germany).

Released 29 May 1964 on Polydor NH 52-317 (UK).

Released 1 June 1964 on Atco 45-6302 (US).[6]

Albums

These four Polydor albums have the same tracklist.

1964 US album by Atco Records.

1984 CD reissue by Polydor.

Personnel

American release:

Sources

Liner notes by Tony Sheridan for "The Beatles' First" (Polydor Records Ltd., UK 236.201)

External links

Notes and References

  1. See the Billboard issues dated May 25, June 15, and June 29, 1959.
  2. Web site: The Beatles – Ain't She Sweet / If You Love Me, Baby (1964, Vinyl). Discogs.
  3. Web site: The Beatles – Ain't She Sweet (1964, Vinyl). Discogs.
  4. John C. Winn, Way Beyond Compare: The Beatles' Recorded Legacy, Volume One, 1957-1965, 2017, Three Rivers Press. Page 110
  5. David Bedford, Garry Popper, Finding The Fourth Beatle: The 23 drummers who put the beat behind the Fab Three, 2018, tredition.
  6. First mentioned in Billboard in the June 6, 1964, issue.
  7. Web site: The Beatles' First (1964, Vinyl). Discogs.
  8. Web site: The Beatles with Tony Sheridan – the Beatles' First with Tony Sheridan & Guests (1967, Vinyl). Discogs.
  9. Web site: The Beatles – Very Together (1969, Vinyl). Discogs.
  10. Web site: The Beatles Featuring Tony Sheridan – in the Beginning (Circa 1960) (1970, Vinyl). Discogs.