"Everybody's Talkin'" | ||||
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Single by Nilsson | ||||
from the album Aerial Ballet | ||||
B-side | "Don't Leave Me" | |||
Released | July 1968 | |||
Recorded | November 13, 1967 | |||
Studio | RCA (Hollywood, California) | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 2:43 | |||
Label | RCA Victor | |||
Songwriter(s) | Fred Neil | |||
Producer(s) | Rick Jarrard | |||
Nilsson singles chronology | ||||
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"Everybody's Talkin' (Echoes)" is a song written and recorded by the American singer-songwriter Fred Neil in 1966 and released two years later. A version of the song performed by the American singer-songwriter Harry Nilsson became a hit in 1969, reaching No. 6 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart and winning a Grammy Award after it was featured in the film Midnight Cowboy . The song, which describes the singer's desire to retreat from the harshness of the city to a more peaceful place and an easier life, is among the most famous works of both artists, and has been covered by many other notable performers.
The song was first released on Neil's second album, the eponymous Fred Neil , released in late 1966. It was composed towards the end of the session, after Neil had become anxious to wrap the album so he could return to his home in Miami, Florida. [6] Manager Herb Cohen promised that if Neil wrote and recorded a final track, he could go. "Everybody's Talkin'", recorded in one take, was the result.
Toby Creswell writing in 1001 Songs notes that the song had parallels to Neil's later life—like the hero of Midnight Cowboy, he looked "for fame to match his talents, discover[ed] that success in his profession isn't all its cracked up to be" and wanted to retreat. [7] Five years later, Neil permanently fulfilled the promise of the speaker in the song, rejecting fame to live the rest of his life in relative obscurity "where the sun keeps shining / thru' the pouring rain" in his home in Coconut Grove, Miami. [8] [9] [10]
Harry Nilsson was searching for a successful song when Rick Jarrard played the track for him, [11] and he decided to record it on November 13, 1967. [12] It was eventually released on his 1968 album Aerial Ballet . [11] When originally released as a single in July 1968, it managed to reach only No. 13 on the Billboard Bubbling Under the Hot 100 chart.
As director John Schlesinger was working on the 1969 film Midnight Cowboy , Derek Taylor recommended Nilsson for the soundtrack to Schlesinger. While Nilsson wrote a new song intended for the film's soundtrack ("I Guess the Lord Must Be in New York City"), Schlesinger instead preferred "Everybody's Talkin'", and used it as the film's theme song. [7] [13] [14] Nilsson re-recorded the song with a slightly different arrangement from the Aerial Ballet version, to better adapt to the music lengths required for various sequences in the film. [15]
Following the success of Midnight Cowboy in theaters, RCA re-released the Aerial Ballet version as a single, with this re-release becoming a hit, peaking at No. 6 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart and No. 2 on the Billboard Easy Listening chart. The song and movie have since become closely associated with one another; [16] Nilsson's cover is also known as "Everybody's Talkin' (Theme from Midnight Cowboy)". [17] William J. Mann, in his biography of Schlesinger, noted that "one cannot imagine Midnight Cowboy now without 'Everybody's Talkin'". [14]
According to the AFM contract sheet, the following musicians played on the track. [18]
In addition, not on the AFM contract sheet, playing the banjo on the track is Randy Cierley Sterling. [19]
Described in The Rock Snob*s Dictionary as an "anti-urban plaint", [20] "Everybody's Talkin'" depicts the introverted speaker's inability to connect with others. Not hearing or truly seeing them, the speaker declares an intention to leave for the ocean and the summer breeze. AllMusic's Denise Sullivan describes Neil's version as "positively spooky and Spartan" by comparison to Nilsson's better-known cover, whose arrangement she felt captured the "freedom, shrouded in regret and loss, implied in the lyric". [11]
The line "Going where the weather suits my clothes" is paraphrased from "Going Down the Road Feeling Bad", a traditional American folk song.
Nilsson's single for the song sold over a million copies and charted on both Billboard's Adult Contemporary and Pop Singles charts, reaching numbers 2 and 6 respectively in 1969. [7] [21] Nilsson's single also won a Grammy that year. [22] The song became a global success and was followed by international appearances by Nilsson to perform it. [23]
Nilsson denied that the song made him successful. Creswell, writing in 1001 Songs, claims that the hit "made Nilsson a superstar," exposing him to a much broader fan base and altering his reputation from solely that of a songwriter to a singer. [7] After Nilsson's death, Billboard noted that Nilsson remained popularly remembered for his covers of "Everybody's Talkin'" and "Without You". [24] Neil, too, is largely remembered for this song. [9] But although Neil's second album was re-released in 1969 under the title Everybody's Talkin' to capitalize on the success of the song, Neil himself shunned the limelight, retiring from the industry after his final album in 1971 to live quietly in the Florida Keys with the millions of dollars he is estimated to have earned on royalties from the song. [6] [25] In keeping with the song's position in the works of both artists, it has been used to title several "greatest hits" compilation albums—a 1997 release by BMG, a 2001 release by Armoury and a 2006 release by RCA for Nilsson and a 2005 release for Neil by Raven Records entitled Echoes of My Mind: The Best of 1963–1971.
The song is highly regarded in the industry, having become a standard. [25] Songwriter Jerry Leiber described it as "a very strange and beautiful song", among the "truly beautiful melodically and lyrically" songs by Fred Neil, [7] who was described by Rolling Stone as "[r]eclusive, mysterious and extravagantly gifted". [25] A 2006 article in The New York Times characterizes the song as "a landmark of the classic-rock era." [6] The song's popularity has proven persistent; through 2005, according to figures from Broadcast Music Incorporated reported in The New York Times, the song had aired on radio and television 6.7 million times. [6] In 2004, the song was listed by the American Film Institute as No. 20 in its "top 100 movie songs" for the first 100 years of film. [26]
In 1999, the 1969 recording of "Everybody's Talkin'" by Harry Nilsson on RCA Victor Records was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame. [27]
Since Nilsson's version of the song achieved chart success, the song has been covered by many other artists—almost 100 as of 2006. [6] The more notable versions include ones by Stevie Wonder, Willie Nelson, Neil Diamond, Liza Minnelli, Tony Bennett, Luna, Bill Withers, Madeleine Peyroux, Louis Armstrong, Leonard Nimoy, Iggy Pop, Julio Iglesias, Lena Horne, Harold Melvin and the Blue Notes, the Beautiful South, Jimmy Buffett, Bobby Goldsboro and Crosby, Stills & Nash. Nilsson's version was sampled in 2002 by Paul Oakenfold on "Starry Eyed Surprise" and in 2004 by the Go! Team on "Everyone's a V.I.P. to Someone". [6] The string riff from a cover by Hugo Winterhalter was prominently sampled by Moby on "Extreme Ways". [28]
Weekly chartsFred Neil version
Nilsson version
The Beautiful South version
| Year-end chartsNilsson version
|
Region | Certification | Certified units/sales |
---|---|---|
United Kingdom (BPI) [43] Nilsson version | Gold | 400,000‡ |
United Kingdom (BPI) [44] The Beautiful South version | Silver | 200,000‡ |
‡ Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone. |
Midnight Cowboy is a 1969 American drama film directed by John Schlesinger, adapted by Waldo Salt from the 1965 novel by James Leo Herlihy. The film stars Dustin Hoffman and Jon Voight, with supporting roles played by Sylvia Miles, John McGiver, Brenda Vaccaro, Bob Balaban, Jennifer Salt and Barnard Hughes. Set in New York City, Midnight Cowboy depicts the unlikely friendship between two hustlers: naïve prostitute Joe Buck (Voight) and ailing con man Rico Rizzo (Hoffman), referred to as "Ratso".
Harry Edward Nilsson III, sometimes credited as Nilsson, was an American singer-songwriter who reached the peak of his success in the early 1970s. His work is characterized by pioneering vocal overdub experiments, a return to the Great American Songbook, and fusions of Caribbean sounds. Nilsson was one of the few major pop-rock recording artists to achieve significant commercial success without performing major public concerts or touring regularly.
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...Harry Nilsson's yearning folk-rock classic "Everybody's Talkin'," the Top 10 classic...
Nilsson had submitted his own song for the Dustin Hoffman—John Voigt film, but the producers preferred the Neil tune. Undaunted, Harry released "I Guess the Lord Must Be in New York City" as his second single, and it peaked at 34 in November 1969.