"Jacob's Ladder" | ||||
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Single by Huey Lewis and the News | ||||
from the album Fore! | ||||
B-side | "The Heart of Rock & Roll" (live) | |||
Released | January 1987 | |||
Genre | Rock | |||
Length | 3:33 | |||
Label | Chrysalis | |||
Songwriter(s) | Bruce Hornsby, John Hornsby | |||
Producer(s) | Huey Lewis and the News | |||
Huey Lewis and the News singles chronology | ||||
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"Jacob's Ladder" is a song written by Bruce Hornsby and his brother John Hornsby and recorded by American rock band Huey Lewis and the News. The song spent one week at No. 1 on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart in 1987, becoming the band's third and final number-one hit.
Set in Birmingham, Alabama, the song marries the Biblical image of Jacob's Ladder to someone who rejects proselytizing evangelists (first, an obese street preacher, followed by a televangelist claiming to need money or be forced off the airwaves) and is instead struggling to get through life one day at a time:
Step by step, one by one, higher and higher
Step by step, rung by rung, climbing Jacob's ladder.
The song was given by Hornsby[ clarification needed ] to his friend Lewis and it appeared on the group's 1986 album Fore! . The song was originally meant for an album for Hornsby that Lewis was producing. [1] Hornsby did not like the version his band played but suggested that Lewis play it that way for his upcoming album. [1] It was the third single released from the album, and topped the Billboard Hot 100 chart for a week in March 1987. [2]
Billboard magazine wrote that the song is "insightful" and "wrestles with spiritual issues." [3] Cash Box praised the "soaring chorus" and "powerful arrangement." [4]
A music video was filmed of the band performing the song in a live concert shot at the Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum Arena on December 31, 1986.[ citation needed ]
Bruce Hornsby later recorded his own rendition of the song for his 1988 album, Scenes from the Southside . It became part of his concert repertoire as well; a live bluegrass-influenced version (very different from the version on Scenes from the Southside) appears on the 2006 album Intersections (1985–2005) , which Hornsby performed with his brother John.
Weekly charts
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