"Radar Love" | |
---|---|
Single by Golden Earring | |
from the album Moontan | |
B-side |
|
Released | August 1973 (NL) |
Recorded | 1973 |
Studio | Trident, London |
Genre | |
Length |
|
Label | |
Songwriter(s) | |
Producer(s) | Golden Earring |
Audio sample | |
"Radar Love" is a song by the Dutch rock band Golden Earring. The single version of "Radar Love" reached No. 9 on the Record World chart, No. 10 on Cash Box , and No. 13 on the Billboard Hot 100 in the United States. It hit the top 10 in many countries, including the United Kingdom singles chart, Canada, [5] Australia, Germany, and Spain.
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (September 2015) |
The song is written from the point of view of a man who has some sort of psychic connection with his lover — "radar love". He senses that she urgently wants him to be with her, and in his haste he drives recklessly, causing a fatal accident, but even in the afterlife the song's narrator and his lover still have radar love. [6]
Like other famous songs of the era — "Highway Star", "Stairway to Heaven", "Bohemian Rhapsody" — "Radar Love" is composed as a suite with several distinctive and quite different sections, although the tonality throughout remains similar.
The intro starts with a guitar riff in four separated phrases, consisting respectively of three, three, five and three notes. The first phrase is up from C♯ minor with three power chords slightly reminiscent of Deep Purple's "Smoke on the Water". The second phrase heads down, the third is up again, higher than the previous, and the fourth leads all down to E major. According to Golden Earring bass player Rinus Gerritsen, the intro was inspired by Carlos Santana. [7]
During the chorus, starting in C♯ minor at 1:20, the band is joined by a brass section. [8]
The song references Brenda Lee's "Coming On Strong" from 1966 as a "forgotten song".
According to Rustyn Rose at Metalholic, the song "is a rock masterpiece, from its hooky chugging bassline, to its simple but unmistakable riffs, to its catchy anthemesque chorus. Even the jam which rides the song out is note for note classic." [9]
The song has been chosen by many magazines and websites as a Top 10 driving song, often ranking in the top three. It was chosen as the best radio song by readers of the Washington Post in November 2001. It was the #1 driving song in Australia ( Australian Musician , November 2005), beating two AC/DC songs; and in Canada (BBC Canada, March 2006). [10] In 2011 it received a vast number of votes as the "Ultimate Driving Song" in a poll on PlanetRock and "finished well ahead of its nearest rival, Deep Purple's 'Highway Star'." [11]
The bassline, guitar improv, and drum solo riff was used in the late 1970s and early 1980s as part of the opening credits and theme to the long running Australian current affairs programme Four Corners produced by ABC before it segues into the official theme, Robert Maxwell's "Lost Patrol".
According to radar-love.net, [12] the song has been covered more than 500 times by, among others, Tribe 8, Ministry, Omen, U2, [13] R.E.M., Ian Stuart Donaldson, Sun City Girls, Dutch group Centerfold, White Lion, Blue Man Group, Def Leppard, [ citation needed ] James Last, NWOBHM band Aragorn, Nine Pound Hammer, Oh Well, Joe Santana, the Space Lady, [14] and the Pressure Boys. White Lion's version charted at #59 on the Hot 100. [15]
Goth-pop band Ghost Dance recorded a cover of the song on the B-side of their 1986 "Heart Full of Soul" single, itself a cover of the Yardbirds track which were then included on their 1988 compilation album Gathering Dust.[ citation needed ]
A pre-Mercyful Fate band featuring King Diamond on vocals recorded a cover of the song. It is featured on the 2001 compilation album King Diamond & Black Rose 20 Years Ago .[ citation needed ]
WaveGroup Sound covered the White Lion version of the song in the 2007 video game Guitar Hero Encore: Rocks the 80s .[ citation needed ]
The song has been featured in several films including Wayne's World 2 (1993), Detroit Rock City (1999), Baby Driver (2017), and The Tender Bar (2021). [16]
It was a central piece in the 2007 Reaper series episode 7 "Love, Bullets & Blacktop", being featured on an 8-track cartridge. [17]
Weekly charts
Radar Love {1977}
White Lion
Oh Well
| Year-end charts
|
Region | Certification | Certified units/sales |
---|---|---|
United Kingdom (BPI) [35] | Silver | 250,000^ |
^ Shipments figures based on certification alone. |
Golden Earring were a Dutch rock band, founded in 1961 in The Hague as The Tornados. They achieved worldwide fame with their international hit songs "Radar Love" in 1973, which went to number one on the Dutch chart, reached the top ten in the United Kingdom, and went to number thirteen on the United States chart, "Twilight Zone" in 1982, and "When the Lady Smiles" in 1984. During their career they had nearly 30 top-ten singles on the Dutch charts and released 25 studio albums.
"Whole Lotta Love" is a song by the English rock band Led Zeppelin. It is the opening track on the band's second album, Led Zeppelin II, and was released as a single in 1969 in several countries; as with other Led Zeppelin songs, no single was released in the United Kingdom. In the United States, it became their first hit and was certified gold. Parts of the song's lyrics were adapted from Willie Dixon's "You Need Love", recorded by Muddy Waters in 1962; originally uncredited to Dixon, a lawsuit in 1985 was settled with a payment to Dixon and credit on subsequent releases.
Moontan is the ninth album by Dutch rock band Golden Earring, released in 1973. It contains the radio hit "Radar Love", and was voted ninth-best Dutch pop album ever by readers of music magazine Oor in 2008. In the Q & Mojo Classic Special Edition Pink Floyd & The Story of Prog Rock, the album rated No. 32 in its list of "40 Cosmic Rock Albums". Moontan is the band's most successful album in the United States, being the only Golden Earring album to be certified Gold by the RIAA.
Switch is the tenth album by Dutch rock band Golden Earring, released in 1975.
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