joi, 3 iulie 2014

Video hit Neil Diamond & Barbara Streisand

Neil Diamond & Barbara Streisand - You Don't Bring Me Flowers

This song about a couple in a drifting relationship was written by Marilyn and Alan Bergman ("The Windmills Of Your Mind").
Marilyn Bergman told the story of this song at the ASCAP Extended Songwriters' Workshop: "Neil Diamond - this sounds like a real Hollywood story, but it's the truth - was at a dinner party with Norman Lear, the television producer, and he asked if Norman had any great television series coming up, because he'd like to write the theme song. And Norman said, "Yes, I've got a show that we're getting ready to do a pilot on called All That Glitters, and I don't have main title for it. Neil offered to write it, and Norman asked that he write it with us. So we wrote this 45-second (because that's all the time we had for a theme) song called 'You Don't Bring Me Flowers.' The show was about the reversal of roles; a woman-dominated society was the premise of the show. Now, between the time that the song was written and the pilot was filmed, the premise of the show changed, and the song didn't fit anymore. So we scrapped it, and about six or eight months later we ran into Neil, and he said that he was doing the song on the road and that everybody liked it. We said, 'What song? It's 45 seconds long!' He said, 'Well, I do a little instrumental part, then I come back,' and we decided to finish the song, and he recorded it.
Alan Bergman added: "He was getting divorced, and he made it as a present for his wife. The station started getting calls asking where they could get the record, and of course there was no record, but Neil and Barbra went in and recorded it. Anyway, the show died a very quick death, and perhaps the song would have gone with it if it had been used."
Diamond and Streisand recorded separate versions of this song that were spliced to together by Gary Guthrie, a producer at the radio station WAKY-AM in Louisville, Kentucky.
Guthrie told the story of how he came to splice the two songs together on 79WAKY.com: "There's some misinformation about how Barb and Neil came about. For example, most accounts have me listed as a 'deejay' even though I was rarely on the air. The short story is this: Becky, my wife, and I were going through a very amiable divorce. The previous Fall, we had heard Neil's version at a friend's house and I noticed how it made her cry. Fast forward to Spring '78 and Barbra's (another of Becky's favorites) new album came out and, dayumm, there it was again. There was just something that clicked in my head and I decided to do it for her. Since we weren't really sleeping in the same bed at that time, my nights were open and I'd hang out at the station and play with the mix, then take it in to Bill Purdom or whoever and have them play while I went out to my car and listened to how it sounded. There was a lot of back and forth with that late at night before I ever unleashed it on the daytime public. Once I did, however, all hell broke loose. Requests, record store calls, you name it. I had two friends who had an in at Columbia - one who had been their Nashville VP and one who was their local guy in Miami - and I asked both to help me get this up the ladder. They did their job well."
Neil Diamond spoke to Mojo magazine July 2008 about this song: "This song was actually written for a television show that was to be produced by Norman Lear, All That Glitters. The premise of the show was that the roles of men and women were juxtaposed: the men stayed home with the babies and did the housework, and the women went out to work. It kind of presaged the way the situation is now. I suggested trying to write a torch song, which is typically a woman singing on-stage about how her man done her wrong, but having sung by a man, therefore the title You Don't Bring Me Flowers, which is not something that men really think about but a woman might."
Mojo then asked Diamond if the show got made. He replied: "I ran into a problem with Norman who said, 'I like the song a lot but I have to own the copyright if I'm to use it in my show' and I said no. So I put it on my next album (1977's I'm Glad You're Here With Me Tonight) as a solo and Barbra really liked it and recorded it herself on her next album (Songbird), in the same key that I did and using the same arranger, so it was very similar. After both records were out, disc jockeys around the United States intercut the two records and made a duet out of them. Barbra and I somehow received some copies of these, and we looked at each other and a light bulb appeared in a bubble above our head and we said, 'Hey, let's go in and do it for real.' It was an enormously successful record."
Streisand and Diamond both attended New York City's Erasmus High School, where the Brooklyn-born future superstars were in the school choir at the same time.
The lyrics:
You don't bring me flowers
You don't sing me love songs
You hardly talk to me anymore
When you come thru the door
At the end of the day

I remember when
You couldn't wait to love me
Used to hate to leave me
Now after lovin' me late at night
When it's good for you
And you're feelin' alright
Well you just roll over
And turn out the light
And you don't bring me flowers anymore

It used to be so natural
To talk about forever
But "used to be's" don't count anymore
They just lay on the floor
'Til we sweep them away

And baby, I remember
All the things you taught me
I learned how to laugh
And I learned how to cry
Well I leared how to love
And I learned how to lie
Well you'd think I could learn
How to tell you goodbye
And you don't bring me flowers anymore

Well you'd think I could learn
How to tell you 'goodbye'
You don't say you need me
You don't sing me love songs

You don't bring me flowers anymore

Niciun comentariu:

Trimiteți un comentariu

Blog Archive

Venetia

imagine 1 venetia imagine 2 venetia
imagine 3 venetia imagine 4 venetia

Colegii de BloG