When Was i Saw Her Again Last Night Recorded

1966 single by The Mamas & the Papas

"I Saw Her Again"
Isawheragain.jpg

The High german edition.

Single by The Mamas & the Papas
from the album The Mamas & the Papas
B-side "Even If I Could"
Released June 1966
Recorded Apr 1966
Genre Sunshine popular
Length 3:10 (album)
2:50 (single)
Label Dunhill (U.S.)
RCA Victor (Europe)
Songwriter(s) John Phillips, Denny Doherty
Producer(s) Lou Adler
The Mamas & the Papas singles chronology
"Monday, Monday"
(1966)
"I Saw Her Again"
(1966)
"Look Through My Window"
(1966)

"I Saw Her Once again" is a pop song recorded past the U.South. vocal group The Mamas & the Papas in 1966. Co-written past band members John Phillips and Denny Doherty, information technology was released as a unmarried in June 1966 (WLS played it well-nigh of that month[ane]) and peaked at number i on the RPM Canadian Singles Nautical chart, number 11 on the UK Singles Chart, and number five on the Billboard Hot 100 popular singles chart the week of July 30, 1966.[2] It appeared on their eponymous second anthology in September 1966.

One of three songs co-written by the ii male members of the group (the others existence "Got a Feelin'" and "For the Love of Ivy"), "I Saw Her Again" was inspired by Doherty'southward brief affair with Michelle Phillips, then married to John Phillips, which, combined with an thing betwixt Michelle Phillips and Cistron Clark of The Byrds,[3] [4] resulted in the brief expulsion of Michelle from the group.[five] While mixing the record, engineer Bones Howe punched in the coda vocals too early, inadvertently including Denny's false get-go on the third chorus ("I saw her..."). Despite attempting to right the error, the miscued vocal could still be heard on playback. Producer Lou Adler liked the effect and told Howe to get out information technology in the final mix.[vi]

Lou Adler has said that this song was specifically done to try and capture the flavor of what the Beatles had been doing, and that information technology was intentionally written to be a single.

A light-hearted music video was fabricated to promote the single, in which the four members arrive outside De Voss, a clothes store on Dusk Plaza on the Sunset Strip in Los Angeles,[vii] by motorcycle (John) so auto (in gild, Michelle, Denny, Cass), with Michelle and Cass "examining" various garments and John spraying the air (and his glasses suddenly disappearing). Denny smokes a cigarette before they all lie on the floor and hurl clothes effectually. They then leave the store (beginning Denny and Cass, then John and Michelle), walking away from their vehicles. Nigh ten seconds into the video, John and Michelle of a sudden switch between their motorbike and car earlier entering the shop.

One of the group's most popular songs, "I Saw Her Again" has been featured on numerous compilation albums and is frequently titled "I Saw Her Over again Last Dark", such every bit on the sleeve of their starting time hits drove Farewell to the First Gilded Era in October 1967.

Billboard described the unmarried as a "lyric rhythm rocker" that was a "hot follow-up to their 'Monday, Monday' smash".[8] Cash Box described the song as a "rhythmic, pulsating folk-rock handclapper nearly a lucky fella who has finally found Miss Right."[ix]

The mono 45 version omits the orchestra instrumental break and chorus that follows on the stereo mix, about likely to reduce the running time for the single release, as many 45'due south of that era were similarly edited for radio play. All Dunhill albums that include the song erroneously testify the single playing time of ii:50 instead of the correct time of 3:10.

Chart history [edit]

Chart (1966) Superlative
position
Australia (Kent Music Report) ix
Canada RPM Top Singles[x] 1
New Zealand (Listener)[11] six
South Africa (Springbok)[12] 3
UK (OCC) eleven
United states of america Billboard Hot 100[13] five
Usa Greenbacks Box Pinnacle 100[fourteen] half dozen

References [edit]

  1. ^ "24 June 1966 WLS Silver Dollar Survey". Retrieved 2011-04-02 .
  2. ^ "I Saw Her Again" by The Mamas & the Papas (Hot 100 chart history) – Billboard.
  3. ^ Michelle Phillips, California Dreamin', pp. 84-87.
  4. ^ John Phillips, Papa John, pp. 140-141; 147-148.
  5. ^ Complete Anthology sleevenotes, Paul Grein, 2004
  6. ^ "The Wrecking Crew: Mamas & The Papas" on YouTube
  7. ^ Hadley Meares (2019-03-07). "Rebellion and rock 'n' roll: The Sunset Strip in the '60s; How go-go dancing teens—and the underage clubs that embraced them—turned the Strip technicolor". Curbed Los Angeles. Retrieved 2021-02-22 .
  8. ^ "Spotlight Singles" (PDF). Billboard. June 25, 1966. p. 16. Retrieved 2021-03-04 .
  9. ^ "CashBox Record Reviews" (PDF). Greenbacks Box. June 25, 1966. p. eighteen. Retrieved 2022-01-12 .
  10. ^ "Item Display - RPM - Library and Archives Canada". Collectionscanada.gc.ca. 1966-08-08. Retrieved 2018-03-07 .
  11. ^ Flavour of New Zealand, 21 October 1966
  12. ^ "SA Charts 1965–March 1989". Retrieved five September 2018.
  13. ^ Joel Whitburn's Superlative Pop Singles 1955-1990 - ISBN 0-89820-089-X
  14. ^ Cash Box Top 100 Singles, July 31, 1966

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I_Saw_Her_Again

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