Something In The Air (song)
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Something In The Air was a UK #1 single for three weeks in July 1969 for Thunderclap Newman. The song was later covered by Tom Petty in 1994.
In 1969, Pete Townshend, The Who's guitarist, created the band to play songs written by former Who roadie, drummer/singer John 'Speedy' Keen (miscredited as "Keene" on the single's label). Townshend produced the single, arranged its strings, played its bass under the pseudonym Bijou Drains, and hired for it eccentric GPO engineer and jazz pianist Andy 'Thunderclap' Newman and 15-year-old Glaswegian Jimmy McCulloch.
Originally titled "Revolution", but later renamed because the Beatles released a single of that name, "Something in the Air" captured post-flower power rebellion, marrying McColloch's sweeping acoustic and glowing electric guitars, Keen's powerful drumming and yearning falsetto, and Newman's felicitous piano solo.
The single was No. 1 after just three weeks, holding off Elvis Presley in the process. The scale of the song's success surprised everyone, and there were no plans to promote Thunderclap Newman with live performances. Eventually a line-up, augmented by Jim Pitman-Avory on bass and McCulloch's elder brother Jack on drums, played a handful of gigs. Personal records say the band played live only five times, although Keen referred to a two-month tour, playing "everywhere".
"Something in the Air" appeared on the soundtracks of the films The Magic Christian (1969), Almost Famous (2000), and The Strawberry Statement (1970); the latter helped the single reach No. 25 in the United States. In the UK, a follow-up single, "Accidents", came out only in May 1970, and charted at No. 44 only for a week, and an album, Hollywood Dream, peaked in Billboard at No. 163.
It has been used extensively in television most notably an advert for British Airways which featured PJ O'Rourke and more recently a version of the song was used in the advertisements for the mobile phone service provider TalkTalk. (A similar advert for TalkTalk shown at the beginning of advert breaks during Big Brother features the opening bars).
Preceded by: "The Ballad Of John And Yoko" by The Beatles |
UK number one single July 2, 1969 |
Succeeded by: "Honky Tonk Women" by The Rolling Stones |