Wedding Bell Blues
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
“Wedding Bell Blues” | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Marilyn McCoo (center) leads Fifth Dimension in 1969 performance of "Wedding Bell Blues"
|
|||||
Single by The Fifth Dimension from the album The Age of Aquarius |
|||||
Released | Early October 1969 | ||||
Genre | Pop music | ||||
Length | 2:42 | ||||
Label | Soul City Records | ||||
Writer(s) | Laura Nyro | ||||
Producer | Bones Howe | ||||
The Fifth Dimension singles chronology | |||||
|
"Wedding Bell Blues" is a song written and recorded by Laura Nyro in 1966 that became a number one hit for The Fifth Dimension in 1969 and subsequently a popular phrase in American culture. The song is written from the perspective of a woman whose boyfriend has not yet proposed to her, who wonders, "am I ever gonna see my wedding day?" The song carries dual themes of adoring love and frustrated lament.
Contents |
[edit] Laura Nyro original
Nyro wrote "Wedding Bell Blues" at the age of 18 as in effect a "mini-suite," featuring several dramatic rhythmic changes - a trait Nyro expanded on future albums. It was to be recorded in 1966 for Verve Folkways label as part of what would become her More Than a New Discovery album. However, producer Herb Bernstein did not allow Nyro to record this version, which led to Nyro more or less disowning the entire album.
What was recorded was fairly similar in content and arrangement to the later, much more familiar Fifth Dimension version, albeit with a somewhat more soulful vocal line. It was released a s a single in September 1966 and remained on the Billboard Pop Singles "Bubbling Under" charts segment for several weeks, peaking at #103.
[edit] Fifth Dimension hit
The Fifth Dimension had already found hits with Nyro's "Stoned Soul Picnic" and "Sweet Blindness" during 1968. When recording tracks for their upcoming album The Age of Aquarius, producer Bones Howe suggested it would be amusing to record another Nyro song, this one about a woman trying to get someone named Bill to commit to marriage. As it happened, Fifth Dimension singer Marilyn McCoo was engaged to another member, Billy Davis, Jr., though they had no set wedding date. So the group recorded it, and in May 1969 the album was released. The first single ahead of the album, "Aquarius/Let the Sunshine In", was a tremendous hit, while success of the second single, "Workin' On a Groovy Thing", was much more moderate. Then a disc jockey in San Diego began playing "Wedding Bell Blues" off the album, Soul City Records saw its potential, and in October 1969 it was put out as a single.
"Wedding Bell Blues" quickly soared to number one on the U.S. pop singles chart, spending three weeks there in late autumn 1969. It also reached the top spot on the U.S. adult contemporary chart, made one of the group's somewhat rare appearances on the U.S. R&B singles chart, was a Top Five hit in Canada, and placed in the Top 20 on the UK Singles Chart (and their only hit there save for the earlier "Aquarius/Let the Sunshine In").
In 1969 television appearances, McCoo would explicitly sing parts of the song to Davis; Davis would respond with quizzical looks. (As it happens, they would indeed marry in 1969, and the two remain married as of 2007.) The rest of The Fifth Dimension's early hits featured more unison singing than this, and McCoo's prominent vocal and stage role on "Wedding Bell Blues" may have led to her being more featured in the group's early 1970s productions.
Lesley Gore recorded her own version of the song for Mercury Records; this version was released in September 1969, and failed to chart, overwhelmed by the attention given to The Fifth Dimension's recording.
[edit] Cultural resonance
The phrase "wedding bell blues" soon became cultural shorthand for anyone in doubt about the subject event or the state of being unmarried in general. As such many written or dramatic works have been named after the song title. These include:
- the 1990 Heather Graham Pozzessere novel Wedding Bell Blues
- the 1999 Julia Watts novel Wedding Bell Blues
- the 2004 Robyn Amos romance Wedding Bell Blues
- the 1996 comedy film Wedding Bell Blues
- published articles on gay marriage-related topics by the likes of Richard Posner in The New Republic,Sarah Wildman in The American Prospect,[1] university professors in academic journals[2] ...
- the episode titles of various television series, for episodes related to characters wondering if marriage was in the offing or otherwise fitting plotlines, including but not limited to episodes from:
- Night Court
- Dallas
- Kate and Allie
- Cheers
- When Things Were Rotten
- Riptide
- Sonic Underground
- Amen
- Garfield and Friends
- Cybill
- Friday the 13th: The Series
- Perfect Strangers
- Beverly Hills, 90210
- Gilmore Girls
- Designing Women
- JAG
- Great Teacher Onizuka
- Queer Duck
- The Parent 'Hood
- Veronica's Closet
- The Proud Family
- Top Chef
- According to Jim
- Camp Lazlo
The song also features on 'Being There', a Series One episode of Ally McBeal, during one of Ally's 'fantasy sequences' in the law firm office. The song is here sung by Vonda Shepard.
[edit] References
- ^ Wedding-Bell Blues | The American Prospect
- ^ http://aysps.gsu.edu/publications/2000/000101_weddingbellblues.pdf
[edit] See also
Preceded by "Suspicious Minds" by Elvis Presley |
Billboard Hot 100 number one single November 8, 1969 - November 22, 1969 |
Succeeded by "Something"/"Come Together" by The Beatles |