From a Distance

"From a Distance"

Cover of the 1990 – 7" single by Bette Midler
Written by Julie Gold
Published 1987
Language English
Original artist Nanci Griffith
Recorded by Nanci Griffith

Bette Midler

Julie Gold

  • 1992, Live at the Bottom Line 1991 (Fast Folk compilation)
  • 1998 Dream Loud

Others (selected):

"From a Distance" is a song written in 1985 by American singer-songwriter Julie Gold. Some think this song was inspired by a PF Sloan song of the same name. Gold was working as a secretary at the time for Home Box Office and writing songs in her free time.[1] Gold's friend, Christine Lavin, introduced the song to Nanci Griffith who first recorded it for her 1987 album, Lone Star State of Mind. It quickly became a favorite of Griffith's fans around the world. Judy Collins sang it live in 1989, being first recorded in her live album Sanity and Grace, and in 1990 in her studio album Fires of Eden. The Byrds recorded the song as one of 4 newly recorded studio tracks for their box set The Byrds released in 1990. The song then became an international commercial success after it was recorded in 1990 by Bette Midler for the album Some People's Lives. "From a Distance" went to number one on the Adult Contemporary chart and peaked at number two on the Billboard Hot 100.[2] The song went on to win a Grammy for Song of the Year in 1991.

Bette Midler re-recorded a Christmas version for her 2006 Christmas Album, Cool Yule, with additional lyrics by Midler, Robbie Buchanan and Jay Landers. Additional recordings of the original have been performed by Gold, Griffith, Simon Nicol (of Fairport Convention) and many others. The song has also been sung by a number of children's choirs (including the performing arts group Theatretrain)

Much of the song's popularity coincided with the first Persian Gulf War.

The song also won a "3 Million Airs Award" from Broadcast Music Incorporated.

Contents

Interpretation

Julie Gold has stated that she believes in an immanent and beneficent God, and also thinks that people have a right to interpret the song any way they want, as with all art.[3] She has stated that the song is about the difference between how things appear to be and how they really are.[3]

Charts

Date Recording artist Country Chart Peak
Nov 1990 Bette Midler US Billboard Adult Contemporary 1
July 1990 Bette Midler US The Billboard Hot 100 2
Oct 1990 Cliff Richard UK UK Singles Chart 11
Jan 1991 Bette Midler Australia ARIA Chart[4] 8
June 1991 Bette Midler UK UK Singles Chart 6
Year-end chart (1991) Position
U.S. Billboard Hot 100[5] 15

The Bette Midler album, Some People's Lives also peaked at number 6 in the Billboard 200.

Track listings

7": UK (Atlantic A7820) CASS: USA (Atlantic 7567-84888-4) 3": Japan (Atlantic AMDY-5032)

  1. "From a Distance"
  2. "One More Round"

CDM: USA (Atlantic PRCD3528) Promo

  1. "From a Distance"

CDM: UK (Atlantic A7820CD) 12": UK (Atlantic A7820T)

  1. "From a Distance"
  2. "One More Round"
  3. "Wind Beneath My Wings"
  4. "The Rose"

CDM: USA (Columbia 88697-00957-2)

  1. "From a Distance (Christmas Version)"

Note: Christmas version from 2006

Cover versions

Put-downs and parodies

The Bette Midler recording of the song ranked at number 37 on VH1's list of the "50 Most Awesomely Bad Songs Ever."[6] and ranked at number 14 on Blender Magazine's list of "The 50 Worst Songs Ever".[7] Criticisms focus on the song's lyrical content and the production of Midler's version, suggesting the single offers "liberal homilies, stiff rhymes and more sound F/X than a Mel Gibson movie."[7] Blender's editors declare the "Worst Moment" to result from the use of the drum machine, stating, "If God exists, He probably hates drum machines."[7] More recently, Matthew Wilkening of AOL Radio ranked Midler's version of the song at #59 on the list of the 100 Worst Songs Ever, stating that God is "no dummy", with "less chance of hearing this [song] from up there."[8]

In 1992, singer-songwriter Jay Mankita wrote a parody, "From a Dog's Stance", which appeared in Sing Out! magazine and was later included on his recording, Dogs Are Watching Us.[9] Mankita adopts the viewpoint of the canine rather than the divine:

From a dog's stance, we all have enough...
so why not give dogs more?
From a dog's stance, dogs can't comprehend...
what all these cats are for.
From a dog's stance, we are waitresses...
marching to the kitchen now.
Bringing bowls of food...Make that "people" food...
That's the stance of every dog.[9]

The song has also been satirized by singer-songwriter Sue Trainor in her "In a Closeup".[10] According to a Washington Post review, "Trainor seems to genuinely admire 'From a Distance', Julie Gold's anthem of universal brotherhood, for she treats the hymn-like melody with great respect. She changes the lyrics, though, and instead of waxing poetic about the beauty of the world 'from a distance', she points out how flawed it all looks 'in a closeup'."[11]

External links

Notes and sources

  1. ^ official Julie Gold Biography
  2. ^ Whitburn, Joel (2002). Top Adult Contemporary: 1961-2001. Record Research. p. 170. 
  3. ^ a b "Julie Gold and Her Songs", Here on Earth - Radio Without Borders, Wisconsin Public Radio, February 19, 2005 (audio)
  4. ^ ARIA chart archives from australian-charts.com
  5. ^ "Billboard Top 100 - 1991". http://longboredsurfer.com/charts.php?year=1991. Retrieved 2009-09-15. 
  6. ^ VH1 "50 Most Awesomely Bad Songs Ever" countdown
  7. ^ a b c "Run for Your Life! It's the 50 Worst Songs Ever!" by John Aizlewood, Clark Collis, Steve Kandell, Ben Mitchell, Tony Power, James Slaughter, Rob Tannenbaum, Mim Udovitch, Rene Vienet and Jonah Weiner, Blender (view article)
  8. ^ Wilkening, Matthew (September 11, 2010). "100 Worst Songs Ever -- Part Three of Five". AOL Radio. http://www.aolradioblog.com/2010/09/11/100-worst-songs-ever-part-three-of-five/. Retrieved December 21, 2010. 
  9. ^ a b "From a Dog's Stance" lyrics from official Jay Mankita web site
  10. ^ In a Closeup, album by Sue Trainor
  11. ^ "Trainor's Reverent Poke at Folk" by Geoffrey Himes, The Washington Post, April 30, 1993
Preceded by
"Love Takes Time" by Mariah Carey
Billboard Adult Contemporary number-one single
November 3, 1990
Succeeded by
"You Gotta Love Someone" by Elton John