You Ain't Seen Nothing Yet

"You Ain't Seen Nothin' Yet"
Single by Bachman–Turner Overdrive
from the album Not Fragile
B-side Free Wheelin
Released September 1974
Recorded 1974
Genre Rock
Length 3:54
3:31 (7" version)
Label Mercury
Writer(s) Randy Bachman
Producer Randy Bachman
Bachman–Turner Overdrive singles chronology
"Roll On Down the Highway"
1974
"You Ain't Seen Nothing Yet"
1974
"Hey You"
1975

"You Ain't Seen Nothin' Yet" is a rock song written by Randy Bachman and performed by Bachman–Turner Overdrive (BTO) on the album Not Fragile. It was released as a single in 1974 with an instrumental track "Free Wheelin'" as the B-side. It reached the #1 position on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart and the Canadian RPM chart the week of November 9, 1974 and also reached #2 on the UK Singles Chart. The single won the Juno Award for best-selling single of 1974.

Contents

Theme

The lyrics for the song tell of the singer meeting a "devil woman" and she giving him love. The chorus of the song includes the song's famous stutter and speaks of her looking at him with big brown eyes and [saying] 'You ain't seen nothin' yet. B-, b-, b-, baby, you just ain't seen na, na, nothin yet. Here's somethin' that you're never gonna forget. B-, b-, b-, baby, you just ain't seen na, na, nothin yet.'

The guitar riff heard throughout the song's chorus is proportionate to the riff from "Baba O'Riley" by The Who. The riff follows a main pattern of A5, E5, then a D5, while the riff in "Baba O'Riley" is F5, C5, Bb4.

Development

"You Ain't Seen Nothin' Yet" was written by Randy Bachman. In The Rolling Stone Record Guide, writer Dave Marsh called the song "a direct steal from The Who," but "an imaginative one."[1] The chords of the chorus riff are very similar to the ones used by The Who in their song "Baba O'Riley," and also, the stuttering vocal is indeed reminiscent of "My Generation." Randy insists that the song was performed as a joke for his brother, Gary, who had a stutter, with no intention of sounding like "My Generation."[2] They only intended to record it once with the stutter and send the only recording to Gary.

Randy developed the song while recording BTO's third album, Not Fragile. It began as an instrumental piece inspired by the rhythm guitar of Dave Mason. Randy says "it was basically just an instrumental and I was fooling around... I wrote the lyrics, out of the blue, and stuttered them through." The band typically used the song as a "work track" in the studio to get the amplifiers and microphones set properly.[3]

But when winding up production for their third album, Charlie Fach of Mercury Records said the eight tracks they had lacked the "magic" that would make a hit single. Some band members asked Randy, "what about the work track?" Randy reluctantly mentioned that he had this ninth song, but didn't intend to use it on a record. He said, "We have this one song, but it's a joke. I'm laughing at the end. I sang it on the first take. It's sharp, it's flat, I'm stuttering to do this thing for my brother."[2]

Fach asked to hear it, and they played the recording for him. Fach smiled and said "That's the track. It's got a brightness to it. It kind of floats a foot higher than the other songs when you listen to it."[2]

Bachman agreed to rearrange the album sequence so the song could be added, but only if he could re-record the vocals first, without the stutter. Fach agreed, but Bachman says "I tried to sing it normal, but I sounded like Frank Sinatra. It didn't fit." Fach said to leave it as it was, with the stutter.[2]

Gary Bachman has since undergone speech therapy to conquer his stutter.[4]

Market performance

The first single from the Not Fragile album was "Roll On Down the Highway." It performed well, reaching #4 on the Canadian RPM charts, but eventually stalled at #14 on the U.S. charts. "You Ain't Seen Nothing Yet," meanwhile, was becoming a hit as an album cut. Radio stations all over the USA were giving it a great deal of airplay, as Not Fragile was soaring up the album charts. So much so that Bachman was embarrassed because he thought it was a stupid song, just something that he wrote as a joke.[2]

Fach would regularly call him with airplay reports, asking for permission to release "You Ain't Seen Nothing Yet" as a single. Bachman says, "And I refused for three weeks... I was producer, so I had final say on what went out. I woke up one day and asked myself, 'Why am I stopping this? Some of my favorite records are really dumb things like 'Louie, Louie'... so I said to Charlie, 'O.K., release it. I bet it does nothing.'"[2]

"You Ain't Seen Nothing Yet" debuted at #65 on September 21, 1974 and shot to the top of the Hot 100 seven weeks later. It was the only US #1 single in BTO's history. (While in The Guess Who, Randy had penned only one other chart-topper, "American Woman," which hit #1 in 1970.)[2]

"You Ain't Seen Nothing Yet" also holds the record for falling farthest on the chart before returning to the Top 10. After falling to #34 two weeks after being in the #1 spot, it jumped back to #8 for two weeks, largely because of interest in the flip side, an instrumental called "Free Wheelin'".

On the UK version of the single, the label credits the band as "Bachmann–Turner Overdrive". It was kept off the top in the UK charts by "Lonely This Christmas" by Mud.

Chart Performance

Chart (1974/5) Peak
position
Australian Kent Music Report 4
Austrian Top 40 3
Belgian VRT Top 30 6
Canadian RPM Top Singles 1
Danish Singles Chart 1
Dutch Top 40 3
German Media Control Chart 1
Irish Singles Chart 4
New Zealand Singles Chart 1
Norwegian Singles Chart 7
South African Singles Chart 1
Swiss Singles Chart 5
U.K. Singles Chart 2
U.S. Billboard Hot 100 1

Year-End Chart

Chart (1974) Peak
position
Canadian RPM Top Singles 4
German Media Control Charts 71
Chart (1975) Peak
position
South African Singles Chart 1
German Media Control Charts 10
Austrian Top 40 12
Australian Kent Music Report 31
Belgian VRT Top 30 82
U.S. Billboard Hot 100 97

Uses in other media

Burton Cummings, a former bandmate of Bachman in The Guess Who and current bandmate in Bachman Cummings, covered the song in his 1976 eponymous album, which went 2x platinum.

Bachman appears in the promo video for Bus Stop's 1998 remake of the song.

The song was always played at the end of the "Smashie and Nicey" sketch on the British sketch show, Harry Enfield's Television Programme.

The song was played in an episode of Ballykissangel.

It was also played on the third season premiere of Supernatural.

The song is featured in The Simpsons episode "Saddlesore Galactica". At a BTO concert, Homer demands that they play the song after just finishing it. When the band reminds him of this fact, he replies, "Whatever!"

A techno remix of the song was used as the theme song for ITV Sport's Formula One coverage from 2003 to 2005. The remix is by German group, The Disco Boys, titled "B-B-B-Baby."

The song is played at the beginning of the movie Studio 54 when the boys are going to club Studio 54 for the first time.

The song appears on the soundtrack of the film Joe Dirt.

The song was, together with U2's "Beautiful Day", used as a theme song by the US Democratic Party following the US 2006 midterm elections.

During a trip to the US, Margaret Thatcher quoted the song when talking to an audience with Ronald Reagan, telling them that "You ain't seen nothing yet".

Appears in the CBC movie Keep Your Head Up Kid: the Don Cherry Story, also shot in Winnipeg, Manitoba.

In Going Overboard, Adam Sandler covered this song.

The song is on the trailer of the film Barnyard.

It was the soundtrack of an award-winning 2010 UK television advert for Thinkbox featuring 'Harvey', a multitasking, homeless Jack Russell Terrier with a flair for self-promotion[5]

The song was played during the strip scene in The Drew Carey Show.

See also

References

  1. ^ BTO band bio accompanying the album review of Rock n' Roll Nights, at overdoseoffingalcocoa.blogspot.com
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Fred Bronson, The Billboard Book of Number One Hits, Billboard, 1988 via "You Ain't Seen Nothing Yet" from SuperSeventies.com
  3. ^ Interview track on the album King Biscuit: Bachman–Turner Overdrive (King Biscuit Flower Hour Records, 1998)
  4. ^ According to a document from The Stuttering Foundation, "Gary Bachman got on top of his stuttering through speech therapy and for many years has been a highly successful realtor in his hometown of Winnipeg."
  5. ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EmzgkMsf_GQ