Hello It's Me

For the album by Lani Hall, see Hello It's Me (album).
"Hello It's Me"
Single by Todd Rundgren
from the album Something/Anything?
B-side "Cold Morning Light"
Released December 1972
Recorded 1971
Genre Pop rock, soft rock, blue-eyed soul, jazz fusion
Length 3:31 (single)
4:42 (album)
Label Bearsville Records
Writer(s) Todd Rundgren
Producer(s) Todd Rundgren
"Hello It's Me"
Single by Nazz
from the album Nazz
Released 1968
Recorded April 1968
Genre Pop rock
Length 3:57
Label SGC Records
Writer(s) Todd Rundgren
Producer(s) Michael Friedman

"Hello It's Me" is a Billboard #5 hit song composed, recorded, and performed by Todd Rundgren, released in late 1972.

Background

Hello It's Me was the first original song by Todd Rundgren.[1] It was first recorded in 1968 by Rundgren's band Nazz and was included on their self-titled debut album. Although released as the B-side of the group's debut single Open My Eyes it was picked up in preference to the A-side by Boston radio station WMEX, where it rose to #1, and was subsequently picked up by other stations, although it didn't fare well nationally, peaking at #66 on the U.S. charts.

Rundgren's songs in this early phase of his career were heavily influenced by the work of Laura Nyro, but in a 2005 interview he revealed that the basic structure of the song was adapted from the introduction of a Jimmy Smith recording:

...the main influence for Hello It's Me was an eight bar intro that Jimmy Smith played on a recording of When Johnny Comes Marching Home.  He had this whole sort of block chord thing that he did to set up the intro of the song.  I tried to capture those changes, and those changes became what are the changes underneath Hello It's Me."  I then had to come up with melody and words, but the changes are actually almost lifted literally from something that was, from Jimmy Smith's standpoint, a throwaway.
Todd Rundgren, puremusic.com [1]

Rundgren recorded an uptempo version of Hello It's Me on his 1972 solo album Something/Anything?. Although a remake of the original, this new version became widely popular and has since become a staple of the classic rock genre. An edit of this version was released as a single in 1973 and became Rundgren's only major pop hit, reaching #5 on the Billboard Hot 100.

Personnel on Todd Rundgren solo (studio) version

In the media

Other versions

References

External links