Whats Yours Is Mine Baby, Now Beat It

Single by the Ronettes

1963 single by the Ronettes

"Exist My Baby"
Be My Baby by The Ronettes US single side-A.png
Single by the Ronettes
B-side "Tedesco and Pitman"
Released Baronial 1963 (1963-08)
Recorded July 5, 1963 (1963-07-05)
Studio Gold Star, Hollywood
Genre
  • Pop
  • rhythm and blues
Length 2:41
Label Philles 116
Songwriter(south)
  • Jeff Barry
  • Ellie Greenwich
  • Phil Spector
Producer(southward) Phil Spector
The Ronettes singles chronology
"Proficient Girls"
(1963)
"Be My Baby"
(1963)
"Infant, I Beloved You"
(1963)
Phil Spector productions singles chronology
"Wait 'Til My Bobby Gets Home"
(1963)
"Be My Infant"
(1963)
"A Fine, Fine Boy"
(1968)
Official audio
"Exist My Infant" on YouTube

"Be My Baby" is a song by American girl group the Ronettes that was released as a single in Baronial 1963 and afterwards appeared equally a track on their 1964 album Presenting the Fabulous Ronettes Featuring Veronica. The song was written past Jeff Barry, Ellie Greenwich, and Phil Spector. Spector as well produced the Ronettes' recording in what is at present considered a quintessential example of his Wall of Sound production formula. It was recorded with a host of session musicians afterwards known as the Wrecking Crew. Ronnie Spector is the only Ronette that appears on the rail.

"Be My Infant" was the Ronettes' biggest hit, reaching number two on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. It is considered one of the best songs of the 1960s by NME (2nd), Time, and Pitchfork (6th).[1] [2] [3] In 1999, it was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame.[iv] The vocal ranked 22nd on Rolling Stone 's both 2004 and 2020 editions of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time[5] and described every bit a "Rosetta stone for studio pioneers such as the Beatles and Brian Wilson," a notion supported past AllMusic who writes, "No less an authority than Brian Wilson has alleged 'Be My Babe' the greatest popular record e'er made—no arguments here."[six] [seven] In 2006, the Library of Congress honored the Ronettes' version past calculation it to the The states National Recording Registry.[8] In 2017, Billboard named the song number one on their listing of the "100 Greatest Girl Group Songs of All Time".[9]

Composition [edit]

The vocal was composed by the trio of Phil Spector, Jeff Barry, and Ellie Greenwich. It features I – ii – V7 and I – half-dozen – IV – V chord progressions.[ citation needed ]

Recording [edit]

"Exist My Baby" was recorded in July 1963[x] at Golden Star Studios in Los Angeles. Spector recorded a range of instruments including guitars, saxophones, multiple pianos, and horns with innovative studio mixing and over-dubbing. Spector described his product method equally "a Wagnerian arroyo to rock & scroll", which became known as the wall of audio.[11] "Be My Baby" was ane of the first times Phil Spector used a full orchestra in his recording.[ citation needed ] The drums were played past Hal Blaine, who introduced a pulsate trounce that later became widely imitated.[12] Blaine afterwards claimed that the bankroll singers included Sonny & Cher who were dating at the time.[xiii] Guitars on the session were played past Tommy Tedesco and Beak Pitman, afterward whom the instrumental "Tedesco and Pitman" on the B-side of the single was named.[14] [ better source needed ]

The song was arranged past Spector regular Jack Nitzsche and engineered by Larry Levine.[ten] Ronnie Spector is the only Ronette to appear on the record.[fifteen]

Release [edit]

"Be My Baby" was the Ronettes' get-go song produced by Phil Spector, released on his label, Philles Records. The grouping had already recorded a track by Greenwich and Barry called "Why Don't They Permit Us Fall in Love", merely this was held back in favor of "Exist My Infant".[xvi] The song reached number ii on the U.S. Billboard Popular Singles Chart and number 4 on the U.k.'south Record Retailer.[17] It also peaked at number four on the R&B chart.[eighteen] The single sold more than two million copies in 1963. In her autobiography, lead vocalist Ronnie Spector relates that she was on tour with Joey Dee and the Starlighters when "Be My Baby" was introduced by Dick Clark on American Bandstand equally the "Record of the Century."[ full citation needed ]

Legacy [edit]

Barbara Cane, vice president and full general manager of writer-publisher relations for the songwriters' agency BMI, estimated that the song has been played in 3.9 1000000 characteristic presentations on radio and goggle box since 1963. "That ways it'due south been played for the equivalent of 17 years dorsum to back."[19]

The lyric "whoa-oh-oh-oh" was reprised in their follow-up unmarried "Baby, I Love You".[20]

The song appears in the opening credit sequence of Martin Scorsese's picture Mean Streets (1973). Scorsese used the song without legal clearance, allowing Spector to take a seize with teeth out of Scorsese'due south earnings for years. Similarly, the song appears in the opening sequence of the 1987 film Muddy Dancing.

The song plays in the "I Am Curious… Maddie" episode of Moonlighting aired March 31, 1987, where Dave and Maddie consummated their relationship. This event not only drew the largest audition the evidence had, but also may accept led to the show's decline.[21] [22]

The song is invoked and interpolated in Eddie Money's 1986 song "Take Me Habitation Tonight", in which Ronnie Spector replies to "Just like Ronnie sang..." with "Be my niggling babe".[23]

Ramones recorded a song titled "Bye Adieu Infant" in their Halfway to Sanity anthology, released in 1987. In 1999, Ronnie Spector joined Joey Ramone and recorded a duet for the album She Talks to Rainbows.

The 2007 single "B Male child Baby" by Mutya Buena featuring Amy Winehouse borrows melodic and lyrical passages from "Be My Baby".[24]

Ronnie Spector used the song title as the championship for her 1990 memoir.[25]

Drum phrase [edit]

Blaine reused the drum phrase in the Frank Sinatra song "Strangers in the Night" in a slower and softer arrangement.[26] Many subsequent popular songs accept replicated or recreated the drum phrase—1 of the well-nigh recognizable in popular music.[27] The post-obit list includes some examples:

  • Carpenters ("Only Yesterday")
  • The Four Seasons ("Rag Doll")[15]
  • Baton Joel ("Say Good day to Hollywood")[28] [29]
  • Manic Street Preachers ("Everything Must Become")[xxx]
  • The Jesus and Mary Chain ("Just Similar Beloved")[28]
  • Taylor Swift ("Hey Stephen")[31]
  • Meat Loaf ("Yous Took the Words Right Out of My Rima oris")[32]
  • Marc Shaiman / Scott Wittman ("Good Morning Baltimore", from Hairspray)[33] [34]
  • Camila Cabello ("Never Exist the Aforementioned")[35]
  • Camera Obscura ("Eighties Fan")[28]
  • Bat for Lashes ("What'due south a Girl to Do?")[28]
  • Machine Seat Headrest ("My Male child (Twin Fantasy)")[36]
  • Lana Del Rey ("Lust for Life" featuring The Weeknd)[27]
  • The Magnetic Fields ("Processed")[27]

Effect on Brian Wilson [edit]

"Be My Baby" had a profound lifelong touch on on the Beach Boys' founder Brian Wilson.[37] [38] His biographer Peter Ames Carlin describes the song every bit becoming "a spiritual touchstone" for Wilson,[39] while music historian Luis Sanchez states that it formed an enduring role of Wilson'southward mythology, beingness the Spector record that "etched itself the deepest into Brian'due south mind ... it comes up again and over again in interviews and biographies, variably calling up themes of deep admiration, a source of alleviation, and a calamitous haunting of the spirit."[40] Spector was aware of Wilson's obsession with "Exist My Babe" and remarked that he would "like to take a nickel for every joint [Brian] smoked" trying to effigy out the record'south sound.[41]

I actually did flip out. Assurance-out totally freaked out when I heard. ... In a style information technology wasn't similar having your heed diddled, it was similar having your listen revamped. It's like, once you've heard that record, you're a fan forever.

—Brian Wilson, 1995[42]

Wilson start heard "Exist My Baby" while driving and listening to the radio; he became and so enthralled by the vocal that he felt compelled to pull over to the side of the road and analyze the chorus.[43] [nb one] Wilson immediately concluded that information technology was the greatest record he had ever heard.[38] He bought the single and kept it on his living room jukebox, listening to information technology whenever the mood struck him.[45] [38] Copies of the song were located everywhere inside his home, also as inside his car and in the studio.[46] Sanchez writes,

The last result of the story and the variations of it that accumulate from an array of biographies and documentaries is an prototype of wretchedness: Brian locked in the bedroom of his Bel Air house in the early '70s, lone, curtains drawn shut, catatonic, listening to "Be My Infant" over and over at aggressive volumes, for hours, as the remainder of The Beach Boys record something in the home studio downstairs.[twoscore]

"Know what's weird most this?" Brian asked in his ingenuous style, playing those four pantocratic notes for the twentieth time. "It'due south the aforementioned sound a carpenter makes when he's hammering in a nail, a bird sings when it gets on its co-operative, or a baby makes when she shakes her rattle. Didja always observe that?"

—David Dalton, quoting Wilson's comments on "Be My Baby"[47]

Music journalist David Dalton, who visited Wilson's home in 1967, said that Wilson had analyzed "Be My Baby" "like an adept memorizing the Koran."[47] Dalton later wrote almost a box of tapes he had discovered in Wilson's bedroom: "I causeless they were studio demos or reference tracks and threw one on the record auto. It was the strangest affair ... All the tapes were of Brian talking into a tape recorder. Hr after hour of stoned ramblings on the meaning of life, color vibrations, fate, death, vegetarianism and Phil Spector."[48] [47]

In the early on 1970s, Wilson instructed his engineer Stephen Desper to create a tape loop consisting only of the chorus of "Be My Baby". Wilson listened to the loop for several hours in what Desper saw as "some kind of a trance."[45] Wilson'south daughter Carnie stated that during her childhood: "I woke upwardly every morning to boom babel prisoner of war! Blast boom-boom pw! Every twenty-four hours."[49] Wilson told The New York Times in 2013 that he had listened to the song at least 1,000 times.[19] In his 2016 memoir, Wilson recalled playing the vocal's drum intro "x times until anybody in the room told me to stop, and then I played it ten more than times."[43] Bandmate Mike Love remembered Wilson comparison the vocal to Albert Einstein'south theory of relativity.[50] The Beach Boys song Mona ends with the lines "Listen to information technology "Be My Baby" / I know you lot're going to beloved Phil Spector"

Cover versions [edit]

1970 – Andy Kim [edit]

Andy Kim released a version of the song as a single in 1970. In the United States, his version spent 11 weeks on the Billboard Hot 100, reaching No. 17,[51] and No. 24 on Billboard 'south Easy Listening chart.[52] [53] It also reached No. 12 on the Cash Box Height 100.[54] In Canada, the song reached No. half dozen on the RPM 100,[55] while reaching No. 16 on the New Zealand Listener chart,[56] No. 24 in West Germany,[57] and No. 36 on Australia'southward Go-Set National Top sixty.[58] It was besides a hit in Brazil.[59]

Andy Kim's version was ranked No. fourscore on RPM 's year end ranking of the "RPM 100 Top Singles of '71".[60]

1972 – Jody Miller [edit]

In 1972, Jody Miller released a version as a single and on the album There'southward a Party Goin' On.[61] Her version reached No. 15 on Billboard 'southward Hot Land Singles chart and No. 35 on Billboard 's Easy Listening chart.[62] [63] It also reached No. xv on the Cash Box State Superlative 75 and Record World 's Country Singles Chart.[64] [65] In Canada, the song reached No. eleven on the RPM Country Playlist.[66]

Other [edit]

  • 1976 – Shaun Cassidy released a encompass of the song on his eponymous debut album. The following year information technology was released equally a unmarried and reached No. 39 in Westward Federal republic of germany.[67]
  • 1992 – Teen Queens released a cover of the song that reached number half dozen on the Australian ARIA Singles Chart in May 1992.[68] It was certified Gold in Australia and was the land's 44th-most-successful song of 1992.[69]
  • 2013 – Leslie Grace covered the song in bachata for her eponymous album in a bilingual version in English and Spanish. Her version peaked at number 8 on the Billboard Hot Latin Songs and number 6 on the Tropical Songs chart.[70]

Charts [edit]

Certification [edit]

References [edit]

Notes

  1. ^ For Wilson, songs that "hitting nigh as difficult" as "Exist My Baby" includes "Rock Around the Clock" (Nib Haley & His Comets, 1955), "Continue A-Knockin'" (Picayune Richard, 1957), "Hey Girl" (Freddie Scott, 1963), and "You've Lost That Lovin' Feeling" (The Righteous Brothers, 1964). Wilson conceded that "it's hard to re-create the feeling of first hearing 'Be My Infant'".[44]

Citations

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  2. ^ Be My Baby. "100 Best Songs of the 1960s | #2 The Ronettes – Be My Baby". Nme.com . Retrieved 2014-05-06 .
  3. ^ "All-Time 100 Songs". Time. 2011-10-24.
  4. ^ Grammy Hall Of Fame Archived 2015-07-07 at the Wayback Machine. Santa Monica, CA: The Recording Academy. Accessed April 2015.
  5. ^ "500 Best Songs of All Time: The Ronettes, 'Exist My Baby'". Rolling Stone. September xv, 2021. Retrieved Nov nineteen, 2021.
  6. ^ Ankeny, Jason. ""Be My Babe" Vocal Review". AllMusic.com.
  7. ^ "The RS 500 Greatest Songs of All Time". RollingStone.com. Archived from the original on 16 May 2007. Retrieved 2007-06-02 .
  8. ^ "The National Recording Registry 2006". The Library of Congress. March half-dozen, 2007. Retrieved September nineteen, 2020.
  9. ^ "100 Greatest Daughter Group Songs of All Fourth dimension: Critics' Picks". Billboard. Retrieved July 11, 2017.
  10. ^ a b Phil Spector: Back to MONO (1958-1969) ABKCO Records, 1991, liner notes
  11. ^ Buskin, Richard. "CLASSIC TRACKS: The Ronettes 'Exist My Baby'". Soundonsound.com . Retrieved 2014-05-06 .
  12. ^ Lewis, Randy (2019-03-11). "Hal Blaine, prolific 'Wrecking Crew' drummer who worked with Frank Sinatra and Elvis, dies at 90". Los Angeles Times . Retrieved 2019-03-13 .
  13. ^ "How nosotros made the Ronettes' Be My Baby". the Guardian. November 17, 2015. Retrieved 16 Jan 2022.
  14. ^ "Phonograph Recording Contract" (PDF). The Wrecking Crew. American Federation of Musicians. Retrieved 10 Oct 2013.
  15. ^ a b Rooksby 2001, p. 26.
  16. ^ Thompson 2004, p. 79.
  17. ^ Rooksby 2001, p. 25.
  18. ^ Whitburn, Joel (2004). Top R&B/Hip-Hop Singles: 1942-2004. Record Inquiry. p. 500.
  19. ^ a b "Still Tingling Spines, 50 Years Later". Nytimes.com . Retrieved 2016-01-16 .
  20. ^ Ankeny, Jason. "Be My Babe - The Ronettes". AllMusic . Retrieved 17 August 2021.
  21. ^ Spitz, Marc (August 16, 2013). "Still Tingling Spines, 50 Years Later". The New York Times . Retrieved June 25, 2021.
  22. ^ Clark, Kenneth R. (May 21, 1989). "Why 'Moonlighting' Went Bust". Chicago Tribune . Retrieved June 25, 2021.
  23. ^ Goldsmith, Annie (1 October 2020). "Zendaya In Talks to Star in New Ronnie Spector Biopic". Town & Country . Retrieved 16 Apr 2021.
  24. ^ Walters, Sarah (21 December 2007). "REVIEW:Mutya Buena ft Amy Winehouse - B Boy Infant (Island)". Manchester Evening News . Retrieved xvi April 2021.
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  26. ^ Mattingly, Rick. "Hal Blaine". www.pas.org. Percussive Arts Society. Retrieved 25 March 2021.
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  28. ^ a b c d Casciato, Cory; Zaleski, Annie; Heller, Jason; Adams, Erik; Sava, Oliver; Eakin, Marah (2013-02-09). "Kicking kicking kick snare, repeat: 15 songs that borrow the drum intro from "Be My Babe"". The A.V. Lodge . Retrieved 2019-03-13 .
  29. ^ Bielen, Ken (2011-07-31). The Words and Music of Baton Joel. ISBN9780313380167.
  30. ^ "Everything Must Become - YouTube". www.youtube.com. Archived from the original on 2021-12-21. Retrieved 2020-08-twenty .
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  34. ^ Shewey, Don (2002) [2002-ten-01]. "Broadway's biggest practice". The Advocate: 62–63.
  35. ^ Leupold, Dennis (Dec fourteen, 2018). "50 All-time Songs of 2018". Rolling Rock.
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  37. ^ Dark-brown 2008, p. 185.
  38. ^ a b c Howard 2004, pp. 56–57.
  39. ^ Carlin 2006, p. 44.
  40. ^ a b Sanchez 2014, pp. 52–53.
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  42. ^ Espar, David, Levi, Robert (Directors) (1995). Rock & Roll (Miniseries).
  43. ^ a b Wilson & Greenman 2016, p. 73.
  44. ^ Wilson & Greenman 2016, p. 77.
  45. ^ a b Carlin 2006, p. 160.
  46. ^ Sanchez 2014, p. 53.
  47. ^ a b c Dalton, David (May 6, 2002). "Epiphany at Zuma Embankment Or Brian Wilson hallucinates me". Gadfly.
  48. ^ Sanchez 2014, p. 52.
  49. ^ Don, Was (1995). Brian Wilson: I Just Wasn't Made for These Times (Documentary film).
  50. ^ Love 2016, p. 74.
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  61. ^ "Billboard Album Reviews", Billboard. September 22, 1972. p. 34. Retrieved December 16, 2021.
  62. ^ "Hot State Singles", Billboard. May twenty, 1972. p. xl. Retrieved December 16, 2021.
  63. ^ "Like shooting fish in a barrel Listening", Billboard. Apr 1, 1972. p. 31. Retrieved December 16, 2021.
  64. ^ "Cash Box Country Acme 75", Cash Box. May 13, 1972. p. 36. Retrieved Feb 16, 2021.
  65. ^ "The Country Singles Nautical chart", Tape Earth. May 20, 1972. p. l. Retrieved February 16, 2021.
  66. ^ "The Programmers State Playlist", RPM. Volume 17, No. thirteen. May 13, 1972. Retrieved February 16, 2021.
  67. ^ Shaun Cassidy - Be My Baby, norwegiancharts.com. Retrieved February 16, 2021.
  68. ^ "Australian-charts.com – Teen Queens – Exist My Infant". ARIA Pinnacle 50 Singles. Retrieved January xv, 2021.
  69. ^ "ARIA Top 100 Singles for 1992". ARIA. Retrieved January 15, 2021.
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Bibliography

  • Brown, Mick (2008). Tearing Down the Wall of Audio: The Ascension and Fall of Phil Spector. Vintage. ISBN978-1-4000-7661-1.
  • Carlin, Peter Ames (2006). Catch a Wave: The Rising, Fall, and Redemption of the Embankment Boys' Brian Wilson. Rodale. ISBN978-ane-59486-320-2.
  • Howard, David N. (2004). Sonic Alchemy: Visionary Music Producers and Their Maverick Recordings (ane. ed.). Milwaukee, Wisconsin: Hal Leonard. ISBN9780634055607.
  • Love, Mike (2016). Good Vibrations: My Life as a Beach Boy. Penguin Publishing Grouping. ISBN978-0-698-40886-9.
  • Rooksby, Rikky (2001). Inside Classic Rock Tracks: Songwriting and Recording Secrets of 100 Great Songs from 1960 to the Present Day. Backbeat Books. ISBN978-0-87930-654-0.
  • Sanchez, Luis (2014). The Beach Boys' Smile. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN978-1-62356-956-three.
  • Thompson, Dave (2004). Wall of Pain: The Biography of Phil Spector (Paperback ed.). London: Sanctuary. ISBN978-1-86074-543-0.
  • Wilson, Brian; Greenman, Ben (2016). I Am Brian Wilson: A Memoir. Da Capo Press. ISBN978-0-306-82307-7.

External links [edit]

  • The Ronettes - Exist My Babe on YouTube
  • Classic Tracks: The Ronettes 'Exist My Baby'
  • Library of Congress essay for its pick for the National Recording Registry.

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Be_My_Baby

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