Green-Eyed Lady

"Green-Eyed Lady"
Single by Sugarloaf
from the album Sugarloaf
B-side "West of Tomorrow"
Released August 1970
Genre Jazz Fusion / Psychedelic rock
Length 6:50 (album version)
5:58 (single version #1)
2:58 (single version #2)
3:33 (single version #3)
Label Liberty Records
Writer(s) Jerry Corbetta, J.C. Phillips & Dave Riordan
Sugarloaf singles chronology
"Green-Eyed Lady"
(1970)
"Don't Call Us, We'll Call You"
(1974)

"Green-Eyed Lady" is a popular single by the 1970s psychedelic rock band Sugarloaf. Written by band members Jerry Corbetta and Dave Riordan, the song was featured on the band's debut album, Sugarloaf and was the band's first single. It peaked at number three on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1970 and was RPM Magazine's number one single for two weeks. It remains the band's most popular song, according to the Last.fm rankings.[1][2] It has been featured on dozens of compilation albums.[3]

Single versions

The original single release was a 5:58 version with no edits but an early fadeout, almost immediately after the last verse. This was later trimmed down to 2:58 (for radio airplay only) in which the entire organ and guitar solos are edited out. When "Green-Eyed Lady" started climbing the charts, the single was reworked one last time to include a shortened piece of the organ/guitar break; this became the common 3:33 version used by radio stations today. Aside from other minor edits, the two shorter tracks begin with the opening's third bar and also end with early fadeouts. All three versions were released under the same catalog number (Liberty 56183).

Critical reception

The song received generally positive reviews. One reviewer called the song "jazzy and memorable,"[4] while John Laycock of the Windsor Star called it a "bewitching single."[5]

Popular culture

Four years later, Sugarloaf would describe the process of recording the song and selling it to the recording industry (namely the failed attempt to get CBS Records to distribute the record) in its song "Don't Call Us, We'll Call You," which also became a hit.

The song is featured in the 1997 comedy film Home Alone 3, starring Alex D. Linz and Rya Kihlstedt.[6]

Cover versions

The song has been covered by Pat Travers,[7] Lifeunderwater and My Sister's Machine.[8]

San Francisco experimental rock band Thinking Fellers Union Local 282 released a version of the song on their 1991 album Lovelyville.

It was also sampled by Jordan Knight for his song, "A Different Party".

References

  1. AllMusic
  2. Last.fm
  3. AllMusic.com. Recorded at Original Sound in Hollywood by Doc Siegel.
  4. The Midnight Tracker
  5. Laycock, John (October 8, 1970). "Pop". The Windsor Star. Retrieved March 24, 2011.
  6. Soundtrackinfo.com
  7. AllMusic
  8. Washburn, Jim (May 18, 1992). "POP MUSIC REVIEW : My Sister's Machine Comes on Loud but Not Very Clear". Los Angeles Times. Tribune Company. Retrieved December 7, 2011.

External links

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