I'd Like to Teach the World to Sing (In Perfect Harmony)

"I'd Like to Teach the World to Sing" redirects here. For the Lea Salonga album, see I'd Like to Teach the World to Sing (album).
"I'd Like to Teach the World to Sing (In Perfect Harmony)"
Single by The Hillside Singers
from the album I'd Like to Teach the World to Sing
Released 1971 (1971)
Label Metromedia
Writer(s)
Producer(s) Al Ham
"I'd Like to Teach the World to Sing"
Single by The New Seekers
from the album We'd Like to Teach the World to Sing
B-side "Boom Town"
Released 1971
Length 2:20
Label Philips
Writer(s) Roger Cook, Roger Greenaway, Bill Backer and Billy Davis
Producer(s) David Mackay
The New Seekers singles chronology
"Never Ending Song of Love"
(1971)
"'I'd Like to Teach the World to Sing (In Perfect Harmony)"
(1971)
"Beg, Steal or Borrow"
(1972)

"I'd Like to Teach the World to Sing (In Perfect Harmony)" is a popular song that originated as the jingle "Buy the World a Coke"[1] in the groundbreaking 1971 "Hilltop" television commercial for Coca-Cola. "Buy the World a Coke" was produced by Billy Davis and portrayed a positive message of hope and love, featuring a multicultural collection of teenagers on top of a hill appearing to sing the song. "Buy the World a Coke" repeated "It's the real thing" as Coca-Cola's marketing theme at the time.

The popularity of the jingle led to it being re-recorded by The New Seekers and by The Hillside Singers as a full-length song, dropping references to Coca-Cola. The song became a hit record in the US and the UK.

Origins

The idea originally came to an advertising executive named Bill Backer, who was working for McCann-Erickson — the agency responsible for Coca-Cola. Backer, Roger Cook and Billy Davis were delayed at Shannon Airport in Ireland. After a forced layover with many hot tempers, they noticed their fellow travelers the next morning were talking and joking while drinking Coca-Cola. Backer wrote the line "I'd like to buy the world a Coke" on a napkin and shared it with British hit songwriters Cook and Roger Greenaway. The melody was derived from a jingle by Cook and Greenaway originally called "True Love and Apple Pie".[2] The commercial ended with the statement:

"On a hilltop in Italy, we assembled young people from all over the world to bring you the message from Coca-Cola bottlers all over the world. It's the real thing. Coke."

A version of the song was rerecorded by Susan Shirley and released in 1971. Cook, Greenaway, Backer, and Billy Davis reworked the song and recorded it as a Coca-Cola radio commercial.

TV commercial

Versions as an ad

Multiple versions of the ad have been made.

Significance and reception

In 2007, Campaign magazine called it "one of the best-loved and most influential ads in TV history".[9] It served as a milestone—the first instance of the recording industry's involvement with advertising.[10]

Marketing analysts have noted Coca-Cola's strategy of marrying the idea of happiness and universal love of the product illustrated by the song.[11][12]

The commercial has continued receiving accolades in more recent times. In 2000, Channel 4 and The Sunday Times ranked the song 16th in the 100 Greatest TV Ads,[13] whilst ITV ranked the advertisement 10th in their list of the greatest advertisements of all time by in 2005.[14]

Singles

The Hillside Singers

After the TV commercial aired, radio stations began to get calls from people who liked it. Billy Davis' friends in radio suggested he record the song, but not as an advertising jingle.[5] It became so popular that the song was rewritten without brand name references and expanded to three verses. Davis recruited a group of studio singers to take it on because The New Seekers did not have time to record it. The studio group named themselves The Hillside Singers to identify with the ad, and within two weeks the song was on the national charts. The Hillside Singers' version reached #13 on the Billboard Hot 100 and #5 on Billboard's Easy Listening chart. Billboard ranked this version as the No. 97 song for 1972.[15]

The New Seekers

The New Seekers later found time to record the song[2] and sold 96,000 copies of their record in one day, eventually selling 12 million total. The recording shot lead singer Eve Graham and the other members of The New Seekers to super-stardom.[16] "I'd Like to Teach the World to Sing (In Perfect Harmony)" climbed to UK #1 and US #7 in 1971 and 1972. The song has sold over a million copies in the UK.[17] The Coca-Cola Company waived royalties to the song and instead donated $80,000 in payments to UNICEF.[2] Billboard ranked this version as the No. 93 song for 1972.[15]

Covers and inspiration for other music

In popular culture

The commercial was used as the final scene in the Mad Men series finale, "Person to Person" (airdate May 17, 2015), which was set in November 1970, at an oceanside spiritual retreat in California. Just before the commercial segment played, the series protagonist, Don Draper, was shown meditating, finally at peace with a smile on his face, on a bluff overlooking the Pacific Ocean and facing the morning sun. Some critics suggest that the episode implies, within the show's fictional universe, the character of Don Draper was responsible for the ad's concept.[19][20] Soon confirmation came from the actor playing Draper, Jon Hamm. He said that, in his view, the broadcast of the famous commercial was used to tell the audience that Draper had returned to McCann Erickson in New York City with his creative ability renewed, and he was responsible for producing the "Hilltop" ad campaign inspired by his experience in the California retreat.[21][22]

On the Netflix television series Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, a second season episode features a reference to the character Reverend Richard Wayne Gary Wayne (also Hamm) claiming that he made up the "Give the World a Coke" advertisement.

See also

References

  1. The New Seekers: Buy The World a Coke (single release) at Discogs
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "I'd Like to Buy the World a Coke" – The Hilltop Story, The Coca-Cola Company (2006). Retrieved on May 4, 2009.
  3. 1 2 "Coca Cola "Hilltop"". Coloribus.
  4. Marlow Stern (18 May 2015). "Mad Men’s Series Finale: Don Draper’s Moment of Zen and the Betrayal of Peggy". The Daily Beast.
  5. 1 2 The "Hilltop" Ad: The Story of a Commercial, Library of Congress. Retrieved on May 4, 2009.
  6. Dale, Arden (December 22, 1989). "'Hilltop Reunion' has McCann and Coke Humming". Backstage.
  7. Williams, Damon C. (2005-06-16). "G. Love, Coke Zero take '71's 'Hilltop' to another level". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved 2015-03-29.
  8. "Coke Nascar Harmony Ad". YouTube.
  9. Hamilton, James & Tylee, John (May 18, 2007). "Ten ads that changed advertising". Campaign. p. 20.
  10. "All about ... Advertiser-funded music". Campaign. February 8, 2008. p. 15.
  11. Gieryn, Thomas F. (Spring 1987). "Science and Coca-Cola". Science & Technology Studies 5 (1). pp. 12–31.
  12. Holbrook, Morris (July 1987). "Mirror, Mirror, on the Wall, What's Unfair in the Reflections on Advertising?". The Journal of Marketing 51 (3). pp. 95–103.
  13. "100 Greatest TV Ads". UK TV Adverts. 2000.
  14. "Greatest advertisements of all time". thinkbox.TV. 2005.
  15. 1 2 Billboard Year-End Hot 100 singles of 1972
  16. Culley, Maureen (March 22, 2008). "I've Finished Teaching the World to Sing". Daily Mail (London). p. 18.
  17. Ami Sedghi (4 November 2012). "UK's million-selling singles: the full list". Guardian. Retrieved 4 November 2012.
  18. Mundy, Chris (May 2, 1996). "Ruling Asses: Oasis". Rolling Stone. pp. 32–35, 68.
  19. Teti, John Teti. "Mad Men: 'Person To Person'". AV Club. "The implication is that Don went back to the only home that would have him—McCann, where Peggy extended a perpetual welcome—and applied his newfound insights to launch an iconic Coke campaign"
  20. Sepinwall, Alan (May 18, 2015). "Series finale review: 'Mad Men' – 'Person to Person': I'd like to buy the world a Coke?". Hitfix. "If Don really traversed this great land of ours, threw away all the sigils of Don Draper-hood, learned of Betty's impending death and the shaky future of their three children, and finally heard someone articulate his own deepest feelings of unlovability, and he came out the other side having only acquired the inspiration needed to buy his way back into McCann(**) and write that Coke ad — and cutting straight from the look of pure bliss on Don's face to the ad, without giving us hints of anything else he might do upon returning to New York, suggests that this is the only thing that ultimately matters to him — then that is a very cynical and dark take on a man I wanted better from." "(**) During Peggy and Stan's phone call (about which I will have more to say in a bit), he tells her that Don will come back and be just fine like he always has in the past, and she later observes that Stan is always right."
  21. Begley, Sarah. "Jon Hamm Thinks There’s a Correct Interpretation of the End of Mad Men: "Don Draper had a moment of meditative clarity that led to the iconic Coca-Cola jingle.". TIME.
  22. "Jon Hamm Talks About the ‘Mad Men’ Series Finale". The New York Times. May 18, 2015. "My [Hamm's] take is that, the next day, he wakes up in this beautiful place, and has this serene moment of understanding, and realizes who he is. And who he is, is an advertising man. And so, this thing [the Hilltop Coke ad] comes to him."

External links

Preceded by
"Chiisana Koi" (ja) by Mari Amachi (ja)
Japanese Oricon Singles Chart number-one single
(The New Seekers version)

April 10, 1972
Succeeded by
"Yoake no Teishaba" by Shouji Ishibashi (ja)
Preceded by
"Slaney Valley" by Larry Cunningham
Irish Singles Chart number-one single
(The New Seekers version)

January 8, 1972 – January 15, 1972
Succeeded by
"Men Behind the Wire" by Barleycorn
Preceded by
"Ernie (The Fastest Milkman in the West)" by Benny Hill
UK Singles Chart number-one single
(The New Seekers version)

January 8, 1972 (4 weeks)
Succeeded by
"Telegram Sam" by T.Rex
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