- These Eyes (song)
Infobox Single
Name = These Eyes
Artist =The Guess Who
from Album =Wheatfield Soul
B-side = "Lightfoot"
Released = 1968 (Canada)April, 1969 (US)
Format = 7" 45 RPM
Genre = Pop, Rock
Length = 3:45
Label = Nimbus 9 (Canada)
RCA (US)
Writer =Randy Bachman ,Burton Cummings
Producer =Jack Richardson
Chart position = * #6 US Pop Singles"These Eyes" is a 1968 song by the Canadian rock bandThe Guess Who . The song was co-written by the group's lead guitarist,Randy Bachman and lead singer,Burton Cummings and originally included on the band's 1968 album "Wheatfield Soul ". Bachman had the original piano chords with an original title of "These Arms." Cummings changed the title to "These Eyes" and added the middle eight. [ [http://www.songfacts.com/detail.php?id=1489 These Eyes by The Guess Who Songfacts ] ] It was first released as a single (backed by "Lightfoot"), in their nativeCanada , where its chart success helped land them aU.S. distribution deal withRCA Records . It was then released in the U.S. in April of 1969, and became a breakthrough success for the group, as it would be their first single to reach the top ten on the U.S. Pop chart, peaking at number six, and would eventually be certified gold by theRIAA for sales of over one million copies. While it was actually the eighteenth single released by the band, it was the first from the quartet of Cummings, Bachman, Jim Kale, andGarry Peterson as produced byJack Richardson . [ [http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&token=&sql=10:3ifwxqu5ldde allmusic ((( Wheatfield Soul > Overview ))) ] ]The song has been used in the films "Now and Then " (1995), "Stay" (2005) and "
Superbad " (2007) where it is sung briefly by Evan (Michael Cera ) and heard moments later on the police car radio in the original form.There have been a number of cover versions released over the years, perhaps most notably
Junior Walker & the All-Stars ' version. Released as a single in October 1969, this version was also a chart success in the U.S., reaching number three on the R&B Singles Chart and number sixteen on the Pop Singles Chart.Canadian hip-hop artist Maestro sampled this song for his 1998 Canadian hit "Stick to Your Vision" off the "Built to Last" album. In addition, the chorus (of which the first part states "These eyes/Seen a lot of shame in the game/These eyes/Seen a lot of pain in the fame/These eyes/Seen a lot of highs and lows/But that's just the way life goes") uses Burton Cummings' vocals for the words "these eyes" in a call-and-response manner.
In 2008, Gregg Gillis, better known to the public as Girl Talk, sampled the song for the track entitled "Set It Off" from his fourth album
Feed the Animals .References
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