Showing posts with label Oh Pretty Woman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Oh Pretty Woman. Show all posts

Monday, September 4, 2023

Highest-Earning Songs All Time

Highest-Earning Songs of All Time:

Surprisingly, there aren’t many resources out there listing royalties earned by songs. There are variations of a top-ten list that have floated around since at least 2014 (see sources at bottom of page) but that’s about it. This page lists twelve songs which have earned $30 million or more and then lists high-selling songs which may be in that bracket as well. Songs with royalty information are listed by songwriters and not the performers. Songs with numbers of copies sold are listed by the performers. Note that earnings and number of copies sold are often estimates.

Check other lists based on charts, sales, and airplay here.


Songs with Royalties of $30 Million or More:

  1. “Happy Birthday to You” by the Hill Sisters (1893). Earnings: $70 million
  2. White Christmas” (1942) by Irving Berlin (1942). Earnings: $66 million, copies sold: 52 million
  3. You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feelin’” by Barry Mann, Cynthia Weil, Phil Spector (1964). Earnings: $65 million
  4. Yesterday” by John Lennon and Paul McCartney (1965). Earnings: $60 million
  5. All I Want for Christmas Is You” by Mariah Carey & Walter Afanasieff (1994). Earnings: $60 million, copies sold: 16 million
  6. Unchained Melody” by Alex North, Hy Zaret (1955). Earnings: $55 million
  7. Stand by Me” by Ben E. King, Elmo Glick, Jerry Leiber, Mike Stoller (1961). Earnings: $50 million
  8. Santa Claus Is Coming to Town by Haven Gillespie & Fred J. Coots (1934). Earnings: $50 million
  9. The Christmas Song (Chestnuts Roasting on an Open Fire)” by Mel TormĂ© and Robert Wells (1944). Earnings: $45 million
  10. “Wonderful Christmastime” by Paul McCartney (1979). Earnings: $40 million

  11. Every Breath You Take” by Sting (1983). Earnings: $35 million
  12. (Oh) Pretty Woman” by Roy Orbison & Bill Dees (1964). Earnings: $30 million

    Other High-Selling Songs But Royalties Unknown:

  13. Shape of You” performed by Ed Sheeran (2017). Copies sold: 42 million
  14. Despacito” performed by Luis Fonsi with Daddy Yankee & Justin Bieber (2017). Copies sold: 38 million
  15. Candle in the Wind 1997” performed by Elton John (1997). Copies sold: 33 million
  16. “In the Summertime” performed by Mungo Jerry (1970). Copies sold: 31 million
  17. Silent Night” written by Joseph Mohr (1818). Copies sold: 30 million
  18. We’re Gonna Rock Around the Clock” performed by Bill Haley & His Comets (1955). Copies sold: 25 million
  19. I Will Always Love You” performed by Whitney Houston (1992). Copies sold: 24 million
  20. Something Just Like This” performed by The Chainsmokers with Coldplay (2017). Copies sold: 23 million
  21. It’s Now or Never” performed by Elvis Presley (1960). Copies sold: 22 million
  22. Perfect” performed by Ed Sheeran & BeyoncĂ© (2017). Copies sold: 22 million

  23. We Are the World” performed by U.S.A. for Africa (1985). Copies sold: 20 million
  24. “If I Didn’t Care” by the Ink Spots(1939). Copies sold: 19 million
  25. “Yes Sir, I Can Boogie” performed by Baccara (1977). Copies sold: 18 million
  26. My Heart Will Go On” performed by Celein Dion (1997). Copies sold: 18 million
  27. (Everything I Do) I Do It for You” performed by Bryan Adams (1991). Copies sold: 15 million
  28. You’re the One That I Want” by Olivia Newton-John & John Travolta (1978). Copies sold: 15 million
  29. “Wind of Change” performed by the Scorpions (1991). Copies sold: 14 million
  30. “Sweet Mother” performed by Prince Nico Mbarga (1976). Copies sold: 13 million
  31. Sukiyaki” performed by Kyu Sakamoto (1963). Copies sold: 13 million
  32. Rudolph, the Red-Nosed Reindeer” performed by Gene Autry (1949). Copies sold: 12.5 million

  33. I Want to Hold Your Hand” performed by The Beatles (1963). Copies sold: 12 million
  34. Time to Say Goodbye” performed by Andrea Bocelli & Sarah Brightman (1995). Copies sold: 12 million
  35. Y.M.C.A.” performed by the Village People (1978). Copies sold: 12 million

Resources/Related Links:


First posted 9/14/2023.

Friday, September 26, 2014

50 years ago: Roy Orbison’s “Pretty Woman” topped the chart

Oh Pretty Woman

Roy Orbison

Writer(s): Roy Orbison/Bill Dees (see lyrics here)


First Charted: August 29, 1964


Peak: 13 US, 13 CB, 11 HR, 48 AC, 89 CW, 1 CL, 12 UK, 11 CN, 12 AU, 1 DF (Click for codes to singles charts.)


Sales (in millions): 1.0 US, 0.76 UK, 7.0 world (includes US + UK)


Airplay/Streaming (in millions): 6.0 radio, 103.05 video, 293.43 streaming

Awards:

Click on award for more details.

About the Song:

Orbison’s “most enduring recording” NRR grew out of a crack Bill Dees made to Roy’s wife, Claudette. She interrupted the pair while they were writing to ask her husband for some money to go to the store. Dees shot back that a “pretty woman never needs any money.” RS500 From that, Roy came up with the idea of a man watching a pretty woman walk by and wondering if she might be lonely like him.

The path from inception to release was, as Dees says, “the fastest thing I ever saw.” KL He says they wrote the song on a Friday, recorded it the next Friday, and by the following Friday it was released. KL The song was marked by “Orbison’s tiger-like growl and the repetitive guitar riff.” JA His singing is “uncharacteristically exuberant” TC on this “perfect country rock boogie sound.” TC Chet Atkins called it the “best commercial record I ever heard.” HL

The flirtatious nature of this “anthem for voyeurs” TC was amusingly ironic, depicting Orbison (or at least the song’s protagonist) “as a trolling stud.” MA The image was far better suited to singer David Lee Roth’s machismo when his hard-rock band, Van Halen, took their 1982 cover of the song to #1 on the album rock chart and #12 on the pop charts. Six years later, Orbison died of a heart attack, but as a testament to the song’s timeliness, a version recorded live in September 1987 hit the adult contemporary and country charts in 1989 – twenty five years after the original.

Rap group 2 Live Crew recorded a parody under the title “Pretty Woman” and sampled the bassline from the original. WK Orbison’s publisher sued under the claim that the fair use doctrine did not allow for copyrighted material to be reused for profit. WK In 1994, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled, in what is now considered a seminal fair use decision, WK that parody qualified as fair use.


Resources:

  • DMDB Encyclopedia entry for Roy Orbison
  • TC Toby Creswell (2005). 1001 Songs: The Great Songs of All Time. Thunder’s Mouth Press: New York, NY. Page 694.
  • HL Michael Heatley and Spencer Leigh (1998). Behind the Song: The Stories of 100 Great Pop & Rock Classics. London, England: Blandford Books. Page 16.
  • JA David A. Jasen (2002). A Century of American Popular Music: 2000 Best-Loved and Remembered Songs (1899-1999). Routledge: Taylor & Francis, Inc. Page 150.
  • KL Jon Kutner and Spencer Leigh (2005). 1000 UK Number One Hits: The Stories Behind Every Number One Single Since 1952. London, Great Britain: Omnibus Press. Page 103.
  • MA Dave Marsh (1989). The Heart of Rock and Soul: The 1001 Greatest Singles Ever Made. New York, NY; New American Library. Page 32.
  • NRR National Recording Preservation Board of the Library of Congress The Full National Recording Registry
  • RS500 Rolling Stone (2011). “The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time
  • WK Wikipedia.org


First posted 8/29/2011; updated 11/12/2022.