Showing posts with label Steve Miller Band. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Steve Miller Band. Show all posts

Saturday, December 11, 1976

Steve Miller Band “Fly Like an Eagle” charted

Fly Like an Eagle

Steve Miller Band

Writer(s): Steve Miller (see lyrics here)


Released: August 13, 1976


First Charted: December 11, 1976


Peak: 2 BB, 3 CB, 5 GR, 5 HR, 4 RR, 38 AC, 1 CL, 2 CN, 1 DF (Click for codes to charts.)


Sales (in millions): 1.0 US


Airplay/Streaming (in millions): -- radio, 14.8 video, 146.05 streaming

Awards (Steve Miller Band):

Click on award for more details.


Awards (Seal):

About the Song:

The Steve Miller Band was formed by its namesake I 1966 in San Francisco. They appeared at the Monterey Pop Festival in June 1967 and released their first album, Children of the Future, in 1968. Their real breakthrough, however, came in 1973 with The Joker, which reached #2 on the album chart and went platinum. It sparked the #1 tile cut which went five times platinum.

It set them up for the even more successful Fly Like an Eagle in 1976. It reached #3 and sold four million copies. Lead single “Take the Money and Run” hit #11 and “Rock ‘N’ Me” topped the charts. The album, however, is “dominated by its title track, all bubbling synths and breathy boys, while everything percolates furiously beneath.” DT “Fly Like an Eagle” just missed out on the top spot, peaking at #2, but was the album’s only gold single.

Miller said, “Originally, I wrote the lyrics as a political statement. The words were from the perspective of Native Americans and the despair they felt, especially after the Wounded Knee standoff with law enforcement earlier that year.” MM He continued, saying, “As I sang the song on the road, I came up with new lyrics and kept the ones I like best. At some point on tour, I broadened the lyrics’ focus, replacing ‘reservation’ with ‘revolution.’ I wanted to make the song’s message more universal.” MM

When it came time to record the song, he lifted some of the guitar work from his own song “My Dark Hour.” He still thought “it needed more dimension and texture” MM so he picked up a cheap synthesizer. He created effects “that felt like an eagle taking off and flying.” MM He later “added the spacey overdubs…[and] the song sounded just right.” MM On the album, the minute-long instrumental is listed as a separate song, “Space Intro.” The two are often played together on the radio. SF

In 1996, Seal covered the song for the movie Space Jam and reached #10 on the Billboard Hot 100.


Resources:


Related Links:


First posted 10/2/2023.

Saturday, January 12, 1974

Steve Miller Band “The Joker” hit #1

The Joker

Steve Miller Band

Writer(s): Eddie Curtis, Ahmet Ertegun, Steve Miller (see lyrics here)


First Charted: October 20, 1973


Peak: 11 BB, 11 CB, 11 GR, 11 HR, 2 RR, 1 CL, 12 UK, 2 CN, 8 AU, 3 DF (Click for codes to charts.)


Sales (in millions): 5.0 US, 0.4 UK


Airplay/Streaming (in millions): 1.0 radio, 38.5 video, 457.76 streaming

Awards:

Click on award for more details.

About the Song:

The Steve Miller Band formed in 1966 in San Francisco. Their first two albums “combined straight-ahead blues with seamlessly produced, Beatlesque rock suites.” FB They spent “the early ‘70s playing some of the best rock music ever recorded, founded in the blues, grand-scaled and harmonically rich.” FB While Miller “developed an enthusiastic following, he remained a relative unknown.” FB Rolling Stone once dubbed Steve Miller “the man without a face.” FB

They released seven albums before they really caught on with the mainstream in 1973. They’d never had an album chart in the top 20 and only two singles reached the Billboard Hot 100 – “Living in the U.S.A.” (#94, 1968) and “Going to the Country” (#69, 1970). Their fortunes changed dramatically, however, with “The Joker.” The 1973 single went all the way to #1, sold five million copies, and propelled the album of the same name to #2 and platinum status.

Miller said, “I never thought ‘The Joker’ was going to be a hit…I said, ‘Okay, it’s got to be-two-and-a-half minutes long and it’s got to play on top 40 radio, and it’s got to follow a soul-disco symphony.” FB He explained that before it became a hit, “I knew every vaudeville hall in the United States and was playing each one of them three times a year...Then ‘The Joker” was the #1 record in the country, and we were playing 3000 seat halls” DT because we’d already scheduled the next tour became a hit.

The song reached its peak in the United States in early 1974, but it would 16 more years before it ascended to the throne in the UK. A television ad for for Levi’s 501 jeans boosted the song’s status, leading to its reissue and eventual #1 slot on the UK charts. KL There was some controversy, however, in that “The Joker” and Deee-lite’s “Grrove Is in the Heart” tied in sales, but the latter was listed at #1 because of a rule that, in the event of a tie, the song with the biggest gain from the previous week would get the nod. KL By hitting #1, “The Joker” set a record for the longest time between a song hitting #1 in the United States and the UK. WK

The song famously uses the made-up word “pompatus” which came from Miller mishearing lyrics for “The Letter” by the Medallions. Writer Vernon Green used the word “puppetutes,” itself a made-up word meaning “a paper-doll erotic fantasy figure.” WK Miller first used the word in his 1968 song “Gangster of Love.” WK


Resources:

  • DMDB encyclopedia entry for Steve Miller Band
  • FB Fred Bronson (2003). The Billboard Book of Number One Hits (5th edition). Billboard Books: New York, NY. Page 353.
  • KL Jon Kutner and Spencer Leigh (2005). 1000 UK Number One Hits. Omnibus Press: London, UK. Page 359.
  • DT Dave Thompson (2011). 1000 Songs That Rock Your World. Krause Publications: Iola, WI. Page 287.
  • WK Wikipedia


First posted 1/6/2024.