Good to Have You Back Again

David Gates is all-time known as the frontman of the American soft-rock grouping Bread. He was as well the group's primary songwriter. The song "Everything I Ain" was written by Gates and was originally recorded and released by Elektra on Bread's 1972 album "Baby I'm-a want y'all". This was the group's fourth anthology and reached number xiii on the US Pop Anthology charts. The album had four singles of which "Everything I own was i. The single reached number 5 on the American Billboard hot 100.

The song was written for Gate'southward father. Gates says that his male parent was a kind and gentle man and took the time to teach Gates to read and write music and to play various instruments. He was influential in introducing Gates to classical music, which, in Gate's give-and-take is "his foundation". He attributes the vocal title to the kind words of his father after Gates sent his mother a gift of an orchid, which was more than he could at the fourth dimension. Gate'south father was touched past the gesture and said that Gates could have "Everything she owned".

In describing how the vocal was written, Gates said that, as usual, the music lead the mode in the process, only that the lyrics came quickly as they tried to keep up with the music. He specifically wrote the line "I would give everything I own just to have y'all back once more" so that the vocal could exist interpreted as a dear song just when he sang the vocal to his wife, she immediately knew it was not a dearest song, in the traditional sense of the word, but a dedication to Gate's father.

Born in 1940, Gates was surrounded by music from an early age. His father was a band director and his mother was a piano teacher. Unfortunately, Gate'due south male parent did not alive to witness the enormous successes that Bread became but he see some early on progress and indications of the accomplishments that were to follow.

For many years Gate's did not reveal the source of inspiration for the song simply at his father's funeral  Gates said "My success would have been so special to him every bit he was my greatest influence. So I decided to write and record 'Everything I Own' about him. If you lot listen to the words, 'Y'all sheltered me from harm, kept me warm, gave my life to me, gear up me free,' it says it all." Gate's father passed away in 1963

The group Staff of life, which was based in Los Angeles, was formed equally a creative outlet for the prolific song-writing of Gates. Gates had already had some songwriting success with the Monkees and Chuck Drupe. The grouping released five albums in 4 years with two in the year of 1972, the year that "Everything I own" was released.

Andy Williams produced the beginning known cover of this song, interestingly also in 1972. His track was released on the album "Love Theme from "The Godfather". The instrumentation and phrasing of William's version sounds remarkably similar to Breadstuff'due south version, at least to my untrained ear.

Jamaican reggae creative person Ken Booth heard the Andy Williams version of the song and decided to record it for his next anthology. Apparently, he needed a "filler" track for the 10th song on the album. The song quickly reached number 1 in Jamaica and was picked up by Trojan for release in the U.k..  The BBC contacted Booth to put the song on acme of the pops and it became a British nautical chart-topper. Apparently, Booth did not receive royalties from this number one song every bit Trojan went bankrupt.

Shirley Bassey recorded the song for her 1973 album "Never Never Never. Bassey belts out the lyrics in her usual robust style. The song was withheld from her 1973 anthology but was finally released on the 1994 CD compilation.

The Male child George version of "Everything I ain" (no doubt inspired by the Ken Booth version) was released in 1987. Boy George presents the song in the same laid back fashion as "Karma Chameleon" and "Practise Y'all Really Desire to Injure Me", the songs that catapulted Boy George into his 1980's stardom. The song reached number one in the Britain, Canada, Republic of ireland, and Kingdom of norway. It was and is his merely number one Uk striking as a solo artist after his departure from Civilisation Club.

Since then the vocal has been covered by many other diverse artists, although not many have strayed equally far from the original Bread style as Male child George and Ken Booth. Covers include Olivia Newton-John in 1973, country singer Crystal Gayle in 1982, Petula Clark in 1974 and pussycat doll, and X Factor judge Nicole Scherzinger.

The song has stood the exam of time and is still alive and well in the 21st century with Rod Stewarts 2006 version and Boyzone in 2013. There is a slap-up brew-up of Chrissy Hind of the Pretenders and Jason Mraz in the 2006 movie Happy Feet.

I posted this song in the Facebook song a day claiming on Fri 3 July 2020 and we had some wonderful renditions in our customs.

The song a mean solar day claiming is a group on Facebook where I postal service a claiming song every day. There is a karaoke-style play-along video with scrolling chords and lyrics to help you learn the vocal. Members then post a video their ain acoustic rendition on the grouping.  You can join the song a day Facebook challenge here. You can subscribe to my YouTube channel with hundreds of play-along videos for guitar players hither. Hither is a link to the play-forth video of Everything I own on Youtube. Then go your guitar out of the cupboard, wipe off the dust and start playing along.

You sheltered me from harm
Kept me warm, kept me warm
Y'all gave my life to me
Gear up me free, gear up me gratis
The finest years I always knew
Were all the years I had with you

And I would requite anything I own
Give up my life, my middle, my home
I would requite everything I own
Simply to take y'all dorsum once again

Yous taught me how to love
What information technology'southward of, what it's of
You never said too much
Just still you lot showed the way
And I knew from watching you
Nobody else could ever know
The part of me that tin't let go

And I would requite anything I own
Surrender my life, my heart, my habitation
I would requite everything I own
Just to have you dorsum once again

Is in that location someone you know
You're loving them and so
But taking them all for granted
You may lose them one solar day
Someone takes them away
And they don't hear the words you long to say

I would give anything I own
Give up my life, my heart, my dwelling house
I would give everything I ain
Just to take you back once again
Just to bear on y'all again

reeddancle.blogspot.com

Source: https://joannecooper.co.za/blogs/latest-news/posts/songs-that-made-us-episode-1-everything-i-own-by-david-gates

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