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For Your Love

By: The Yardbirds
Date: 03/1965
From: For Your Love
Comment:
written by Graham Gouldman

ChartDebut
Date
Peak
Pos.
US15/05/19656
UK20/03/19653

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The Yardbirds singles chronology
Good Morning Little Schoolgirl
(11/1964 • 12 pts)
For Your Love
(03/1965 • 234 pts)
Heart Full of Soul
(06/1965 • 227 pts)
The Yardbirds singles by points
Heart Full of Soul
(06/1965 • 227 pts)
For Your Love
(03/1965 • 234 pts)
 

For Your Love

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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"For Your Love"

Japanese single
Single by The Yardbirds
B-side "Got To Hurry"
Released Feb 1965
Format 7" single
Genre Baroque pop, Blues rock
Length 2:30
Label Columbia DB 7499 (UK)
Epic 9790 (US)
Writer(s) Graham Gouldman
Producer Giorgio Gomelsky
The Yardbirds singles chronology
"Good Morning Little Schoolgirl" (1964) "For Your Love"
(1965)
"Heart Full of Soul"
(1965)

"For Your Love" is a 1965 single written by future 10cc member Graham Gouldman and performed by the British Invasion band The Yardbirds. It peaked at number three on UK Singles Chart[1] and became their highest charting single in the U.S., peaking at number six.[2]

Contents

Background

Gouldman wrote the song at the age of 19 while working by day in a gentlemen's outfitters near Salford Docks and playing by night with the semi-professional Manchester band the Mockingbirds. He said: "I was sleeping most of the time because I'd been gigging with the Mockingbirds the night before, and then during the day when I'd got any spare time I'd write in the shop. I used to shut up the shop at lunch time and sit in the back writing."[3]

Gouldman cited The Beatles as his influence by saying "We went down to Denmark Street and went round all the publishers trying to find a song . . . we didn’t get any songs that we liked or we weren’t given any songs period and the Beatles had started and I thought ‘well, I’m gonna really have a crack at song-writing.’ I had dabbled a bit, but they were really my inspiration and gave me and I think a lot of other people the courage to actually do it. We all wanted to be like the Beatles. I wrote two songs and the record company we were with turned down one of the songs. The song they turned down was 'For Your Love', which eventually found its way to the Yardbirds."[4]

Gouldman's manager, Harvey Lisberg, was so impressed by the song he told Gouldman they should offer it to the Beatles. "I said, 'I think they're doing alright in the songwriting department, actually'," Gouldman recalled.[5] Undeterred, Lisberg gave a demo of the song to publisher Ronnie Beck of Feldman's, who took it to the Hammersmith Odeon, where the Beatles were performing. By coincidence the Yardbirds were also performing on a Christmas show at the venue and Beck played the song to their manager, Giorgio Gomelsky, and the band.[3]

In 1965 The Mockingbirds began a regular warm-up spot for BBC TV’s Top of the Pops, transmitted from Manchester.[6]. Gouldman recalled: "There was one strange moment when The Yardbirds appeared on the show doing 'For Your Love'. Everyone clamoured around them – and there I was just part of an anonymous group. I felt strange that night, hearing them play my song."[3]

Despite the success "For Your Love" gave The Yardbirds, it signaled the departure of guitarist Eric Clapton, who played on the track with strong reluctance. Dismayed with the group's shift from R&B to pop, Clapton left the Yardbirds to join John Mayall & the Bluesbreakers.

Cover Versions

A cover version by Peter Blakely is featured in the 1990 film "The Crossing".

The song was also recorded by Herman's Hermits, Humble Pie, The Greg Kihn Band, Nils Lofgren, Fleetwood Mac, Chilly, The Ace Kefford Stand, and Graham Gouldman himself.

Chart performance

Chart (1965) Peak
position
United Kingdom (Record Retailer) 3[7]
United Kingdom (NME) 1[8]

Appearances in Popular Culture

The song was featured in the 1998 film Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, and in the 2009 film The Boat That Rocked.

See Also

References

  1. ^ http://www.everyhit.com/
  2. ^ http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=11:aifixqr5ldfe~T51
  3. ^ a b c George Tremlett (1976). The 10cc Story. Futura. ISBN 0-86007-378-5. 
  4. ^ Graham Gouldman interviewed on "I Write the Songs", BBC Radio Wales, December 25, 2006
  5. ^ Comment at Kirsty MacColl website
  6. ^ "Q Rock Stars Encyclopedia" by Dafydd Rees and Luke Crampton, Dorling Kindersley, 1999
  7. ^ "Artist Chart History Details: Yardbirds". The Official Charts Company. http://www.theofficialcharts.com/artist/_/yardbirds/. Retrieved 8 August 2010. 
  8. ^ Rees, Dafydd; Lazell, Barry; Osborne, Roger (1995). Forty Years of "NME" Charts (2nd ed.). Pan Macmillan. p. 152. ISBN 0-7522-0829-2. 

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