Best Selling Products at Amazon.com

"Bad Blood"
Neil Sedaka
Rocket 40460
October 1975
Billboard: #1     Lyrics Icon Videos Icon

Elton John and Neil Sedakaeil Sedaka's comeback in the '70s was even more successful than his '60s career. In the short span of eight months, three songs that he wrote went to number one: "Laughter in the Rain," "Love Will Keep Us Together" and "Bad Blood."

'The Hungry Years' - Neil Sedaka
In a chart run that extends back to 1958, Brooklyn born pop singer/songwriter/pianist Neil Sedaka scored his 17th Top 40 hit and second No. 1 single in 1975 with "Bad Blood," which topped the charts for three of its 12 weeks in the Top 40. The song originally appeared on Sedaka's British-only album release Overnight Success, which was slightly modified before being released in the US as The Hungry Years. First charting on Oct. 11, 1975, The Hungry Years peaked at No. 16 on the Billboard Hot 200 album chart, and remained on the chart for 32 weeks. It was certified gold by the R.I.A.A. on Dec. 18, 1975.
The year 1975 was good for Sedaka. After a dry period of 11 years he was suddenly hot -- he was signed to Elton John's new label, Rocket Records; he was starring on network television and appearing in Las Vegas; and he and other artists were topping the charts with his songs.

The follow-up to "Laughter in the Rain" was "The Immigrant," a song Neil dedicated to John Lennon because of his problems with the United States government in obtaining permission to remain in America. The song peaked at 22 and another single from Sedaka's Back was released, "That's Where the Music Takes Me."

Neil waited for major radio stations to add his new single. Then came some good news: the influential RKO chain had added a new Neil Sedaka song to their playlists. The bad news was, it wasn't "That's Where the Music Takes Me." It was an album track from Overnight Success, a British LP that wasn't even released in the United States.

What may have influenced RKO programming chief Paul Drew to add the song was the fact that the owner of the record label was singing background vocals. "Bad Blood" did not list him in the credits, but Elton John could clearly be heard on the track. After he had written "Bad Blood" with Phil Cody, Sedaka suggested to producer Robert Appere that it could be recorded as a duet. Neil asked Elton to come to Clover Studios in Los Angeles to sing the backing vocal and he agreed.

The record was rush released by Rocket in America after the surprise airplay from RKO. While Neil may be primarily remembered for "Breaking Up Is Hard to Do," his most successful single is really "Bad Blood," which sold 1.4 million copies and was number one for three weeks.

With a couple of track changes, the Overnight Success album was retitled The Hungry Years for American release. Neil's follow-up to "Bad Blood" was a new arrangement of "Breaking Up Is Hard to Do." Instead of a 1962 pop song, it was transformed into a contemporary ballad. The new version went to number eight, and it is the only number one single to be re-recorded by the same artist and become a Top 10 hit all over again.

After three more chart singles on Rocket, Neil signed with Elektra Records. His biggest success on the label was a duet with his daughter Dara, "Should've Never Let You Go." In 1983 he moved to MCA/Curb and again charted with Dara on a cover version of Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell's "Your Precious Love," making Sedaka one of the handful of artists whose chart success span four decades.

- Fred Bronson, The Billboard Book of Number One Hits, Billboard, 1988.

Reader's Comments

No comments so far, be the first to comment .




Peace Icon Main Page | Additional Singles Intro | Singles By Month | Seventies Almanac | Search The RockSite/The Web


Mobilize your Site
View Site in Mobile | Classic
Share by: