Somehow Some Way Well Be Together Again

Vocal past Marshall Crenshaw

1982 single past Marshall Crenshaw

"Someday, Someway"
Someday, Someway - Marshall Crenshaw.jpg
Unmarried past Marshall Crenshaw
from the album Marshall Crenshaw
B-side "You're My Favorite Waste product of Time"
Released May 1982
Recorded January 1982
Genre
  • Power pop[one]
  • Rockabilly
  • New wave
Label Warner Bros.
Songwriter(south) Marshall Crenshaw
Producer(s) Richard Gottehrer, Marshall Crenshaw
Marshall Crenshaw singles chronology
"Something's Gonna Happen"
(1981)
"Someday, Someway"
(1982)
"There She Goes Again"
(1982)
Sound
"Someday, Someway" on YouTube
Music video
"Someday. Someway" on YouTube

"Someday, Someway" is a 1982 vocal by American rock musician Marshall Crenshaw. The song was released on his 1982 debut album, Marshall Crenshaw.

A breakthrough vocal for Crenshaw, "Someday, Someway" originated every bit a have on Gene Vincent'south "Lotta Lovin'." Crenshaw wanted to use the beat to create a hypnotic consequence and wrote a new tune effectually information technology. The lyrics were described by Crenshaw as simple, only with a subconscious depth; he later claimed that the lyrics had been influenced by the beginnings of his marriage.

Crenshaw's version of the vocal was released as a single in 1982 after Robert Gordon covered and released the song in 1981. Both versions saw early success on New York radio, though Crenshaw's rendition saw greater success nationally. The song ultimately hit the top 40 in the The states and has since become Crenshaw'southward nearly famous song. It has since been covered by multiple artists.

Background and recording [edit]

"Someday, Someway" was one of the start songs Marshall Crenshaw wrote, following "Yous're My Favorite Waste material of Time" and some others.[2] The vocal was written while Crenshaw was in New York, where he had played John Lennon in the musical Beatlemania; he explained, "While I was [in New York], I wrote 'Anytime, Someway' and v or half-dozen of the other tunes on my first album. I wrote those in my hotel room. That was my adjacent movement in life, to be a recording artist. I actually had a sense of creative direction and off I went."[three] Crenshaw described "Anytime, Someway" as "the beginning [song] I wrote where I actually thought 'Eureka'." Calling it a "breakthrough moment," he later on said the vocal was the issue of a "particular audio and style had been forming in my heed during this menses."[4]

"Someday, Someway" was recorded along with other songs for his debut album past Crenshaw with producer Richard Gottehrer at the Power Station in New York.[five] Gotterher, a old songwriter whose hits included "I Want Candy" and "My Swain's Back", had produced albums by Blondie and the Go-Get's during the 1970s and 1980s.[five] Crenshaw had originally planned to produce his debut anthology alone but after sessions stalled, Warner Bros. suggested Gotterher; Crenshaw recalled, "Nosotros started making our first album and I sort of [BS'd] my way into the producer's chair simply it didn't piece of work out. So Richard Gottehrer came in and he helped me make the tape."[5] [6]

Music and lyrics [edit]

"Someday, Someway" was based on the 1957 Gene Vincent song "Lotta Lovin'."[2] [4] [v] Every bit Crenshaw explained, "I wanted to take the beat out and atmosphere of a 1950s Rock and Whorl record that I loved ... and build something around that. I came upwards with the music first for 'Someday' and dug that it was kind of hypnotic, very spare and succinct."[4] Crenshaw later chosen the vocal'due south guitar riff his "my best riff ever."[vii]

Crenshaw wrote the lyrics to the song after finishing the music, explaining, "they were nice and spare but had some depth, lots of possible meanings and implications, etc. There was something kind of mysterious near it and I liked that."[two] Crenshaw described the song as "one of those ones that came out in a rush."[ii] In an interview with PBS, Crenshaw explained that the song had subconsciously been written nigh the early stages of wedlock. He stated, "What I figured out finally was that I wrote it about the awkward beginnings of a marriage. All of a sudden, you're married and you realized that you signed up for something permanent. That's what the vocal's about. At the time I didn't realize that. I wasn't trying to write about that, only that's merely what was going on."[8]

Release [edit]

The first version of "Anytime, Someway" to be released was a 1981 cover by neo-rockabilly musician Robert Gordon.[eight] [9] This version of the song became a regional hitting in New York.[viii] Crenshaw later on attributed the song'southward success to the New York radio station 102.7 WNEW-FM. He explained in an interview, "WNEW was on one manus what you would call a mainstream FM rock station, but there likewise was some flexibility. People similar Vin [Scelsa] and Meg Griffin were really talented and determined to express themselves also equally play the hits. Meg really loved Robert Gordon's version of 'Someday, Someway,' and just jumped on it. And then when I got my single out on Shake Records, what practise you know? She picked up on that, too, and started talking about me on the radio. So the rest of the station followed suit; they were really slap-up to us, always."[10]

Crenshaw's version of "Someday, Someway" came out in May 1982. The single release of the vocal, backed past "You're My Favorite Waste product of Time," was a moderate chart hit in the U.s.a., reaching number 36 on the Billboard charts and number 31 on the Cashbox charts.[9] [11] [12] The single would be Crenshaw's only peak 40 hitting.[9] The song was also released on his 1982 debut album, Marshall Crenshaw.

The music video for "Anytime Someway" came from a concert Crenshaw played in San Francisco. Crenshaw later on explained, "Warner Brothers sent a moving-picture show coiffure, three cameras, and they sent a sound truck with a multi-track recording fix and they documented the show. Their purpose in doing that was to send out VHS tapes to all of the distributors to let people know what we were virtually and what we looked like and sounded like. Back in the solar day, that concert was shown on MTV a couple of times and the video for 'Someday, Someway' from taken from that show too."[thirteen] An archival release of the San Francisco concert was released in 2017.

Critical reception [edit]

At the time of its release, "Someday, Someway" saw positive reception from critics. In a 1982 review of Marshall Crenshaw for Billboard, Thomas Gabriel praised the song'due south "lean, emotionally direct lyrics" and noted that the song's bridge is simply as catchy every bit its melody.[xiv]

The song has since seen critical acclamation and has been praised as one of Crenshaw's best songs. Jim Bessman of Billboard called the song a "masterful pop creation" while Dave McKenna of The Washington Post called the song "irresistible".[7] [15] Don Harrison of Richmond Magazine called the song "impossibly catchy" and Juliet Pennington of The Boston Globe said the song was "such a catchy tune that you can't become it out of your head after yous hear information technology".[half dozen] [xvi]

"Anytime, Someway" has been called Crenshaw's signature song.[iv] Crenshaw afterwards said of the song, "I yet similar information technology just fine, and I especially similar the tape we did. The tempo and groove are just perfect, it doesn't sound dated and maybe never will, it's just good."[4] Crenshaw continues to perform the song live.[17]

Charts [edit]

Cover versions [edit]

"Anytime, Someway" has been covered by multiple artists. Robert Gordon's 1981 version of the song reached number 71 on the Billboard charts.[9] The song was later covered by English pop ring S Club 7. When asked near this version, Crenshaw said, "I did hear [their cover]. This group was huge in the U.k., not and then much over here, so I never actually knew what they were supposed to be in terms of their musical manner, didn't get why they'd done the vocal, merely was still pleased about it. Somewhere in the world an A&R person was thinking about me and I didn't even know it; that's a cool matter'."[4]

References [edit]

  1. ^ "A beginners' guide to the heyday of power-pop, 1972-1986". The A.5. Club. October 11, 2012. Retrieved Jan xiv, 2022.
  2. ^ a b c d Schlansky, Evan. "Marshall Crenshaw". The American Songwriter. ForASong Media, LLC. Retrieved 30 January 2019.
  3. ^ "Anytime, Someway by Marshall Crenshaw". SongFacts . Retrieved 30 January 2019.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Grant, Jesse. "Marshall Crenshaw Interview". SongFacts . Retrieved thirty Jan 2019.
  5. ^ a b c d "Marshall Crenshaw". Michigan Stone and Gyre Legends . Retrieved 5 March 2019.
  6. ^ a b Harrison, Don (2 March 2016). "Q&A: Marshall Crenshaw". Richmond Magazine . Retrieved 31 January 2019.
  7. ^ a b McKenna, Dave. "Marshall Crenshaw: Off the Charts". The Washington Post. Frederick J. Ryan Jr. Retrieved 5 March 2019.
  8. ^ a b c "On Tour: Marshall Crenshaw". PBS . Retrieved v March 2019.
  9. ^ a b c d ""Someday, Someway" by Marshall Crenshaw". 98.7 WFGR — Grand Rapids Greatest Hits. Townsquare Media.
  10. ^ "5 Marshall Crenshaw Covers You May Not Have Heard". Rhinoceros. Warner Music Group. Retrieved 30 January 2019.
  11. ^ "Marshall Crenshaw". Billboard . Retrieved five March 2019.
  12. ^ a b "CASH BOX Elevation 100 Singles – Week ending September iv, 1982". Archived from the original on 21 September 2012. Retrieved 2019-03-04 . {{cite spider web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) Cash Box mag.
  13. ^ Sharp, Ken. "Every Twenty-four hours'south a Field Mean solar day: Marshall Crenshaw on New Vinyl Reissues, Songwriting (Q&A)". Rock Cellar Mag . Retrieved 31 January 2019.
  14. ^ Gabriel, Thomas (26 June 1982). "Closeup: Marshall Crenshaw". Billboard: 82. Retrieved 5 March 2019.
  15. ^ Bessman, Jim (19 August 2000). "Rhino Offers Crenshaw Classics". Billboard: 102. Retrieved four March 2019.
  16. ^ Pennington, Juliet. "The VIP Lounge with Marshall Crenshaw". The Boston Globe. John W. Henry. Retrieved 18 March 2019.
  17. ^ "Marshall Crenshaw - Someday, Someway". Paste Mag. Wolfgang's Vault. Retrieved 30 January 2019.
  18. ^ "Marshall Crenshaw Chart History (Hot 100)". Billboard. Retrieved 4 March 2019.
  19. ^ "Marshall Crenshaw Chart History (Mainstream Rock)". Billboard. Retrieved four March 2019.
  20. ^ Kent, David (1993). Australian Chart Book 1970–1992 (illustrated ed.). St Ives, Due north.S.W.: Australian Chart Book. p. 76. ISBN0-646-11917-half-dozen.

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Someday,_Someway

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