See You Again Linda Ronstadt Album Cover

"Hurt So Bad"
Hurt So Bad - Little Anthony & The Imperials.jpg
Single past Fiddling Anthony & The Imperials
from the anthology Goin' Out Of My Head
B-side "Reputation"
Released December 29, 1964 (1964-12-29) [i]
Genre Soul, pop
Length ii:fifteen
Characterization DCP
Songwriter(s) Teddy Randazzo, Bobby Weinstein, Bobby Hart
Producer(s) Teddy Randazzo, Don Costa
Lilliputian Anthony & The Imperials singles chronology
"Goin' Out Of My Head"
(1964)
"Hurt And then Bad"
(1964)
"Take Me Back"
(1965)

"Hurt So Bad" is a song written past Teddy Randazzo, Bobby Weinstein, and Bobby Hart. Information technology is a archetype 1965 Elevation 10 hit ballad originally recorded past Little Anthony & The Imperials. Linda Ronstadt also had a Summit 10 hit with her embrace version in 1980. The song has been re-recorded by numerous artists including The Lettermen, who took the song to number twelve in September 1969.

Little Anthony & The Imperials version [edit]

Background [edit]

Petty Anthony & The Imperials' original version was taken from their album, Goin' out of My Head. It was the follow-up to that album's smash-striking championship song, and like that song, also became a Billboard Tiptop 10 hit also every bit a Top 5 R&B hit.[2] This version reached number ten on the Billboard Hot 100, and number one in Canada[3]. It was also performed by the grouping on their starting time appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show. It was written peculiarly for The Imperials by Teddy Randazzo, a long-time friend of the group, along with Bobby Weinstein and Bobby Hart, and was produced by Don Costa for his DCP tape characterization, later absorbed by United Artists Records and re-released on its Veep Records subsidiary. A powerful, dramatic ballad recording, it has go one of The Imperials' best-known songs, and has inspired numerous cover versions.

Personnel [edit]

  • "Picayune Anthony" Gourdine - lead vocals
  • Clarence "Wah-Hoo" Collins - baritone/bass
  • Ernest Wright - second tenor
  • Sammy Strain - first tenor
  • Producer: Don Costa
  • Backed by The 101 Strings Orchestra

El Chicano version [edit]

Background [edit]

El Chicano released a cover of "Hurt And then Bad" on their 1970 debut anthology Viva Tirado. It was one of 9 songs on the album, including their first hit unmarried "Viva Tirado".

Linda Ronstadt version [edit]

"Injure So Bad"
Hurt So Bad - Linda Ronstadt.jpg
Single by Linda Ronstadt
from the album Mad Love
B-side "Justine"
Released March 1980 (March 1980)
Genre Rock, new wave
Length three:17
Characterization Aviary Records
Songwriter(s) Teddy Randazzo, Bobby Weinstein, Bobby Hart
Producer(s) Peter Asher
Linda Ronstadt singles chronology
"How Practise I Make Y'all"
(1980)
"Injure So Bad"
(1980)
"I Tin can't Permit Become"
(1980)

Background [edit]

Linda Ronstadt recorded a cover of "Injure So Bad" for her Platinum-certified album, Mad Love, in 1980. Produced past Peter Asher on Asylum Records, it was released every bit the disc's second single. Linda's version of the vocal featured a guitar solo by Danny Kortchmar. It stands as the nearly successful version ever recorded of the song, which peaked at #8 on the Billboard Hot 100 and #9 on the Cash Box Summit 100 chart in the spring of 1980.[4] It was Ronstadt's final Top 10 striking on the Billboard Hot 100 as a solo artist.

Other versions [edit]

The song was covered past the post-obit artists:

  • The Lettermen, and Jackie DeShannon[5]
  • Alicia Keys covered it.
  • Ramsey Lewis, The Delfonics, David Cassidy, Richard "Groove" Holmes, Grant Green, Willie Bobo, El Chicano, Nancy Wilson, Anne Renée (fr) (rendered in French as "Ça Fait Mal") and others.

References [edit]

  1. ^ "Little Anthony and the Imperials - Injure So Bad".
  2. ^ Steve Huey. "Little Anthony & the Imperials Biography & Awards". Billboard. Retrieved 7 Nov 2009. The Imperials' streak of expert fortune continued with the equally dramatic ballad "Injure So Bad," another Peak Ten hit that as well became their second R&B Top Fiver in 1965.
  3. ^ "RPM Height twoscore & v - January 4, 1965" (PDF).
  4. ^ "Linda Ronstadt - Nautical chart history". Billboard. Retrieved 2016-ten-sixteen .
  5. ^ William Ruhlmann. "Injure And so Bad". Allmusic. Retrieved 7 November 2009. The Lettermen, who had previously covered "Goin' out of My Head," revived information technology in 1969 for a Top 20 hitting; Jackie DeShannon combined it in a medley with "Yous Go on Me Hangin' On" that reached the charts in 1976.

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hurt_So_Bad

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