Friday, June 27, 2014

Olivia Newton-John - A Little More Love (1978)

 A Little More Love
b/w Borrowed Time

Released: 1978 (MCA)
Written by: John Farrar
Produced by: John Farrar
Album: Totally Hot

 U. S. Billboard Charts:
 Hot 100 3
 Adult Contemporary4


Olivia Newton-John moaning seductive lyrics?  I'm there. At the height of the disco craze, this song was like nothing else on the radio.  I take that back, the verse bears a resemblance to Nick Gilder's "Hot Child in the City" from a few months earlier.  But the advantages this song has over "Hot Child in the City" is that Olivia is performing it plus it's a better written song.  At 12 years old, I certainly didn't get the double entendre of "Will a little more love bring a happy ending" and that's probably for the best.

This song was written by ONJ's long-time producer/songwriter John Farrar, who also wrote Olivia's contributions to Grease and Xanadu. After a brief intro, the verse is seductive with Olivia's vocals punctuated by guitar hits at the end of each line.  Then it moves into a more popish transition building to the chorus, which has a great synth line and ONJ's multi-layered harmony vocals.   In an usual but clever writing move, the end of the chorus harkens back to the verse.  No middle 8, no solos, just verse-chorus-verse-chorus-chorus-chorus and we're done.

This song came out not long after my family and I had moved 500 miles to the Texas gulf coast.  In an effort to fit in, I joined the basketball team at my new school.  This song reminds me of trips to basketball tournaments in early 1979 (7th grade basketball tournaments - Catch the Excitement!).  In particular, I'm remembering one in an old rickety gym that looked like it could have been used as a filming location for Hoosiers.  Why would this song remind me of that?  Who knows?




3 comments :

  1. The mysterious associations we can't explain are part of the fun with old songs.

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  2. This song is indeed slinky and seductive. And what about that impossibly high voiced choir; could it be Olivia overdubbed? She definitely uses more voices in this song than any other I can think of.

    The accompanying official video of her in the studio is just a little too tame for such a slow-burning scorcher. She was always too wholesome, innocent and naive to be a fully committed sex symbol but she gave it her all didn't she?

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  3. I owned this album and was always a huge fan of the single. Whenever I hear it today on XM, I feel a little twinge of "dirty" (in a good way ;) ).

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