October 8, 2021 —– Chart #112
Hello Musical Friends,
Welcome to Friday, college football season and the 112th edition of Chart of the day. Back to 1974 with today’s song, a very nice tune written and performed by America. “Lonely People” was the second single release from America’s 1974 album Holiday. “Lonely People” reached number five on the Billboard Hot 100, the Peeks’ only credited song to reach that chart’s top 10, and was America’s second number one on the Easy Listening chart, where it stayed for one week in February 1975. “Lonely People” was not automatically earmarked for the Holiday album: Dan Peek unsuccessfully submitted a demo of the song for John Sebastian to consider recording.
“Lonely People” was written as an optimistic response to the Beatles’ song “Eleanor Rigby“. Dan Peek considered “Eleanor Rigby” an “overwhelming” “picture…of the masses of lost humanity, drowning in grey oblivion” and would recall being “lacerated” on first hearing the lyrics of its chorus which run “All the lonely people: where do they all come from…where do they all belong”. “Lonely People” was written within a few weeks of Dan Peek’s 1973 marriage to Catherine Maberry: Peek- “I always felt like a melancholy, lonely person. And now [upon getting married] I felt like I’d won.” The lyrics of “Lonely People” advise “all the lonely people”: “Don’t give up until you drink from the silver cup”, a metaphor which Dan Peek thus explains: “It’s possible to drink from another’s well of experience…and be refreshed.”
After Dan Peek left America in 1977, he recalled performing “Lonely People” to close his concerts, introducing the song “with words to the effect” “that Jesus is the answer to loneliness”. On the advice of a fan, Peek rewrote the lyrics of the song to convey a pro-Christian message and he recorded a revised version of “Lonely People” for his 1986 album Electro-Voice. This version changed the original lyrics “And ride that highway in the sky” and “You never know until you try” to “And give your heart to Jesus Christ.” Peek’s version was released as a single in 1986 and became a hit on contemporary Christian music stations.
Studio version:
Live performance from 1975: https://youtu.be/A_OboeBSMdk
Keep rockin’ my friends,
Stan