How the Web Was Woven

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

"How the Web Was Woven"
UK picture sleeve
Single by Jackie Lomax
B-side
  • "Thumbin' a Ride"
  • "Fall Inside Your Eyes" (US)
Released6 February 1970
RecordedOctober–November 1969
GenreCountry rock[1]
Length3:52
LabelApple
Songwriter(s)Clive Westlake, David Most
Producer(s)George Harrison
Jackie Lomax singles chronology
"New Day"
(1969)
"How the Web Was Woven"
(1970)
"Helluva Woman"
(1971)

"How the Web Was Woven" is a song written by English songwriters

B-side
, each side was produced by a different member of the Beatles.

I Just Can't Help Believin'
", which became a top-ten hit in Britain and other European countries.

Composition

"How the Web Was Woven" was written in 1969 by

Carlin Music Publishers.[3][4] According to Tony Hiller, another London-based songwriter, David Most first approached Australian producer David Mackay with an idea for the song and Mackay provided the melody for the chorus. Westlake and Most completed the song and recorded a demo.[5] This and several other Carlin demos were then submitted as material for Elvis Presley to record via Freddy Bienstock,[6] who owned Carlin and looked after Presley's music publishing interests in the company Hill & Range.[7]

Like other ballads selected for Presley over this period, "How the Web Was Woven" is a love song with a dark theme.[8] It was also typical of the material sourced from Carlin's songwriters in terms of its European pop style, dramatic mood and dense musical arrangement.[9] Most told Record Mirror magazine that it was the third song he had written, after "Goodbye" and "Le Blon", recorded by Barry Ryan and Anita Harris, respectively. He also said that Percy Sledge was the singer he "had in mind" when writing the song.[10]

Jackie Lomax version

"How the Web Was Woven" was first recorded in London by Jackie Lomax.[11] The sessions took place in October and November 1969[12] and were produced by George Harrison for the Beatles' Apple record label.[13] Having fallen out with Apple since Allen Klein's appointment as the company's business manager in May 1969,[14] Lomax was reluctant to record the song.[2] Harrison recognised the importance of the piano part and initially booked session pianist Nicky Hopkins to play on the track, but Hopkins became unavailable.[15] The recording instead features contributions from American multi-instrumentalist Leon Russell,[2] who was in London to record his debut solo album.[16] In addition to piano, Russell played organ and guitar on the track.[17] According to Most, Harrison also played guitar on the recording, which he described as an "up-tempo" version.[10]

The song was Lomax's final single on Apple Records.

Leiber and Stoller's "Thumbin' a Ride" – was produced by Paul McCartney,[19] making "How the Web Was Woven" the only single to have its A-side produced by one member of the Beatles and the B-side by another.[20][21] The single was issued in the United Kingdom on 6 February 1970 (as Apple 23) and on 9 March in the United States (as Apple 1819), where the previously released "Fall Inside Your Eyes" was the B-side.[22] As with Lomax's previous singles for the label, it failed to chart.[18]

"How the Web Was Woven" was included as a bonus track on the 2010 reissue of Lomax's 1969 album Is This What You Want?[23] Writing in 2013, Danny Eccleston of Mojo magazine described the recording as "a terrific, rough-and-ready version of this Clive Westlake/David Most tune" aided by "[Lomax's] authentic country-soul phrasing and the quality accompaniment by the on-fire Leon Russell".[1]

Elvis Presley version

Presley recorded "How the Web Was Woven" during a five-day period of intensive recording at RCA Studios in Nashville, in early June 1970.[24] Other than for film soundtrack recordings, the sessions were Presley's first since February 1969 and produced a total of 34 tracks, many of them from Bienstock's Carlin catalogue.[25][26] In return for the prestige associated with having their composition recorded by Presley, Westlake and Most ceded their publishing royalties to him and his manager, Colonel Tom Parker, a situation that was standard for Hill & Range.[27]

The song was released in November 1970 on Presley's album

UK Singles Chart[32] and was also a top-ten hit in Belgium, the Netherlands[33] and South Africa.[34]

References

  1. ^ a b Danny Eccleston, "Jackie Lomax – How The Web Was Woven", mojo4music, 18 September 2013 (retrieved 5 May 2017).
  2. ^ a b c Andy Childs, "The History of Jackie Lomax", ZigZag, July 1974; available at Rock's Backpages (subscription required; retrieved 5 May 2017).
  3. ^ Richards, p. 48.
  4. ^ Paul Williams, "David Most dies", Music Week, 27 September 2010 (retrieved 7 May 2017).
  5. ^ Richards, pp. 48–49.
  6. ^ Jorgensen, pp. 300–02, 322.
  7. ^ Guralnick, pp. 379–80.
  8. ^ Simpson, pp. 144–45.
  9. ^ Guralnick, p. 379.
  10. ^ a b "Making It Most", Record Mirror, 2 January 1971, p. 6.
  11. ^ Jorgensen, p. 302.
  12. ^ Castleman & Podrazik, p. 85.
  13. ^ "A Solo Career and Apple Records 1968–69", JackieLomax.com (retrieved 7 May 2017).
  14. ^ Robert Greenfield, "Jackie Lomax Is Leaving London", Rolling Stone, 26 November 1970; available at Rock's Backpages (subscription required; retrieved 8 May 2017).
  15. ^ O'Dell, pp. 95–96.
  16. ^ O'Dell, p. 93.
  17. ^ Castleman & Podrazik, p. 203.
  18. ^ a b Bruce Eder, "Jackie Lomax", AllMusic (retrieved 7 May 2017).
  19. ^ Castleman & Podrazik, pp. 85, 192.
  20. ^ "Is This What You Want?", Apple Records (retrieved 5 May 2017).
  21. ^ Liner notes by Andy Davis, Is This What You Want? CD booklet (Apple/EMI, 2010; produced by George Harrison, Jackie Lomax, Mal Evans & Paul McCartney).
  22. ^ Castleman & Podrazik, pp. 85, 87, 303.
  23. ^ Joe Marchese, "Review: The Apple Records Remasters, Part 4 – Harrison's Soulful Trio", The Second Disc, 18 November 2010 (retrieved 5 May 2017).
  24. ^ Jorgensen, pp. 298, 302.
  25. ^ Guralnick, pp. 376–77, 379–80, 382.
  26. ^ Jorgensen, pp. 296, 301.
  27. ^ Simpson, pp. 86–87, 274.
  28. ^ "Discography 1970–1977", Walk a Mile in My Shoes: The Essential '70s Masters box-set book, RCA Records, 1995, p. 75.
  29. ^ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, "Elvis Presley That's the Way It Is", AllMusic (retrieved 5 May 2017).
  30. ^ "Discography 1970–1977", Walk a Mile in My Shoes: The Essential '70s Masters box-set book, RCA Records, 1995, p. 82.
  31. ^ Simpson, p. 281.
  32. ^ "Elvis Presley", Official Charts Company (retrieved 8 May 2017).
  33. ^ "Elvis Presley – I Just Can't Help Believin'", dutchcharts.nl (retrieved 8 May 2017).
  34. ^ "SA Charts 1969–1989 Songs (H–I)", South African Rock Lists, 2000 (retrieved 8 May 2017).

Sources