If I Call You By Some Name

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"If I Call You By Some Name"
Verve Folkways KF 5033
Songwriter(s)Rick Shorter
Producer(s)Rick Shorter
The Paupers singles chronology
""Long Tall Sally"" "If I Call You By Some Name" ""Simple Deed""

If I Call You By Some Name was a hit for the Canadian rock group The Paupers. The song which was composed by Rick Shorter was released in 1966. It was the biggest hit that the band had.

Background

The song is a mellow folk-influenced tune.[1] It was composed, produced, and by

Verve Folkways in December, 1966.[2]

In December 1966 Billboard announced that the single was predicted to reach the Hot 100 Chart.[3] It was announced in the January 21, 1967 issue of Billboard that the record had already broken out as a hit in Canada.[4] It made it to No. 31 on Canada’s RPM chart[5] In January, 1967, the song peaked at No. 6 on Toronto's influential radio station CHUM (AM).[6][7]

Because they had success with "If I Call You By Some Name", opportunities were opened for the group. They recorded their debut album,

b/w "Let Me Be", both which were composed by Adam Mitchell and Skip Prokop.[9]

According to The Great Canadian Book of Lists by Randy Ray and Mark Kearney, the group was not very proud of the song. But in the late 1960s it went down very well as the ultimate close-dancing song when they played high school dances in Toronto.[10] The Paupers were a psychedelic group, and the folk-influenced song was their most mellow.[11]

References

  1. ^ The Canadian Music Hall Of Fame - YORKVILLE STORMS THE CHARTS
  2. ^ 45Cat - The Paupers If I Call You By Some Name, Catalogue: KF 5033
  3. ^ Billboard, December 31, 1966 - Page 16 SPOTLIGHT SINGLES, CHART Spotlights--Predicted to reach the HOT 100 Chart
  4. ^ Billboard, January 21, 1967 - Page 12 VERVE/FOLKWAYS: Marriage of Folk and Pop
  5. ^ "RPM Top 100 Singles - February 11, 1967" (PDF).
  6. ^ Canuckistan Music - The Paupers, Magic People - Michael Panontin
  7. ^ "CHUM Hit Parade - January 16, 1967".
  8. ^ The Canadian Pop Encyclopedia - Artist: Paupers, The, Biography
  9. ^ Billboard, March 18, 1967 - Page 58 From The Music Capitals of the World, TORONTO
  10. ^ The Great Canadian Book of Lists, By Randy Ray, Mark Kearney - Page 203 Music, BABY BOOMER MUSIC, ROCKIN' RANDY'S TOP FIFTEEN CANADIAN SINGLES: 1950s to the 1970s
  11. ^ "YORKVILLE STORMS THE CHARTS". The Canadian Music Hall Of Fame. Archived from the original on October 5, 2017.

External links