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Rings Cymarron

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"Rings" is a soft rock song which in 1971 became a top 20 U.S. Pop hit for the Memphis band Cymarron and also peaked at number 66 in Australia. It was a top 10 C&W hit for Tompall & the Glaser Brothers.
"Rings" was composed by Eddie Reeves, who headed the West Coast office of United Artists Music, and Alex Harvey who was contracted to United Artists Music. The song was written for the wedding of a friend of Reeves named Bob Hamilton who - as the song's lyrics indicate - had experienced an estrangement and reconciliation with his fiancée: the song concludes with the couple "hand in hand...upon the sand with the preacher man" - a reference to Hamilton and his bride's exchanging vows on the Venice beachfront. The lyric: "Got James Taylor on the stereo", was a reference to James Taylor's "Fire and Rain" being the couple's favorite song - while the "Tony and Mario" mentioned in the song were the owners of a Hollywood restaurant the couple frequented.
Soon afterwards Reeves and Harvey made a recording of the song at the end of a demo recording session booked for Harvey at Quantum Sound Studio in Torrance: although there was reportedly no original intent other than gifting the newlyweds with the recording a demo copy was heard by singer-songwriter Mike Settle who instigated the first full recording of "Rings" by a session group helmed by himself and the song's two writers with Harvey singing lead, the track being credited to Running Bear and Goldstein. Having little faith in the prospects for the Running Bear and Goldstein version of "Rings", Reeves had no reservations about pitching the song to the producer of Lonnie Mack for whom the song was optioned with Mack recording the "Rings" for his 1971 album The Hills of Indiana.
At around the time of the Lonnie Mack recording, Bob Hamilton, whose wedding had generated the song, played "Rings" for Memphis Mafioso Marty Lacker through whom the song reached Chips Moman, founder of the legendary Memphis recording studio American Sound. Moman recorded the song with a trio of American Sound session musicians he had recently signed to record as Cymarron whose lead singer Richard Mainegra would recall: "We weren't exactly thrilled with it. The demo was really country-soundin' and slow and we were writin' our own stuff and soundin' a lot more Eagles-ish. But [Moman] told us to go upstairs and work it up the way we'd be happy with it. So we changed a chord or two and livened it up a bit."
According to Eddie Reeves: "The Cymarron record was rush released and received strong immediate airplay, some of which came from major markets radio stations programmed by some of the attendees of Bob Hamilton's wedding. [Also] Bob was in the business of consulting many radio stations and he was not shy about touting the attributes of his...wedding song." "Rings" debuted at number 84 June 12, 1971 and peaked at number 17 on the Billboard Hot 100 14 August 1971, its peak on the magazine's Easy Listening chart being number 6. The song would serve as the title cut for Cymarron's sole album, also released in 1971.
"Rings" also afforded Cymarron a chart hit in Canada (number 41), Australia (number 46) and the Netherlands (number 28).
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Sacred Cow Music Jukebox series
Sacred Cow Music presents popular music heard world-wide spanning the past 100 years. All genres are represented. Our goal is to introduce musical hits that made the charts, as well as those forgotten memories.
"Rings" was composed by Eddie Reeves, who headed the West Coast office of United Artists Music, and Alex Harvey who was contracted to United Artists Music. The song was written for the wedding of a friend of Reeves named Bob Hamilton who - as the song's lyrics indicate - had experienced an estrangement and reconciliation with his fiancée: the song concludes with the couple "hand in hand...upon the sand with the preacher man" - a reference to Hamilton and his bride's exchanging vows on the Venice beachfront. The lyric: "Got James Taylor on the stereo", was a reference to James Taylor's "Fire and Rain" being the couple's favorite song - while the "Tony and Mario" mentioned in the song were the owners of a Hollywood restaurant the couple frequented.
Soon afterwards Reeves and Harvey made a recording of the song at the end of a demo recording session booked for Harvey at Quantum Sound Studio in Torrance: although there was reportedly no original intent other than gifting the newlyweds with the recording a demo copy was heard by singer-songwriter Mike Settle who instigated the first full recording of "Rings" by a session group helmed by himself and the song's two writers with Harvey singing lead, the track being credited to Running Bear and Goldstein. Having little faith in the prospects for the Running Bear and Goldstein version of "Rings", Reeves had no reservations about pitching the song to the producer of Lonnie Mack for whom the song was optioned with Mack recording the "Rings" for his 1971 album The Hills of Indiana.
At around the time of the Lonnie Mack recording, Bob Hamilton, whose wedding had generated the song, played "Rings" for Memphis Mafioso Marty Lacker through whom the song reached Chips Moman, founder of the legendary Memphis recording studio American Sound. Moman recorded the song with a trio of American Sound session musicians he had recently signed to record as Cymarron whose lead singer Richard Mainegra would recall: "We weren't exactly thrilled with it. The demo was really country-soundin' and slow and we were writin' our own stuff and soundin' a lot more Eagles-ish. But [Moman] told us to go upstairs and work it up the way we'd be happy with it. So we changed a chord or two and livened it up a bit."
According to Eddie Reeves: "The Cymarron record was rush released and received strong immediate airplay, some of which came from major markets radio stations programmed by some of the attendees of Bob Hamilton's wedding. [Also] Bob was in the business of consulting many radio stations and he was not shy about touting the attributes of his...wedding song." "Rings" debuted at number 84 June 12, 1971 and peaked at number 17 on the Billboard Hot 100 14 August 1971, its peak on the magazine's Easy Listening chart being number 6. The song would serve as the title cut for Cymarron's sole album, also released in 1971.
"Rings" also afforded Cymarron a chart hit in Canada (number 41), Australia (number 46) and the Netherlands (number 28).
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
*****************************************************************************
Sacred Cow Music Jukebox series
Sacred Cow Music presents popular music heard world-wide spanning the past 100 years. All genres are represented. Our goal is to introduce musical hits that made the charts, as well as those forgotten memories.