Let There Be Music (song)
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| "Let There Be Music" | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Single by Orleans | ||||
| from the album Orleans II and Let There Be Music | ||||
| B-side | "Give One Heart" | |||
| Released | April 1975 | |||
| Recorded | 1974 | |||
| Genre | Soft rock | |||
| Length | 3:30 (single version) 4:04 (album version) | |||
| Label | Asylum | |||
| Songwriters | Larry Hoppen, Johanna Hall | |||
| Producer | Chuck Plotkin | |||
| Orleans singles chronology | ||||
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"Let There Be Music" is a song written by Larry Hoppen and Johanna Hall that was first released by Orleans on their 1974 album Orleans II and again as the title track to their 1975 album Let There Be Music. It was the lead single from Let There Be Music, peaking at No. 55 on the Billboard Hot 100.
Roanoke Times critic Rome Scott described "Let There Be Music" as a boogie.[1] Cash Box said that "a great power chorded intro leads into a crisp rocking number which is reminiscent of the sound of the Doobie Brothers, The Who, and about a half dozen others" and that the "anthem-like qualities of this rocker and fine instrumental interplay add up to a hit."[2] Press and Sun Bulletin critic Chris Carson also suggested a similarity to the Doobie Brothers.[3] Green Bay Press-Gazette critic Pat Moran said that the song "is patterned almost exactly after the [Doobie] Brothers' first hit "Listen to the Music" but it rocks a bit more than Toulouse Street.[4] Record World said of the track that the "band comes up with the California brand of country rock boogie a la Eagles."[5] Joy McLain of The Wichita Beacon said that the song has "the steady rock beat for a radio song."[6] AllMusic critic David Cleary described it as a power pop song and as "an agreeably forceful and hook-filled electric guitar-based selection featuring an especially ardent vocal."[7] Fellow AllMusic critic Alex Henderson described it as "anthemic".[8]
Carl Quicquaro of the Valley Advocate Amherst suggested that the lyrics "Let there be music/let it shine like the sun" and "Everybody's got to have some fun" "speak for themselves" to provide an uplifting conclusion to side 1 of the album.[9]
The single version differs from the album version in that the album version ends with a longer instrumental section.[6]
