Little Arrows
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| "Little Arrows" | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Single by Leapy Lee | ||||
| from the album Little Arrows | ||||
| B-side | "Time Will Tell" | |||
| Released | 28 June 1968 | |||
| Studio | Olympic, London | |||
| Genre | ||||
| Length | 2:42 | |||
| Label | MCA | |||
| Songwriters | ||||
| Producer | Gordon Mills | |||
| Leapy Lee singles chronology | ||||
| ||||
| Performance on Beat-Club | ||||
| "Little Arrows" on YouTube | ||||
"Little Arrows" is a single by English artist Leapy Lee, written by composer Albert Hammond and lyricist Mike Hazlewood. Hammond had met Hazlewood in the band the Family Dogg and formed a songwriting partnership. Meanwhile, Lee was struggling finding success in the music branch, working at a bingo hall, where he met Hammond. The song was composed in the Chelsea Drugstore and is about Cupid shooting his bow and arrow. Musically, it is a country pop song with a whimsical tone. It was recorded at Olympic Studios and produced by Gordon Mills with Jimmy Page as a session guitarist.
MCA Records released "Little Arrows" as a single in the UK on 28 June 1968, and it reached number two on the Record Retailer chart in October of that year. In the US, "Little Arrows" was released by Decca Records and became a crossover hit, reaching number 16 on the Billboard Hot 100 and number two on the Cash Box Country Singles chart. Elsewhere in the world, "Little Arrows" reached number one in Austria, New Zealand, Rhodesia, and Sweden and sold upwards of 4 million copies upon original release. It was the title track of Lee's first album Little Arrows, and was his only pop hit, leading him to be labelled a one-hit wonder.
Leapy Lee's recording of "Little Arrows" received positive reviews in the press for being "gimmicky", but mixed reception by contemporary journalists. Shortly after Lee's original was released, Irish showband Brendan O'Brien & the Dixies released a cover which reached number one in Ireland in September 1968. The song was translated into Swedish by Stig "Stikkan" Anderson as "Amors pilar", which became a hit for Ewa Roos in February 1969. A Spanish version, "Las Flechas del Amor", was recorded by Karina and reached number one in Spain for seven weeks between March and April of 1969.
British-Gibraltan songwriter Albert Hammond and American producer Steve Rowland met each other in Madrid, Spain in 1966 when Hammond performed in his band the Diamond Boys.[1] Together, they formed The Family Dogg that year, introducing Hammond to songwriter Mike Hazlewood.[2] The formed a songwriting partnership together, with Hammond composing and Hazlewood writing the lyrics.[1] At the same time, singer Leapy Lee (born Graham Pulleyblank) was struggling finding success, having previously recorded several non-charting singles for Pye, Decca and CBS Records,[3] including the unreleased Ray Davies-composition "King Of The Whole Wide World" in March 1966.[4] In 1968, he signed with the then-fledling record label MCA Records,[5] but was working as a caller in a bingo hall, where Hammond met him after accompanying his aunt there.[6]
According to Hammond, he worked as a dishwasher at the Chelsea Drugstore when he wrote "Little Arrows", and was written as the same time as Hammond's single "I'm a Train" (1974).[6][7] Lyrically, the song is about the ancient Roman God Cupid shooting his bow and arrow,[8] being "very effective in suggesting" that his arrows "hit their mark" according to musicologist Walter Everett.[9] Musically, Em Casalena identifies "Little Arrows" as country pop,[10] whereas Greg Adams of AllMusic opines it had similarities to a "whimsical, pop-oriented tone".[11] Lee recorded the track at Olympic Studios in Barnes, London with producer Gordon Mills and engineer Vic Smith.[12] Session musicians on the track include guitarist Joe Moretti,[13] alongside Jimmy Page prior to his success in Led Zeppelin.[14][15] The guitar on the track features an echo box effect throughout.[8]
Release and commercial performance

MCA released "Little Arrows" as a single in the UK on 28 June 1968,[3] backed by the B-side "Time Will Tell" which was written by Mills and Johnny Harris.[8] Though initial chart success was slow,[8] the single entered the Record Retailer chart on 27 August 1968 at a position of number 47,[17] steadily climbing the chart until it peaked at number two on 15 October 1968,[17] unable to dislodge "Those Were the Days" by Mary Hopkin from the top position.[18] It exited the chart on 14 January 1969 at a position of 49, having spent a total of 21 weeks on the charts.[17] Shortly after it entered the British charts, the single was released in the US through Decca in August 1968.[16]
On the US Billboard Hot 100, "Little Arrows" debuted on 12 October 1968 at a position of 97, before peaking at number 16 on 7 December.[19] The song became a crossover country hit,[11] being more successful on the Billboard Hot Country Singles chart, where it reached number 11.[19] On the Cash Box Country chart, "Little Arrows" peaked at number two, behind Loretta Lynn's "Your Squaw Is on the Warpath".[20] In Canada, the song peaked at number one on the country chart and number eight on the pop singles chart.[21][22] Elsewhere in the world, "Little Arrows" was a large success in Africa, Europe and Oceania where it reached number one in Austria,[23] New Zealand,[24] Rhodesia,[25] and Sweden.[26] It also peaked in the top-ten in Australia,[27] Denmark,[28] Norway,[29] South Africa,[30] Switzerland,[31] and West Germany.[32] Prompted by the success, Lee would go on to tour several of these territories.[33]
Upon its initial chart run, "Little Arrows" had sold 3 million copies worldwide,[33] later "selling close to four million copies worldwide".[5] It was the first hit composed by Hammond and Hazlewood, shortly followed by the Pipkins "Gimme Dat Ding" (1970).[1] Although Lee would go on to have further top-ten singles in South Africa and a few country chart hits in the US,[5][30] he is generally considered a one-hit wonder for "Little Arrows".[5][8] The track acted as the title song for Lee's album Little Arrows, which included two more compositions by Hammond and Hazlewood; "Theresa" and "My Girl Maria".[11] Lee performed "Little Arrows" at the Ryman Auditorium for the Grand Ole Opry on 31 May 1969.[34]