The Loner (Maurice Gibb song)

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B-side"Homing In On The Next Trade Wind"[1]
Released7 January 1972 (UK)
September 1972 (US)
Recorded23 July 1970
"The Loner"
UK 7" by Pye Records
Single by The Bloomfields
from the album Bloomfield
B-side"Homing In On The Next Trade Wind"[1]
Released7 January 1972 (UK)
September 1972 (US)
Recorded23 July 1970
GenreFolk rock, symphonic rock
Length1:55
LabelPye (UK)
Capitol (US)
Songwriter(s)Maurice Gibb, Billy Lawrie
Producer(s)Maurice Gibb

"The Loner" is a song written by Maurice Gibb and Billy Lawrie and originally included on Gibb's The Loner which was not released, although British rock band The Bloomfields covered the song and their version was released internationally, featuring a lead vocal of Billy Lawrie and Maurice Gibb, with Gibb on guitars and bass. They recorded this song for the film Bloomfield, but the film was called The Hero in America. The song starts with a drum fill. Gibb and Lawrie sang together in harmony on the line I'm a loner. On the record, Billy Lawrie was credited as 'B. Laurie'.[2]

Gibb announced that he would be writing and performing on Richard Harris' film Bloomfield. The songs that Gibb originally planned for the film, "Danny" and "'Till I Try". But Gibb and Lawrie ended up re-recording "The Loner", a song from 1970 unreleased studio album of the same name by Gibb himself.[3]

Recording and release

The Bloomfields recorded a new short version of "The Loner", a song from Gibb's unreleased solo studio album of the same name. It was shortened by cutting out the short instrumental passages, but keeping the two verses and choruses intact. Their version was recorded from 23 July 1970 at the Nova Sound Studios in London. On the same day of sessions, they recorded "Men of Men" and "Ballet of Freedom" (both unreleased).[4]

The song was released in the UK on 7 January 1972, and its B-side was "Homing in On the Next Trade Wind" performed by Heads, Hands & Feet released on Pye Records.[5] In the US, Capitol Records issued a single by Heads, Hands & Feet with two songs they did on the soundtrack Hail the Conquering Hero; its B-side was also the flipside of "The Loner" in the UK.[6] "The Loner" was also released on the film soundtrack of the same name.[7]

The biggest differences between the two versions are poor sound quality on Gibb's original (as that version was unreleased until now, and only appearing on some bootlegs)[8] and the use of faster tempo on Bloomfields' version.[9]

Personnel

Maurice Gibb original version

References

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