Have Love, Will Travel (original) (raw)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For the Tom Petty song "Have Love Will Travel", see The Last DJ.

1960 single by Richard Berry

"Have Love, Will Travel"
Single by Richard Berry
B-side "No Room"
Released January 1960
Genre Rhythm and blues
Length 2:35
Label Flip 349
Songwriter(s) Richard Berry
Richard Berry singles chronology
"Louie Louie" (1956) "Have Love, Will Travel" (1960) "Sweet Sugar You" (1957)

"Have Love, Will Travel" is a 1959 song written and recorded by Richard Berry.[1] While the song may have been recorded before the end of 1959, the correct release date appears to be January, 1960.[2][3] The title is based on a popular television/radio western serial Have Gun, Will Travel.

In its best known incarnation, garage rock/proto-punk band The Sonics included a "typically intense"[4] version of the song on their 1965 album, Here Are The Sonics. Driven by a riff doubled on guitar, sax and bass, a big driving drum sound, screaming vocals and a saxophone break, it epitomized their sound.[_citation needed_] The Sonics changed the key from G to C, modified the riff (performing it instrumentally, rather than vocally), and (while they used the original chord progression, a basic 1-4-5-4 progression, G-C-D-C in G, or C-F-G-F in C), the modified riff emphasizes cross-relations of minor/major intervals against the keyboard. The guitar in the Sonics version does not use fuzz-tone, although it seems that some have mistaken the sax for a fuzz-tone guitar.[_citation needed_] This is the version that virtually all other performers copied after the '60s.[_citation needed_]

A different song by the same title, written by Lee Hazlewood, was released by The Sharps in 1958.

Television and movies

[edit]

  1. ^ "WangDangDula.com". Wdd.mbnet.fi. Archived from the original on 9 October 2018. Retrieved 8 June 2021.
  2. ^ "Richard Berry and the Pharaohs - Have Love Will Travel".
  3. ^ "Richard Berry and the Pharaohs - Have Love Will Travel / No Room". Discogs. 1960.
  4. ^ Palao, Alec (2002). Love That Louie (CD sleeve notes). London: Ace Records.
  5. ^ Fairman, Bruce (July 9, 2015). "A Brilliant Disguise: Springsteen Live Archive Series Spotlights Los Angeles, 1988". The Second Disc. Retrieved July 12, 2015.