OUT OF LEFT FIELD: This is the...
- Share via
OUT OF LEFT FIELD: This is the season of odd-ball records at No. 1 on the national pop charts: the Beach Boys’ nod to Jimmy Buffett’s good-timey tropical sound, “Kokomo,” Bobby McFerrin’s a cappella sing-along, “Don’t Worry . . . Be Happy” and UB40’s 5-year-old remake of Neil Diamond’s 1968 song, “Red Red Wine.”
But a medley of two mid-’70s rock anthems is perhaps the most unlikely chart-topper of them all. The smash by the Florida-based duo Will to Power combines Peter Frampton’s “Baby, I Love Your Way” and Lynyrd Skynyrd’s “Free Bird.”
The record brings back memories of the ‘70s album-rock scene better than a Day on the Green festival poster or an Allman Brothers 8-track tape.
But what’s the record doing at No. 1 in an era populated by young stars (Tiffany, Debbie Gibson, et al) who were still in preschool when the songs were originally hits?
Bob Rosenberg, Will to Power’s producer/leader, thinks the blend of the two songs is the key ingredient in the single’s success. “I knew it would do pretty well just from the feel of the two songs . . . the segue, the way they fit together,” he said. “I don’t think either song by itself would have made it. But hearing them in a medley made it into something different.”
The Miami-based producer, who formed Will to Power with singer Suzi Carr, said he sought to bring a fresh, contemporary approach to the songs rather than just copy the ‘70s hits. And he added a consistent bass line that neither of the original records had.
Rosenberg, 29, first tried his hand at blending songs while working as a nightclub DJ and later as a DJ a Miami radio station. “I used to do ‘hot mixes’--Bruce Springsteen or Madonna medleys to promote their concerts--and the medleys often became the No. 1 requested record on the station,” he said. “I’m always hunting for segue points (in songs), it’s second nature to me. Any time I hear a song, I hear the songs that go with it.”
More to Read
The biggest entertainment stories
Get our big stories about Hollywood, film, television, music, arts, culture and more right in your inbox as soon as they publish.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.