Song Of The Day 11/19/2015: Bill Medley – “Brown Eyed Woman”
Songwriters Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil, whose list of hits is too ridiculously long to cull from and reprint here, took on what was back then the very nervous topic of an interracial relationship. Hard cold facts about the song are difficult to nail down. Reportedly the Blossoms, who included Darlene Love, did background vocals. Love and Medley had been dating. I don't know if Mann and Weil used their affair for inspiration. I come across occasional references to "Brown Eyed Woman" as a "controversial" song that got banned at certain landlocked cities' radio stations -- which may be why it peaked at #43, because Medley himself claims the song hit #1 in New York and Los Angeles.
I don't know where to start, really. It's a breathtaking song and performance. For those, including me once, who wondered exactly what the big deal was about Bill Medley and his duo the Righteous Brothers, his vocal on this song tops just about anything else he ever did. It's deep, deep pain, channeled with fury and societal animus. When Medley sings "All I am is what I symbolize," he uncorks a well of social self-endangerment you don't normally hear in a '60s love song. At the same time he doesn't lapse into self-pity or guilt -- he just can't understand why it has to be the way it is, and I don't either. But it is. It's a tough song. It doesn't have any solutions, which many pop tunesmiths were expected to come up with for some reason. It just states the problem, beautifully, so you won't forget the question.
So we fixed all this, right? That's what Roger Ailes is telling me. Hashtag 'Murica.