Some 55 years ago, The Hollies recorded 'He Ain’t Heavy, He’s My Brother' in Studio Two at Abbey Roads Studios, London.
… On arriving The Hollies were greeted by a session pianist - Reg Dwight, hired for just £12, who had just released his debut album under the name of Elton John. Drummer, Bobby Elliott, recounts setting up his kit next to Elton with Allan Clarke sitting on a stool nearby and the band nailing the track in the first or second take.
"He Ain’t Heavy…" became one of The Hollies’ most iconic and heartfelt tracks.
The song was originally written by Bobby Scott and Bob Russell and first recorded by Kelly Gordon.
Released in September of 1969, the song climbed to No. 3 in the UK charts and reached No. 7 in the US, resonating deeply with listeners on both sides of the Atlantic.
This was the second single The Hollies released after Graham Nash left the group to form Crosby, Stills, and Nash; the first was "Sorry Suzanne." Nash was replaced by Terry Sylvester.
The title came from the motto for Boys Town, a community formed in 1917 by a Catholic priest named Father Edward Flanagan. Located in Omaha, Nebraska, it was a place where troubled or homeless boys could come for help. In 1941, Father Flanagan was looking at a magazine called The Messenger when he came across a drawing of a boy carrying a younger boy on his back, with the caption, "He ain't heavy Mr., he's my brother." Father Flanagan thought the image and phrase captured the spirit of Boys Town, so he got permission and commissioned a statue of the drawing with the inscription, "He ain't heavy Father, he's my brother." The statue and phrase became the logo for Boys Town.
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Boys Town Statue |
Joe Cocker was offered this song before The Hollies after it had been played first to his producer Denny Cordell. The General Professional Manager for Cyril Shane Music Ltd & Pedro Music Ltd in England at the time explains: "Tony Hicks was in our office looking for songs for the Hollies (our office was not on Denmark Street, it was in Baker Street). Denny called from New York to say 'Joe didn't see the song.' As Tony said in The Guardian, he liked the song and asked for an exclusive the following day. The version he heard was Kelly Gordon, who apart from being a successful producer, also wrote a little song entitled 'That's Life.' His version was slow and soulful which is why I had thought of Joe Cocker to record it. Bobby Russell wrote this song while dying of cancer in Los Angeles.
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L-R Terry Sylvester, Tony Hicks, Allan Clarke and drummer Bobby Elliott - London, October 1969 |
Because this EP is now 55 years old, and I have never seen a copy before, I consider it to be Obscure and extremely rare. But the C box can also be ticked this month, not because it's Crazy but because Joe Cocker missed out adding the song to his long list of hits and Kelly Gordon wrote the song while dying from Cancer in 1969 (so sad). This post consists of FLACs and full artwork with label scans.
A1 He Ain't Heavy, He's My Brother
A2 Mad Professor Blyth
B1 Sorry Suzanne
B2 I Can't Tell The Bottom From The Top
The Hollies were:
Allan Clarke - Vocals
Tony Hicks - Guitar, Backing Vocals
Terry Sylvester - Guitar, Vocals
Bernie Calvert - Bass
Bobby Elliot - Drums
The Hollies EP (71Mb)
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