Hush (Billy Joe Royal song)#Other versions

{{Short description|1967 single by Billy Joe Royal}}

{{More citations needed|date=June 2014}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=January 2012}}

{{Infobox song

| name = Hush

| cover = Hush (Billy Joe Royal song).png

| alt =

| caption = Cover of the 1967 Norway single

| type = single

| artist = Billy Joe Royal

| album = Billy Joe Royal
featuring Hush

| B-side = Watching from the Bandstand

| released = September 1967

| recorded = 12 July 1967

| studio =

| venue =

| genre = Swamp rock{{cite web|last=Fontenot|first=Robert|url=https://www.liveabout.com/what-is-swamp-rock-2522008|title=What Is Swamp Rock?|publisher=LiveAbout|access-date=October 28, 2018}}

| length = 2:30

| label = Columbia

| writer = Joe South

| producer = Joe South

| prev_title = These Are Not My People

| prev_year = 1967

| next_title = Storybook Children

| next_year = 1968

}}

"Hush" is a song written by American composer and musician Joe South, for recording artist Billy Joe Royal. The song was later covered by Somebody's Image (an Australian band fronted by Russell Morris) in 1967. Their version reached #14 in Australia. It was also covered by Deep Purple in 1968 and by Kula Shaker in 1997. Each artist had a Top 5 hit with their version.

Billy Joe Royal version

Billy Joe Royal recorded "Hush" on 12 July 1967 in Nashville with Barry Bailey, future lead guitarist for the Atlanta Rhythm Section, on guitar. Joe South, Royal's regular songwriter/producer, was travelling to Nashville with Royal and writing "Rose Garden" in the car. Royal didn't like it, so South wrote "Hush" for him while leaning on the dashboard.Vancouver Province 4 November 1988 "Billy Joe Pulls Himself Out of the Boondocks" by Bruce Mason p.65 Royal did record "Rose Garden" for his album Billy Joe Royal featuring Hush, though didn't release it as a single. In 1971, "Rose Garden" become an international hit for Lynn Anderson, and was South's most successful composition. Royal later regretted not liking the song.The Tennessean 7 November 1987 "Billy Joe Royal a Little Late, But Country Stardom Arrives at Last" by Robert K. Oermann pp.1D, 2D

Although more successful than Royal's last six single releases, only two of which had ranked even low on the Billboard Hot 100, "Hush" would not afford Royal a Top 40 comeback: managing only one "top-tier" market breakout in Chicago – whose prime Top 40 station WLS would rank "Hush" as high as #5, tying the WLS hit parade peak for both Royal's 1965 career record "Down in the Boondocks" and also Deep Purple's 1968 "Hush" cover{{cite book| first=Ronald P.| last=Smith| title='Chicago Top 40 Charts 1960-1969| year=2001| publisher=Writers Club Press| location=Bloomington IN| page=161 |isbn=0-595-19614-4}} – "Hush" would rise no higher on the Hot 100 than #52,{{cite web|url=http://www.billboard.com/artist/284230/billy+joe+royal/chart |title=Billy Joe Royal – Chart history |publisher=Billboard |access-date=2014-06-25}} with a Canadian pop chart peak of #45.{{cite web |url=http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/obj/028020/f2/nlc008388.100111.pdf |title=Official list |website=Collectionscanada.gc.ca |access-date=2020-06-28}} The qualified success of "Hush" was sufficient to allow for the release of Royal's second album Billy Joe Royal featuring Hush.

"Hush" did afford Billy Joe Royal a one-off hit on the European continent, reaching #12 on the German singles chart and becoming a Top Ten hit in Belgium (#1), the Netherlands (#5) and Switzerland (#2).{{Cite web|url=http://swisscharts.com/song/Billy-Joe-Royal/Hush-12|title=Billy Joe Royal - Hush - hitparade.ch|website=Swisscharts.com|access-date=December 25, 2021}}

A promo clip for Billy Joe Royal's release of the song was filmed at the boardwalk amusement park and outskirts of an unidentified Southern beach town.

Deep Purple version

{{Infobox song

| name = Hush

| cover = deeppurplehushps.jpg

| caption = Cover of the 1968 UK single

| type = single

| artist = Deep Purple

| album = Shades of Deep Purple

| B-side = One More Rainy Day

| released = * 21 June 1968 (UK){{cite book | last = Popoff | first = Martin | author-link = Martin Popoff | title = The Deep Purple Family | edition = 2nd | publisher = Wymer Publishing | year = 2016 | pages = 41 | isbn = 978-1-908724-42-7}}

  • July 1968 (US)

| recorded = May 1968

| studio = Pye, London

| genre = *Psychedelic rock

  • hard rock{{cite web |last1=Wiser |first1=Carl |title=Steve Morse of Deep Purple : Songwriter Interviews |url=https://www.songfacts.com/blog/interviews/steve-morse-of-deep-purple |website=www.songfacts.com |publisher=Songfacts |access-date=3 February 2023 |language=en}}
  • blues rock{{cite book|last= Breihan|first= Tom|chapter= Bon Jovi - "You Give Love a Bad Name|date= November 15, 2022|title= The Number Ones: Twenty Chart-Topping Hits That Reveal the History of Pop Music|publisher=Hachette Book Group|location= New York|page= 175}}

| length = 4:24

| label = *Parlophone (UK)

| writer = Joe South

| producer = Derek Lawrence

| next_title = Kentucky Woman

| next_year = 1968

| misc = {{Audio sample

| type = single

| file = Deep Purple Hush.ogg

}}

}}

{{Infobox song

| name = Hush

| cover = Deep Purple Hush 1988.png

| alt =

| caption = Cover of the 1988 German single

| type = single

| artist = Deep Purple

| album = Nobody's Perfect

| B-side = *"Dead or Alive" (live)

  • "Bad Attitude" (live)

| released = 31 May 1988{{cite web|url=https://www.worldradiohistory.com/UK/Music-Week/1988/MW-1988-05-28.pdf|title=Music Week|page=31}}

| recorded = 26 February 1988{{cite book | last1 = Gillan | first1 = Ian | author-link1 = Ian Gillan | title = The Autobiography | edition = 3rd | publisher = John Blake Publishing | year = 2016 | page = 328 | isbn = 978-1-786-06135-5}}

| studio = Pye, London

| venue =

| genre = Rock
style: blues rock,{{Cite web|url=https://www.discogs.com/Deep-Purple-Hush/release/887941|title=Deep Purple - Hush|website=Discogs|year=1988 }} hard rock{{Cite web|url=https://www.discogs.com/Deep-Purple-Hush/release/7439276|title=Deep Purple - Hush|website=Discogs|year=1988 }}

| length = 3:32

| label = *Polydor (UK)

| writer = Joe South

| producer =

| prev_title = Call of the Wild

| prev_year = 1987

| next_title = King of Dreams

| next_year = 1990

}}

The song was subsequently recorded by English hard rock band Deep Purple, at that time fronted by lead singer Rod Evans, for their 1968 debut album Shades of Deep Purple. Group member Ritchie Blackmore having heard the Billy Joe Royal original while living in Hamburg: "It was a great song [which] would be a good song [for] our act, if we could come up with a different arrangement...We [recorded] the whole song in two takes."{{Cite web|url=https://www.vintageguitar.com/2822/ritchie-blackmore/|title=Ritchie Blackmore|website=Vintageguitar.com|first=Willie G.|last=Moseley|date=July 10, 2001 |access-date=December 25, 2021}} The track became the group's first hit single, peaking at number 4 on the Hot 100 on 21–28 September 1968,{{cite book |title= The Billboard Book of Top 40 Hits: Eighth Edition |last=Whitburn |first=Joel |author-link=Joel Whitburn |year=2004 |publisher=Record Research |page=169}} number 16 in Italy in late 1968, and number 2 in Canada, while going largely unnoticed in the United Kingdom. Cash Box called it a "psychedelicized reversion of the time-back Billy Joe Royal song," saying that the instrumental work and tailoring of the rock song all point to sheer force".{{cite magazine |title=CashBox Record Reviews |date=July 27, 1968 |page=32 |access-date=2022-01-12 |url=https://worldradiohistory.com/Archive-All-Music/Cash-Box/60s/1968/CB-1968-07-27.pdf |magazine=Cash Box}} Record World described it as "a rollicking, contemporary ditty."{{cite magazine|title=Single Picks of the Week|magazine=Record World|date=July 27, 1968|page=163|accessdate=2023-05-31|url=https://worldradiohistory.com/Archive-All-Music/Record-World/60s/68/Record-World-1968-07-27.pdf}}

In 1968, Deep Purple performed live on Hugh Hefner's Playboy After Dark TV series. The band opened the episode playing the instrumental "And the Address". After Hefner heard a ghost story from Jon Lord and had a guitar lesson from Ritchie Blackmore, Deep Purple performed "Hush" which is available in the Playboy After Dark -2nd Collection 2007 DVD release and the 2000 CD-reissue of the Shades of Deep Purple album.

In celebration of the band's 20th anniversary, Deep Purple re-recorded the song in 1988 for their album Nobody's Perfect. The track was released as a single and reached number 62 on the UK singles chart and number 44 on the US Hot Mainstream Rock chart. Ian Gillan, who had replaced Rod Evans as lead singer of Deep Purple in 1969, admitted being "uneasy" about having recorded the song, saying that the only person he wanted to hear perform the song was Evans (who at that point was no longer involved in music).{{cite book |last1=Thompson |first1=Dave |title=Smoke on the Water - The Deep Purple Story |date=2004 |publisher=ECW Press |isbn=9781550226188 |pages=256}}

"Hush" is one of four songs originally recorded with the band's original vocalist Rod Evans and bassist Nick Simper that Deep Purple have performed with their replacements Ian Gillan and Roger Glover later on. Others are "Mandrake Root", also from Shades of Deep Purple, "Kentucky Woman", from the album The Book of Taliesyn from 1968 and "Bird Has Flown", from the album Deep Purple from 1969. The instrumental "Wring That Neck" from The Book of Taliesyn was also a regular part of the band's setlist into the early 1970s.

Charts

class="wikitable plainrowheaders" style="text-align:center"

|+ Deep Purple version

! scope="col"| Chart (1968)

! scope="col"| Peak
position

scope="row" | Italy (Musica e dischi){{Cite web |title=Hit per Interprete |url=https://www.hitparadeitalia.it/indici/per_interprete/ad.htm |website=HPI}}

| 13

scope="row" | Switzerland (Swiss Hitparade){{Cite web |title=Deep Purple - Hush |url=https://hitparade.ch/song/Deep-Purple/Hush-60 |website=hitparade.ch}}

| 7

scope="row" | US Billboard Hot 100{{Cite web |title=Deep Purple |url=https://www.billboard.com/artist/deep-purple/ |website=Billboard}}

| 4

Other versions

  • The song's composer Joe South recorded "Hush" in 1968 for his second album Games People Play.{{cite web|url=https://www.discogs.com/Joe-South-Games-People-Play/release/2045389|title=Joe South - Games People Play|website=Discogs|year=1969 }}
  • British singer Kris Ife released a version in December 1967 (MGM Records single)
  • Tommy Körberg recorded "Hush" for his 1968 album Nature Boy, credited to Tom.{{cite web|url=https://www.discogs.com/release/12415609-Tom-Nature-Boy|title=Tom – Nature Boy (1968, Vinyl)|access-date=December 25, 2021|website=Discogs.com|year=1968 }}
  • Merrilee Rush recorded "Hush" for her 1968 album Angel of the Morning.{{cite web|url=https://secondhandsongs.com/performance/20045/versions|title=Cover versions of Hush by Billy Joe Royal |website=Secondhandsongs.com|access-date=December 25, 2021}}
  • Love Affair recorded "Hush" for their 1968 album The Everlasting Love Affair.
  • A 1973 single release of "Hush" by Jeannie C. Riley, from her album Just Jeannie, reached #51 on the Billboard C&W chart.
  • Swiss band Gotthard included a cover on their self-titled 1992 debut album. They also performed the song live with Deep Purple's Jon Lord as guest special at the Zermatt Unplugged Festival in 2008.
  • Jenny Rock, a Canadian artist, recorded a French adaptation version in 1970 entitled Mal (produced by Michel Pagliaro).
  • Kula Shaker recorded a version which peaked at #2 in the UK Charts in 1997 and was used on the soundtrack for I Know What You Did Last Summer and the marketing for Kingsman: The Secret Service.
  • Somebody's Image recorded a version that was a minor hit in Australia in 1967.
  • The Partridge Family performed a version on their TV series, with David Cassidy on vocals.
  • Milli Vanilli recorded a version on their debut album All or Nothing in 1988.
  • Complex recorded a version for their debut self-titled studio album in 1970.
  • Funky Junction recorded a version of "Hush" on their only album Funky Junction Play a Tribute to Deep Purple in 1973. The band featured Phil Lynott, Eric Bell, and Brian Downey from Thin Lizzy.Alan Byrne, "Thin Lizzy: Soldiers of Fortune", Firefly, 2004
  • Captain Jack covered "Hush" on the Eurodance album Party Warriors, released in Europe in 2003.{{Cite web|url=https://www.discogs.com/Captain-Jack-Party-Warriors-The-Partyhit-Collection/release/1905078|title=Captain Jack - Party Warriors - The Partyhit Collection|website=Discogs|date=February 24, 2003 }}

Personnel

1968 Deep Purple version

1988 Deep Purple version

References