San Franciscan Nights
{{Use mdy dates|date=May 2018}}
{{Infobox song
| name = San Franciscan Nights
| cover =
| alt =
| type = single
| artist = Eric Burdon and The Animals
| album = Winds of Change
| B-side = "Good Times" (USA), "Gratefully Dead" (UK)
| released = August 1967
| recorded =
| studio =
| venue =
| genre =
| length = {{Duration|m=3|s=20}}
| label = MGM
| writer = Burdon, Briggs, Weider, Jenkins, McCulloch
| producer = Tom Wilson
| prev_title = When I Was Young
| prev_year = 1967
| next_title = Good Times
| next_year = 1967
}}
"San Franciscan Nights" is a 1967 song performed by Eric Burdon and The Animals. Words and music were composed by the group's members, Eric Burdon, Vic Briggs, John Weider, Barry Jenkins, and Danny McCulloch. A paean to San Francisco, it was the biggest hit that the new band – as opposed to the first-incarnation Animals of the mid-1960s – would have. It reached a peak position of number 1 on the Canadian RPM charts, number 9 on the U.S. pop singles chart,{{cite web|title=Winds of Change charts and awards|url=http://www.allmusic.com/album/winds-of-change-r29136/charts-awards/billboard-single|publisher=Allmusic|accessdate=2012-01-23}} and number 7 on the UK pop singles chart.
Background
The band wrote "San Franciscan Nights" themselves as a protest song against the Vietnam War. Looking back on the tune in a 2010 interview with Songfacts, Burdon said: "The 'Love Generation' helped the anti-war stance in the States. It certainly turned a lot of soldiers' heads around, making them wonder why they had to be out fighting a war when back home their girlfriends were frolicking around and it caused a lot of anguish on that level. Maybe it helped politically with the so-called enemy. I'm not sure."{{cite web | url = http://www.songfacts.com/detail.php?id=20855 | title = San Franciscan Nights | work = Songfacts.com | accessdate = 2010-12-25}}
The song opens with a brief parody of the Dragnet theme. This is followed by a spoken word dedication by Burdon "to the city and people of San Francisco, who may not know it but they are beautiful and so is their city", with Burdon urging European residents to "save up all your bread and fly Trans Love Airways to San Francisco, U.S.A.," to enable them to "understand the song", and "for the sake of your own peace of mind".
The melody then begins with lyrics about a warm 1967 San Franciscan night, with hallucinogenic images of a "strobe light's beam" creating dreams, walls and minds moving, angels singing, "jeans of blue," and "Harley Davidsons too," contrasted with a "cop's face is filled with hate" (on a street called "Love") and an appeal to the "old cop" and the "young cop" to just "feel all right". Pulling in as many 1960s themes as possible, the song then concludes with a plea that the American dream include "Indians too".
Billboard described the single as having an "off-beat opener" that "turns into a plaintive, meaningful ballad saluting the hot music
city".{{cite news|newspaper=Billboard|accessdate=2021-02-25|date=July 29, 1967|page=18|title=Spotlight Singles|url=https://worldradiohistory.com/Archive-All-Music/Billboard/60s/1967/Billboard%201967-07-29.pdf}} Cash Box said that it has "pretty guitar work behind the easy-going vocal".{{cite magazine |title=CashBox Record Reviews |date=July 29, 1967 |page=20 |access-date=2022-01-12 |url=https://worldradiohistory.com/Archive-All-Music/Cash-Box/60s/1967/CB-1967-07-29.pdf |magazine=Cash Box}}
The flipside of the UK version of this single was a song called "Gratefully Dead", another nod from the Animals to the San Francisco scene.
Burdon's notion that San Francisco's nights are warm drew some derision from Americans more familiar with the city's climate – best exemplified by the apocryphal Mark Twain saying, "The coldest winter I ever spent was a summer in San Francisco."{{cite news
| last = Nolte | first = Carl
| title = Fog Heaven: The sun will come out tomorrow. Or maybe not. It's summer in the city, and that means gray skies
| work = San Francisco Chronicle
| page = A-1
| publisher = Hearst Communications
| date = August 19, 2005
| url = http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2005/08/19/MNGOBEA9JI1.DTL
| accessdate = 2008-06-13}} – and music writer Lester Bangs thought Burdon's notion "inexplicable".{{cite book | title=The Rolling Stone Illustrated History of Rock & Roll | publisher=Random House/Rolling Stone Press | year=1980 | chapter=The British Invasion | author=Lester Bangs | author-link=Lester Bangs }} But in fact, Burdon and his group had recently played in San Francisco during a rare 10-day stretch of exceptionally warm spring weather, which left a strong, if erroneous impression on them.{{citation needed|date=November 2021}}
At a concert in Naperville, Illinois in 2010, Burdon said the song was written about an evening with Janis Joplin in San Francisco.{{citation needed|date=August 2020}}
Charts
class="wikitable sortable"
! Chart (1967) ! Peak |
{{singlechart|Wallonia|18|artist=Eric Burdon & The Animals|song=San Franciscan Nights}} |
{{Single chart|Canadatopsingles|1|chartid=10096}} |
Finland (Soumen Virallinen){{cite book |last=Nyman |first=Jake |title=Suomi soi 4: Suuri suomalainen listakirja |publisher=Tammi |year=2005 |isbn=951-31-2503-3 |edition=1st |location=Helsinki |page=105|language=fi}}
|style="text-align:center;"|29 |
{{Singlechart|Ireland2|16|song=San Franciscan Nights}} |
{{singlechart|Dutch100|5|artist=Eric Burdon & The Animals|song=San Franciscan Nights}} |
New Zealand (Listener Chart){{cite web|url=http://www.flavourofnz.co.nz/index.php?qpageID=search%20listener&qartistid=637#n_view_location |title=Eric Burdon and the Animals (search)|publisher=Flavour of New Zealand}}
| style="text-align:center;"|7 |
{{Singlechart|UKsinglesbyname|7|artist=Eric Burdon|song=Sorrow|artistid=13110}} |
{{Singlechart|Billboardhot100|9|artist=Eric Burdon}} |
{{singlechart|West Germany|20|artist=Eric Burdon & The Animals|song=San Franciscan Nights|songid=174997}} |
Notes
{{Reflist}}
External links
- [http://www.radio3net.ro/sp2/db_artisti.php?cx=list_piese&id_album=809 Listen]{{dead link|date=May 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} to the cover version by Sfinx
- [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y4G3KPP1Nts Live version] by the Animals on Youtube
{{The Animals}}
{{Dragnet}}
{{Jack Webb/Mark VII Limited}}
{{Authority control}}
Category:Songs written by Eric Burdon
Category:Song recordings produced by Tom Wilson (record producer)