Take Me for What I'm Worth

{{Short description|1965 studio album by The Searchers}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}

{{Infobox album

| name = Take Me for What I'm Worth

| type = studio

| artist = The Searchers

| cover = Take_Me_For_What_I'm_Worth_LP.jpg

| border = yes

| alt =

| released = November 1965

| recorded = 1965

| studio = Pye Studios, London

| genre = Rock/Pop/Folk

| length =

| language = English

| label = Pye

| producer = Tony Hatch

| prev_title = Sounds Like Searchers

| prev_year = 1965

| next_title = Second Take

| next_year = 1972

| misc = {{Singles

| name = Take Me for What I'm Worth

| type = studio

| single1 = Take Me for What I'm Worth

| single1date = November 1965

}}

}}

Take Me for What I'm Worth is the fifth studio album by the English rock band The Searchers and the group's first LP which missed the official Record Retailer Top 20 album chart in the United Kingdom. Released in the end of 1965 it was the last album by the Searchers before the leader of the band Chris Curtis left. Album included some songs written by members of the band as well as cover versions of some well known tracks originally recorded by The Ronettes ("Be My Baby"), Fats Domino ("I’m Ready"), Marvin Gaye ("I'll Be Doggone") or Ian and Sylvia ("Four Strong Winds"). The title track, written by P. F. Sloan, was the last Top 20 hit for the band in the UK.{{cite web |title=Searchers: Artist Chart History |url=https://www.officialcharts.com/artist/10739/searchers/ |publisher=Official Charts Company |accessdate=4 May 2020}}

Overview and recording

Sessions for Take Me for What I'm Worth LP began in May 1965 at Pye Studios. There were reports in the press at the same time, that The Beatles manager Brian Epstein would take over the group, but this did not happen. In fact, Epstein probably wouldn't be able to help the band with commercial success because nearly all of his merseybeat bands (included Gerry and the Pacemakers, Billy J. Kramer and the Dakotas, The Fourmost etc.) had the same problems with waning popularity in 1965. Still, Frank Allen said: "Eppy would have had the clout to do more for us, but what we really needed was control in the studio. We made nice records, but we were losing our way," and he added: "We didn't take enough care finishing the records off."Peter Doggett, Take Me for What I'm Worth (CD liner notes), Sanctuary Records, 2001.

Chris Curtis take over direction of the band previous year. He picked up (or wrote) and arranged the most songs and he also found P. J. Proby's "Take Me for What I'm Worth" which became their Top 20 hit and the title track of this album. He loved both the melody and the lyrics of the song: "It’s a very profound statement and it could have become a gay anthem," said in interview with Spencer Leigh.{{cite web|url=http://www.spencerleigh.co.uk/2013/05/chris-curtis-of-the-searchers-december-1997-interview/3/ |title=Chris Curtis interview |publisher=Spencer Leigh |date=December 1997 |access-date=11 February 2021}}

John McNally's songwriting would evolve over the years and flourish with interesting compositions. As a songwriter, he has contributed with two songs to the record "It's Time' and "Don't You Know Why". One more self-penned number featured on the album, band's lyrical composition with the beautiful flute solo "Too Many Miles" (the song was primarily written by Chris Curtis{{cite web|url=http://mdenger.bplaced.net/wrts/|title=The Searchers Discography by M. Denger|work=Who Wrote What}}). During these sessions, out-take version of the Marvin Gaye hit was made: an alternate "I'll Be Doggone" with Chris Curtis on lead vocals (released only on US LP The Searchers No. 4).

Although the album was completed very soon, it stayed in the vaults for another five months and it was not released until the end of the year.Peter Doggett, Take Me for What I'm Worth (CD liner notes), Sanctuary Records, 2001. This could have had a major impact on the album's failure, because the British music scene was evolving very fast at that time.

Release

Take Me for What I'm Worth was released as a mono LP album on the Pye label with the catalogue number NPL 18120 and as a stereo album NSPL 18120 but failed to chart (Record Retailer printed only the Top 20 album chart in 1965).[https://www.officialcharts.com/who-we-are/sixties-history/ Official Charts website History of the UK charts retrieved 7 June 2020.]

Track listing

{{tracklist

| collapsed =

| headline = Side 1

| all_writing =

| extra_column = Lead vocals

| title1 = I'm Ready

| writer1 = Fats Domino, Al Lewis, Sylvester Bradford

| extra1 = Chris Curtis

| length1 = 1:54

| title2 = I'll Be Doggone

| writer2 = Smokey Robinson, Warren Moore, Marv Tarplin

| extra2 = Frank Allen

| length2 = 2:54

| title3 = Does She Really Care for Me

| writer3 = Larry Weiss, Fred Anisfield

| extra3 = Chris Curtis

| length3 = 2:07

| title4 = It's Time

| writer4 = John McNally

| extra4 = John McNally

| length4 = 2:34

| title5 = Too Many Miles

| writer5 = Mike Pender, Chris Curtis, John McNally, Frank Allen

| extra5 = Mike Pender

| length5 = 2:08

| title6 = You Can't Lie to a Liar

| writer6 = Frank Churchill, Lionel Hampton

| extra6 = Mike Pender

| length6 = 2:22

}}

{{tracklist

| collapsed =

| headline = Side 2

| extra_column = Lead vocals

| title1 = Don't You Know Why

| writer1 = John McNally

| extra1 = Mike Pender

| length1 = 2:38

| title2 = I'm Your Loving Man

| writer2 = Mike Pender, Chris Curtis

| extra2 = Mike Pender, Chris Curtis

| length2 = 1:57

| title3 = Each Time

| writer3 = Jackie DeShannon

| extra3 = Mike Pender, Chris Curtis

| length3 = 2:46

| title4 = Be My Baby

| writer4 = Jeff Barry, Ellie Greenwich, Phil Spector

| extra4 = Frank Allen

| length4 = 3:16

| title5 = Four Strong Winds

| writer5 = Ian Tyson

| extra5 = Mike Pender, Chris Curtis

| length5 = 3:07

| title6 = Take Me for What I'm Worth

| writer6 = P. F. Sloan

| extra6 = Mike Pender

| length6 = 2:40

}}

The First US version (The Searchers No. 4)

{{Infobox album

| name = The Searchers No. 4

| type = studio

| artist = The Searchers

| cover = The_Searchers_No4_LP.jpg

| border = yes

| alt =

| released = September 1965

| recorded = 1965

| studio = Pye Studios, London

| genre = Rock/Pop/Folk

| length =

| language = English

| label = Kapp

| producer = Tony Hatch

| chronology = The Searchers US

| prev_title = The New Searchers LP (Chris, John, Mike, Frank)

| prev_year = 1965

| next_title = Take Me for What I'm Worth

| next_year = 1966

| misc = {{Singles

| name = The Searchers No. 4

| type = studio

| single1 = Goodbye My Love

| single1date = March 1965

| single2 = He's Got No Love

| single2date = July 1965

| single3 = You Can’t Lie To a Liar

| single3date = October 1965

}}

}}

In September 1965 (prior to UK release), Kapp Records released the first US version of the LP, as The Searchers No. 4, with a different cover art and with a slightly different track listing. Kapp removed "I'm Ready", "It's Time", "Too Many Miles" and "Take Me For What I'm Worth" and added the hit singles Goodbye My Love and He's Got No Love (as well as the group's self-penned B-sides "Till I Met You" and "So Far Away"). Early front covers incorrectly show a song titled "Can't You Just See Me", later correct this to "I'm Your Lovin' Man". Album entered the Billboard Top 200 LP charts on 23 October 1965, went to No. 149 and stayed for 2 weeks.{{cite web|url=https://billboard.elpee.jp/album/The%20Searchers%20No.%204/The%20Searchers/ |title=Billboard database |date= |accessdate=2021-02-02}} The opening track "You Can't Lie To a Liar" was released as a single b/w "Don't You Know Why", but missed the charts.

=Track listing=

{{Track listing

|headline=Side one

|extra_column=Original UK release

|title1=You Can't Lie To a Liar

|writer1=Frank Churchill, Lionel Hampton

|extra1=Take Me for What I'm Worth

|length1=2:20

|title2=Goodbye My Love

|writer2= Robert Mosley, Lamar Simington, Leroy Swearingen

|extra2=non-album single

|length2=2:58

|title3=Don't You Know Why

|writer3=John McNally

|extra3=Take Me for What I'm Worth

|length3=2:36

|title4=Does She Really Care For Me

|writer4=Larry Weiss, Fred Anisfield

|extra4=Take Me for What I'm Worth

|length4=2:04

|title5=So Far Away

|writer5=Chris Curtis, Mike Pender

|extra5=non-album single, B-side He's Got No Love

|length5=1:59

|title6=I'll Be Doggone

|writer6=Smokey Robinson, Warren Moore, Marvin Tarplin

|extra6=Take Me for What I'm Worth

|length6=2:52

}}

{{Track listing

|headline=Side two

|extra_column=Original UK release

|title1=Each Time

|writer1=Jackie DeShannon

|extra1=Take Me for What I'm Worth

|length1=2:46

|title2=Till I Met You

|writer2=Chris Curtis, Mike Pender, John McNally, Frank Allen

|extra2=non-album single, B-side Goodbye My Love

|length2=2:57

|title3=I'm Your Loving Man

|writer3=Chris Curtis, Mike Pender

|extra3=Take Me for What I'm Worth

|length3=1:57

|title4=Be My Baby

|writer4=Jeff Barry, Ellie Greenwich, Phil Spector

|extra4=Take Me for What I'm Worth

|length4=3:16

|title5=Four Strong Winds

|writer5=Ian Tyson

|extra5=Take Me for What I'm Worth

|length5=3:06

|title6=He's Got No Love

|writer6=Mike Pender, Chris Curtis

|extra6=non-album single

|length6=2:38

}}

The Second US version (Take Me for What I'm Worth)

{{Infobox album

| name = Take Me for What I'm Worth (US)

| type = studio

| artist = The Searchers

| cover = Take_Me_For_What_I'm_Worth_US_LP.jpg

| border = yes

| alt =

| released = 1966

| recorded = 1965

| studio = Pye Studios, London

| genre = Rock/Pop/Folk

| length =

| language = English

| label = Kapp

| producer = Tony Hatch

| chronology = The Searchers US

| prev_title = The Searchers No. 4

| prev_year = 1965

| next_title = Needles & Pins

| next_year = 1972

| misc = {{Singles

| name = Take Me for What I'm Worth (US)

| type = studio

| single1 = He's Got No Love

| single1date = July 1965

| single2 = You Can’t Lie To a Liar

| single2date = October 1965

| single3 = Take Me for What I'm Worth

| single3date = December 1965

}}

}}

In February 1966 Kapp Records released LP again. This time under the UK title Take Me for What I'm Worth and with a similar cover art (with B/W photo of the band). Once again it was released with a different track listing included previous UK hit singles "He's Got No Love" and When I Get Home (written by Bobby Darin) and their B-sides. For some reasons, both US editions omitted the UK opening rock and roll stomper „I’m Ready“ (originally by Fats Domino), which was released as a single in some European countries as Germany or Sweden.{{cite web|url=https://www.discogs.com/search/?q=searchers+I%27m+Ready&type=release&decade=1960&format_exact=45+RPM |title=Discogs.com |date= |accessdate=2021-02-11}}

=Track listing=

{{Track listing

|headline=Side one

|extra_column=Original UK release

|title1=Take Me For What I'm Worth

|writer1=P. F. Sloan

|extra1=Take Me for What I'm Worth

|length1=2:40

|title2=I'm Never Coming Back

|writer2= Chris Curtis, Mike Pender

|extra2=non-album single, B-side When I Get Home

|length2=1:58

|title3=Too Many Miles

|writer3=Chris Curtis, Mike Pender, John McNally, Frank Allen

|extra3=Take Me for What I'm Worth

|length3=2:07

|title4=It's Time

|writer4=John McNally

|extra4=Take Me for What I'm Worth

|length4=2:36

|title5=So Far Away

|writer5=Chris Curtis, Mike Pender

|extra5=non-album single, B-side He's Got No Love

|length5=1:59

|title6=You Can't Lie To a Liar

|writer6=Frank Churchill, Lionel Hampton

|extra6=Take Me for What I'm Worth

|length6=2:20

}}

{{Track listing

|headline=Side two

|extra_column=Original UK release

|title1=Don't You Know Why

|writer1=John McNally

|extra1=Take Me for What I'm Worth

|length1=2:36

|title2=Each Time

|writer2=Jackie DeShannon

|extra2=Take Me for What I'm Worth

|length2=2:46

|title3=He's Got No Love

|writer3=Chris Curtis, Mike Pender

|extra3=non-album single

|length3=2:38

|title4=I'll Be Doggone

|writer4=Smokey Robinson, Warren Moore, Marvin Tarplin

|extra4=Take Me for What I'm Worth

|length4=2:52

|title5=I'm Your Loving Man

|writer5=Chris Curtis, Mike Pender

|extra5=Take Me for What I'm Worth

|length5=1:57

|title6=When I Get Home

|writer6=Bobby Darin, Russell Alquist

|extra6=non-album single

|length6=2:09

}}

Personnel

The Searchers

Additional musicians and production

References