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Everybody Needs Somebody to Love

"Everybody Needs Somebody to Love"
Single by Solomon Burke
A-side "Everybody Needs Somebody to Love"
B-side "Looking for My Baby"
Released February 1964
Format 7" single
Recorded January 1964
Genre Rhythm and blues, soul
Label Atlantic
2241
Writer(s) Jerry Wexler, Bert Berns, Solomon Burke
Producer(s) Bert Berns
Solomon Burke singles chronology
"Goodbye Baby (Baby Goodbye)" "Everybody Needs Somebody to Love" "Yes I Do"

"Everybody Needs Somebody to Love" is a song written by Bert Berns, Solomon Burke and Jerry Wexler, and originally recorded by Solomon Burke under the production of Bert Berns at Atlantic Records in 1964. Burke's version charted in 1964, but missed the US top 40, peaking at #58.

Wilson Pickett covered the song in 1966, and his version (which explicitly mentions Solomon Burke in the opening section) made it to #29 pop, and #19 R&B in early 1967. Other notable versions of "Everybody Needs Somebody to Love" were recorded by The Rolling Stones and The Blues Brothers.

The song is ranked #429 on the Rolling Stone magazine's list of The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.

On 28 May 1964, Burke recorded two unreleased songs, and "Everybody Needs Somebody to Love" (Atlantic 2241), that was also written by Burke (but also credited to Bert Berns and Jerry Wexler), which was Burke's most prominent bid for an enduring soul standard. Burke claims he was the sole writer on the song but was talked into sharing credit by Wexler and Berns.

In an interview Burke recalled the song's origins: "I used to do it in church when I was a kid and it was a march for the offering. We would play it with tubas, trombones and the big bass drum and it sounded really joyful. I played it to Jerry Wexler and Bert Berns, who thought that it was too fast, and had the wrong tempo."

In August 2008, Burke recalled that he had hired musicians from Charlotte, North Carolina, to play at a gig in Long Island and he drafted them in to play the instrumental riff on "Everybody Needs Somebody to Love". Burke described the recording: "Got the band cooking, get a bit of echo, we went through it, came back out, said to Jerry [Wexler], 'Whaddya think?' He said, 'Too fast. Doesn't have any meaning.' (Engineer) Tommy (Dowd) says, 'What can we lose? His band's here, let's just cut it.'" In this song, Burke employs the style of a black preacher, in "which he begins by delivering his message in a style of a sermon, and offering salvation".


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