"If You Could Read My Mind" | ||||
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Single by Gordon Lightfoot | ||||
from the album Sit Down Young Stranger | ||||
B-side | "Poor Little Allison" | |||
Released | December 1970 | |||
Recorded | 1970 | |||
Genre | Soft rock, Folk rock | |||
Length | 3:48 | |||
Label | Reprise | |||
Writer(s) | Gordon Lightfoot | |||
Producer(s) | Lenny Waronker and Joseph Wissert | |||
Gordon Lightfoot singles chronology | ||||
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"If You Could Read My Mind" | |
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Single by Stars on 54 | |
from the album 54 (film) | |
Released | 1998 |
Format | CD single |
Recorded | 1998 |
Genre | Dance-pop |
Length | 3:26 |
Label | Tommy Boy Music LTD (UK) |
Writer(s) | Gordon Lightfoot |
Producer(s) | The Berman Brothers for Berman Brothers Media, Ltd. |
"If You Could Read My Mind" is a song by Canadian singer-songwriter Gordon Lightfoot. It reached number one on Canadian music charts and was his first recording to appear on the American music charts, reaching number 5 on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart in February 1971. Later in the year it reached number 30 in the UK. The song also reached number one for one week on the Billboard Easy Listening chart, and was the first of four Lightfoot releases to reach number one.
This song first appeared on Lightfoot's 1970 album Sit Down Young Stranger, which was later renamed If You Could Read My Mind following the song's success.
Lightfoot has cited his divorce for inspiring the lyrics, saying they came to him as he was sitting in a vacant Toronto house one summer. At the request of his daughter, Ingrid, he performs the lyrics with a slight change now: the line "I'm just trying to understand the feelings that you lack" is altered to "I'm just trying to understand the feelings that we lack." He has said in an interview that the difficulty with writing songs inspired by personal stories is that there is not always the emotional distance and clarity to make lyrical improvements such as the one his daughter suggested.
In 1987 Lightfoot took a lawsuit out against the writer of "The Greatest Love of All", alleging plagiarism of 24 bars of "If You Could Read My Mind". Lightfoot has stated that he dropped the lawsuit when he felt it was having a negative effect on the singer Whitney Houston, as the lawsuit was about the writer and not her.
The song is in A major and uses the subtonic chord.
The song has been covered by many other artists, including Andy Williams, Johnny Mathis, Petula Clark, Jack Jones, Ultra Nate, Don Williams, Johnny Cash, Duane Steele, Don McLean, Kalan Porter, Herb Alpert & the Tijuana Brass, Olivia Newton-John, Liza Minnelli, Diana Krall and Sarah Maclachlan, Glen Campbell, Gene Clark, Aurora featuring Marcella Detroit, Amber, Gordon Haskell, Vikki Carr, Daliah Lavi, the Mexican Actress/model/singer Isabel Madow (in Spanish, as "Sí Pudieras Leer Mi Mente"), Beckie Menzie and Joe Dassin (with French lyrics as "Si tu peux lire en moi"), Hector (in Finnish, as "Jos Lukisit Kuin Kirjaa"), etc. The covered version by The Spotnicks was adopted as an unofficial theme for the 1972 Summer Olympics.[1]