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Muskrat Love

"Muskrat Love"
Single by America
from the album Hat Trick
B-side "Cornwall Blank"
Released June 28, 1973
Recorded 1973
Genre Folk rock
Length 3:06
Label Warner Bros.
Songwriter(s) Willis Alan Ramsey
Producer(s) Gerry Beckley, Dewey Bunnell, Dan Peek
America singles chronology
"Only in Your Heart"
(1973)
"Muskrat Love"
(1973)
"Rainbow Song"
(1973)
"Only in Your Heart"
(1973)
"Muskrat Love"
(1973)
"Rainbow Song"
(1973)
"Muskrat Love"
Muskrat Love - Captain & Tennille.jpg
Single by Captain & Tennille
from the album Song of Joy
B-side "Honey Come Love Me"
Released September 1976
Genre Soft rock
Length 3:28
Label A&M
Songwriter(s) Willis Alan Ramsey
Producer(s) Captain & Tennille
Captain & Tennille singles chronology
"Shop Around"
(1976)
"Muskrat Love"
(1976)
"Can't Stop Dancin'"
(1977)
"Shop Around"
(1976)
"Muskrat Love"
(1976)
"Can't Stop Dancin'"
(1977)

"Muskrat Love" is a soft rock song written by Willis Alan Ramsey. The song depicts a romantic liaison between two anthropomorphic muskrats named Susie and Sam. It was first recorded in 1972 by Ramsey himself for his sole album release Willis Alan Ramsey. The song was originally titled "Muskrat Candlelight" referencing the song's opening lyric. A 1973 cover version by the rock band America—retitled "Muskrat Love" for the lyrics that close the chorus—was a minor hit reaching number 67 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. In 1976, a cover by pop music duo Captain & Tennille resulted in the song's highest profile, peaking at number four on the Hot 100 chart. It also reached number two on the Cash Box chart, which ranked it as the 30th biggest hit of 1976.

America recorded "Muskrat Love" for their 1973 album Hat Trick, marking the second time the band had recorded a song not written by a member of America. In putting together ten songs to comprise the eventual Hat Trick album, America's members Gerry Beckley, Dewey Bunnell, and Dan Peek had agreed to each contribute three compositions with a mutually agreeable cover song being recorded as the tenth track. David Dickey who played bass for America brought Ramsey's "Muskrat Candlelight" to the group's attention: according to Beckley—"to us it sounded like a very bluesy, quirky tune. We just felt it was quirky and commercial, and we worked it up."

"Muskrat Love" was issued as an advance single from Hat Trick in July 1973 although Dan Peek would recall that America's label Warner Bros. "hated" the track and "begged us not to release it as a single...We were stupid to press the issue but we liked the song for its easy, acoustic, harmonic beauty not realizing that perhaps it was badly cast for us in order to retain the fairly hip image we had eked out". Peek adds that the single "easily hit the Top 40 on the strength of our past successes" although "Muskrat Love" in fact marked a downturn in America's popularity with a low peak on the Hot 100 in Billboard at number 67; the single did better on the Billboard Adult Contemporary chart reaching number 11.


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