*** Welcome to piglix ***

Nathan Jones (song)

"Nathan Jones"
1971 - Nathan Jones.png
Single by The Supremes
from the album Touch
B-side "Happy (Is a Bumpy Road)"
Released April 15, 1971
Format 7" single
Recorded Hitsville U.S.A. (Studio A): December 17, 1970
Genre R&B, soul, pop
Length 3:04
Label Motown
M 1182
Writer(s) Leonard Caston
Kathy Wakefield
Producer(s) Frank Wilson
The Supremes singles chronology
"River Deep – Mountain High" (with Four Tops)
(1970)
"Nathan Jones"
(1971)
"You Gotta Have Love in Your Heart" (with Four Tops)
(1971)
Touch track listing
"Nathan Jones"
Banana nj.jpg
Single by Bananarama
from the album Wow!, Greatest Hits Collection and Rain Man: Original Soundtrack
Released November 1988
Format 7" single, 12" single, CD single
Recorded August 1988
Genre Pop
Length 5:11 (Album Version)
3:19 (Single Version)
3:03 (Psycho 7-inch Edit)
Label London
NANX 18
Writer(s) Leonard Caston
Kathy Wakefield
Producer(s)
Bananarama singles chronology
"Love, Truth and Honesty"
(1988)
"Nathan Jones"
(1988)
"Help!"
(1989)

"Nathan Jones" is a hit single recorded by The Supremes, released in spring 1971 (see 1971 in music) on the Motown label. Produced by Frank Wilson and written by Leonard Caston - a.k.a. Leonard Caston, Jr. - and Kathy Wakefield, "Nathan Jones" was one of eight Top 40 hits the Supremes recorded after its original frontwoman, Diana Ross, left the group for a solo career.

The song centers around a woman's longing for her former lover, a man named Nathan Jones, who left her nearly a year ago "to ease [his] mind." Suffering through the long separation ("Winter's past, spring, and fall") without any contact or communication between herself and Jones, the narrator is no longer in love with Jones, remarking that "Nathan Jones/you've been gone too long".

"Nathan Jones" is an unusual entry among the Supremes' singles repertoire for several reasons, not the least of which is the fact that all three members of the group (Jean Terrell, Mary Wilson, and Cindy Birdsong) sing the song's lead vocal in unison. Clydie King was asked to sing along with the group to give the song a fuller vocal sound. While working on the song, producer Frank Wilson had in mind a rock music style of phrasing for the song, resulting in the unison vocals. The unison vocals would repeatedly be dubbed to create a layered harmonic tone similar to that present in the production of vocal group ABBA. In addition, Wilson had his engineer, Cal Harris, use what can (now) be considered classic studio sensibilities to take The Funk Brothers' backing tracks for "Nathan Jones" and give them a phase shifting sound at various points during the song. This was accomplished by either using a second recorder (as the Beatles would have done) or (less likely) an outboard processor such as the blue faced MXR flanger.

Released as a single on April 15, 1971 with "Happy is a Bumpy Road" as the B-side, "Nathan Jones" peaked at number sixteen on the Billboard Pop Singles chart, number-eight on the Billboard R&B chart. Overseas, the single went to number-five on the UK Singles Chart. "Nathan Jones" was the most successful single released from the Supremes' fourteenth regular studio album, Touch.


...
Wikipedia

...