"Rock Me on the Water" | ||||||||||
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Autographed 7" Picture Sleeve
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Single by Jackson Browne | ||||||||||
from the album Jackson Browne | ||||||||||
B-side | "Something Fine" | |||||||||
Released | July 1972 | |||||||||
Format | 7" | |||||||||
Recorded | 1971 | |||||||||
Length | 3:47 7" version; 4:13 album version | |||||||||
Label | Asylum Records | |||||||||
Writer(s) | Jackson Browne | |||||||||
Producer(s) | Richard Sanford Orshoff | |||||||||
Jackson Browne singles chronology | ||||||||||
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"Rock Me on the Water" is an oft-covered song written and performed by American singer-songwriter Jackson Browne, released as the second single from his 1972 debut album, Jackson Browne, following the #7 success of Browne's debut single, "Doctor My Eyes." Browne's version reached #48 on Billboards Sept. 23, 1972, Hot 100 chart, spending nine weeks on that chart after debuting at #73 on August 5, 1972. It was also released as a single in Canada, Germany and Japan, and as a promotional single in the United Kingdom.
William Ruhlmann at Allmusic.com wrote that Browne was performing the song as early as autumn 1970. "In the songs he was writing shortly before his recording debut in 1972, Jackson Browne continually alluded to apocalyptic events, but never more explicitly than in 'Rock Me...'," he wrote. Browne is documented as saying that the song, with its reference to the "sisters of the sun," pays homage to his real-life sisters.
Browne addressed the gospel and religious issues in the song, saying that "it's not about religion, it's about society." The song is meant to employ gospel language, but, he said, he turns "it around 180 degrees... If you heard even three seconds of it, you would say, 'well, that's gospel,' but you have to have an idea in a gospel song, and if it's not going to be Jesus, then it must at least be salvation. If I say 'when my life is over, I'm going to stand before the father, but the sisters of the sun are going to rock me on the water now' is like a way of, lovingly, and in a friendly way, refuting the traditional and conventional messages of redemption having to do with the straight and narrow... I staked a lot on that song, because it was a combining of that social awareness and paying attention to what's going on around, with the inner search for spiritual meaning."
Like much of the album from which it came, the song is presented simply, with only Craig Doerge (piano), Russ Kunkel (drums), and Lee Sklar (bass) playing, along with David Crosby's harmony vocals.