*** Welcome to piglix ***

Why Can't We Live Together

"Why Can't We Live Together"
Single by Timmy Thomas
from the album Why Can't We Live Together
B-side "Funky Me"
Released 1972
Format Vinyl record (45 RPM)
Genre R&B, jazz
Length 3:30 (single version)
4:50 (album version)
Label Glades/TK Records
Writer(s) Timmy Thomas
Producer(s) Timmy Thomas

"Why Can't We Live Together" is a song by Timmy Thomas from the album Why Can't We Live Together. The song is notable for being recorded in mono;its sparse, stripped-down production, which featured only a Lowrey organ, percussion from an early rhythm machine and Thomas's passionate, soulful vocal. Thomas first sang it as an improvised number in his own nightclub, the Denisse Lounge. Afterwards, following positive audience reception he wrote it as a full song. Thomas recorded a demo at Dukoff Recording Studios in North Miami, Florida, with Bill Borkan acting as sound engineer. The single version got more airplay because the longer instrumental coda was considered by many radio stations to be closer to jazz.

TK Records staff producer Steve Alaimo listened to the demo of the song and was going to re-cut it with a full band, but then decided the song was already finished the way it was. Released as a single in late 1972, the song became a major hit in the U.S. during the early part of 1973, reaching the number one spot on the R&B chart, number three on the Billboard Pop Singles and eventually selling over two million copies. It was also a hit in the UK as well, peaking at #12. There was a re-release on 7" and 12" in 1979, with a live version as B-side on the 7" European release.

The song has been covered by many artists, including Mike Anthony (1982), Sade (1984, on her debut album Diamond Life), Joan Osborne, Steve Winwood (2003) and Maria Muldaur (2009). In 1990, a "Stand Up For Love" re-recording of the song was done by Thomas. Mike Anthony, an American DJ/producer based in Belgium at the time, recorded his discofied version of the song in early 1982 but while it had reached the Belgian and Dutch charts, he was sued by the owners of the original Timmy Thomas recording for using elements from the original recording. A judge ordered a re-recording of the song with all the original parts removed. This ruling marked one of the first court cases in which the use of original samples in new recordings played a role, as a precursor to the many court cases in the 1990s and 2000s.


...
Wikipedia

...