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Will This Be the Day

"Will This Be the Day"
Desert Rose Band Will This Be The Day 1991 Single Cover.jpg
Single by The Desert Rose Band
from the album A Dozen Roses – Greatest Hits
B-side "Our Baby's Gone"
Released February 9, 1991
Format 7"
Genre Country, country rock
Length 3:26
Label MCA/Curb
Songwriter(s) Chris Hillman, Steve Hill
Producer(s) Ed Seay, Paul Worley
The Desert Rose Band singles chronology
"Story of Love"
(1990)
"Will This Be the Day"
(1991)
"Come a Little Closer"
(1991)
"Story of Love"
(1990)
"Will This Be the Day"
(1991)
"Come a Little Closer"
(1991)

"Will This Be the Day" is a song written by Chris Hillman and Steve Hill, and recorded by American country rock band The Desert Rose Band. It was released in February 1991 as the first single from the band's first compilation album A Dozen Roses – Greatest Hits.

Beginning the band's commercial decline on both the American and Canadian Country Singles Charts, the single was the band's first single not to make the top 30 on the American Billboard Hot Country Songs Chart and the first to fail to make the top 40 on the Canadian RPM Country Singles Chart. "Will This Be the Day" peaked at number 37 on the American Billboard Hot Country Songs Chart in February for a total of 3 weeks, whilst peaking at number 44 on the Canadian RPM Country Singles Chart in May 1991. In Canada, the single debuted at number 92 in late March and remained in the top 100 for a total of eight weeks.

The song was written by the band's frontman Chris Hillman and frequent collaborator Steve Hill. It was produced by Paul Worley and Ed Seay who had produced all five of the band's albums, except for True Love in late 1991, whilst only Worley produced the band's first album, The Desert Rose Band (1987).

In the 1991 issue of The Journal of Country Music, volumes 14-15, published by the Country Music Foundation, an article on page 29 spoke of Hillman's reaction to the song's radio play performance, stating "On an unusually chilly Southern California morning in March, Hillman fretted over radio's cool response to Desert Rose's "Will This Be the Day"." In the article, Hillman stated, "It's not doing as well as any of the other singles."

The single was released in America and Canada only, by Curb Records (under MCA), on 7" vinyl. Although the 7" vinyl release had no artwork, it was issued in a standard MCA Records coloured sleeve.

The single had the Pages of Life album track "Our Baby’s Gone" as the B-side, which was written by Herb Pedersen.

The main promotion for the single was the song's music video, directed by Gerry Wenner. The video was licensed under MCA Records and produced by ET/VideoLink, a division of Edwards Technology Video, located in Burbank, California.

The video was the only one to be created for a new song on the A Dozen Roses – Greatest Hits album.


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