Английская Википедия:I Wanna Learn a Love Song
Шаблон:Infobox song "I Wanna Learn a Love Song" is a song written and performed by Harry Chapin. The song was included on his 1974 album, Verities & Balderdash. The song is about a guitar teacher who gives guitar lessons to a woman who is falling in love with him.
Background
The song is a true story about how Chapin met his wife Sandra Chapin. The song starts out showing a guitar teacher who only has his guitar to "Keep his belly still". For each lesson, he got a "crisp ten dollar bill". The woman in the song says that she wants to play the guitar and hear her children sing with her. As the song goes on, he tried to teach her some chords, but she only wants to listen to him and his guitar. He can hear her husband In his den, "playing stud poker with the boys". Finally, she met him at the door when the "den was dark" suggesting her husband had left.[1] Toward the end of the song, it is implied that he and the woman had sex.[2] There was a significant change to the first verse when Harry performed live—the album "Greatest Stories Live" Is an example of this, where the second and fourth lines of the first verse are altered to a more "adult" version. Instead of "Lean and lazy/little bit crazy" the live version Is "Crass and Corny/Little bit horny"Шаблон:Citation needed
Cash Box called it an "intriguing short story" that "teaches us a lesson about life and love and it's eminently listenable," saying that it has a "great sing-along chorus and a big production."[3]
Simple Song
Simple Song is an unreleased version of the song. It was removed from the album Sniper and Other Love Songs.. The song itself is very much similar to "I Wanna Learn a Love Song", with some lyrical changes and is sung in a much softer voice. The song was released in a 2004 double album with Sniper and Other Love Songs and Heads & Tales, but only in Europe. It included a total of eight unreleased tracks (one from Heads & Tales and seven from Sniper and Other Love Songs).[4]
Chart performance
Weekly charts
Chart (1974–75) | Peak position |
---|---|
Australia | 75 |
Canada | 36 [5] |
U.S. Billboard Adult Contemporary | 7 [6] |
U.S. Billboard Hot 100 | 44 [6] |
U.S. Cash Box Top 100 | 40 |
Year-End Charts
Chart (1975) | Peak position |
---|---|
U.S. Billboard Hot 100 | 276 [7] |
Other Uses
- Donna Fargo created a version of the song with virtually the same lyrics, but from the woman's point of view.
- José Feliciano covered the song on his 1974 album For My Love…Mother Music that uses the “corny”/“horny” lyric.
References