Sun Arise

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search
"Sun Arise"
Single by Rolf Harris
B-side "The Big Black Hat"
Released 1960
Format 7" single
Genre Folk/pop
Length 3:03
Label Epic, EMI Columbia
Writer(s) Rolf Harris, Harry Butler
Producer(s) George Martin

"Sun Arise" is the fourth single released by the Australian singer-songwriter Rolf Harris. Released in January 1961 in Australia and October 1962 in the UK, it was Harris' third charting hit in Australia (following "The Big Black Hat" in 1960) and second in the UK (following "Tie Me Kangaroo Down, Sport" also 1960). Unlike many of his early chart hits, "Sun Arise" was not a comedy record, but came within the genre of world music with its didgeridoo-inspired sound.

Production and lyrics

The song was written with fellow Western Australian Harry Butler, a naturalist later known for his television show In the Wild.[1]

After the success of "Tie Me Kangaroo Down" Harris assumed that his future records would be automatically released in the United Kingdom by his label EMI Records. EMI however were not so sure and directed him to George Martin, then known for producing some of the more off the wall records of the time.[2] Martin initially called the recording "very boring" which Harris countered by saying that the Aborigines, who he was trying to imitate would "repeat a phrase over and over again and it would become mesmerising". The song was re-written with slightly more lyrics and recorded using eight double basses to mimic the didgeridoo which Harris could not play at the time.[2] A notable feature of this song is the playing of claves.

The song's lyrical structure is simple with the vast majority of the lines starting simply "Sun Arise". The lyrics of the song came from a story Butler told him about Aboriginal beliefs. Some tribes see the sun as a goddess. Each time she wakes in the morning, her skirts of light gradually cover more and more of the land, bringing back warmth and light to the air.[3] The only explicit reference to anything Australian in the song is the mention of the Kangaroo Paw flower, which is endemic to Western Australia.[4]

Chart performance

The track was Harris' second top ten hit in the UK Singles Chart, peaking at no. 3.[5] It was also his first hit in the United States, at #61 on the Billboard Hot 100. It also reached #61 in his native Australia and #98 on re-release in 1963. Thirty-five years after originally charting in the UK, the song (albeit in a re-recorded version) re-entered the charts in October 1997, reaching no. 26.[6]

"Sun Arise" was included on the album of the same name in 1963. The song's B-side was "Someone's Pinched Me Winkles".

Cover versions

The song was covered by Alice Cooper on their third album, Love it to Death.

Robert Plant and Jimmy Page of Led Zeppelin performed the song live on the Denton television show in 1994, as part of Page & Plant's No Quarter tour.

The Godfathers covered the song as one of their first singles, which was later compiled onto Hit by Hit.

References

  1. Information on the song
  2. 2.0 2.1 Medd, James: "Lessons learnt in the music business by Rolf Harris" from 'The Word Magazine' August 10, 2010
  3. Harris, Rolf: "Can You Tell Me What It Is Yet?" Bantam Press, London, 2001
  4. Song Lyrics
  5. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  6. Harris' UK chart performances

External links