"Let There Be Love" | |
---|---|
![]() The Dutch release of the single. | |
Single by Bee Gees | |
from the album Idea | |
B-side | "Really and Sincerely" (Netherlands) |
Released | September 1968 (album) 1970 (Netherlands) |
Recorded | 12 June or 21 June 1968 |
Studio | IBC Studios, London |
Genre | Baroque pop |
Length | 3:28 (mono) 3:32 (stereo) |
Label | Polydor (United Kingdom) Atco (United States) |
Songwriter(s) | Barry, Robin & Maurice Gibb |
Producer(s) | Robert Stigwood, Bee Gees |
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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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1968 single by Bee Gees
"Let There Be Love" is a dramatic ballad by the Bee Gees, written by Barry, Robin and Maurice Gibb and released as the opening track on their 1968 album Idea. In 1970, it was issued as a single in the Netherlands, peaking at no. 14 in March during a four-week chart run.[1] In 1968, the group performed (lip-synced) the song on a European TV station, and the clip has been played on 192TV in the Netherlands.[2]
"Let There Be Love" features on the 1973 compilation Best of Bee Gees Vol. 2.
Barry Gibb recalls:
"`Let There Be Love`" was written next to St. Paul`s Cathedral in a penthouse apartment that we rented when we first arrived in England. That song was written in that penthouse `round about midnight. Me and my then-girlfriend, who is my wife now, we`d just fallen in love, and it was that type of mood I was in that night."[3]
The 2006 deluxe remaster has a mono mix of an earlier state of the recording, with different lead vocal sung entirely by Barry and some instrumental differences and faded at 3:34.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1968 single by Bee Gees
"Let There Be Love" is a dramatic ballad by the Bee Gees, written by Barry, Robin and Maurice Gibb and released as the opening track on their 1968 album Idea. In 1970, it was issued as a single in the Netherlands, peaking at no. 14 in March during a four-week chart run.[1] In 1968, the group performed (lip-synced) the song on a European TV station, and the clip has been played on 192TV in the Netherlands.[2]
"Let There Be Love" features on the 1973 compilation Best of Bee Gees Vol. 2.
Barry Gibb recalls:
"`Let There Be Love`" was written next to St. Paul`s Cathedral in a penthouse apartment that we rented when we first arrived in England. That song was written in that penthouse `round about midnight. Me and my then-girlfriend, who is my wife now, we`d just fallen in love, and it was that type of mood I was in that night."[3]
The 2006 deluxe remaster has a mono mix of an earlier state of the recording, with different lead vocal sung entirely by Barry and some instrumental differences and faded at 3:34.