"Evil Hearted You" is a 1965 song by the English rock group the Yardbirds. It was written by future 10cc member Graham Gouldman, who also wrote the group`s two prior singles, "For Your Love" and "Heart Full of Soul".[1] It reached No. 3 on the main UK singles chart.[2]
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Evil Hearted You
The Yardbirds •
w: Graham Gouldman •
1965 /10 /01
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2:24 |
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2
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Still Im Sad
The Yardbirds •
w: Smith, McCarty •
1965 /10 /01
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2:57 |
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"Evil Hearted You" | ||||
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![]() West German picture sleeve | ||||
Single by the Yardbirds | ||||
A-side | "Still I`m Sad" (double A-side) | |||
Released | 1 October 1965 | |||
Recorded | 26 August 1965 | |||
Studio | Advision Sound, London | |||
Genre | Rock | |||
Length | 2:24 | |||
Label | Columbia | |||
Songwriter(s) | Graham Gouldman | |||
Producer(s) | Giorgio Gomelsky | |||
The Yardbirds UK singles chronology | ||||
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"Evil Hearted You" is a 1965 song by the English rock group the Yardbirds. It was written by future 10cc member Graham Gouldman, who also wrote the group`s two prior singles, "For Your Love" and "Heart Full of Soul".[1] It reached No. 3 on the main UK singles chart.[2]
The Yardbirds recorded the song at Advision Studios, London, on 26 August 1965.[3][a] When it was released 1 October 1965 in the UK, "Evil Hearted You", along with the second side, "Still I`m Sad" became a double A-side hit.[6] The Record Retailer singles chart counted both sides and reported it reached number three.[6] The NME singles chart reported the two songs separately – "Evil Hearted You" at number ten and "Still I`m Sad" at number nine.[6] There was no single release in the US, but the song was included on the Yardbirds` second Epic Records album Having a Rave Up,[7] which was released 15 November 1965.
In her pop music column in Disc Weekly, Penny Valentine thought the decision to release the single as a double A-side was "madness", since "Still I`m Sad" was "super" while "Evil Hearted You" was "so dull".[8]
Among retrospective reviewers, the music critic Cub Koda describes the song as a "minor-key pop classic" and the guitarist Jeff Beck`s solo as "equal parts classical and James Bond soundtrack".[9] The biographer Martin Power writes:
"Evil Hearted You" had a hint of Italian composer Ennio Morricone, with Beck`s contribution taking it to a whole new level of excitement, his clattering, heavily reverbed guitar and shimmering, two-octave slide solo sounding almost ghostly.[10]
In a review for AllMusic, Richie Unterberger calls the song "one of the gloomiest hit singles in all of 1960s British rock" and adds:
[It] throws in all of Gouldman`s mid-`60s bag of tricks: multiple abrupt tempo changes, a haunting Middle Eastern-influenced melody extremely heavy on the minor chords, a lyric abjectly pining for a woman`s love, and adroit integration of several contrasting sections.[1]
"Evil Hearted You" was recorded by the American group the Human Beinz, prior to changing their name.[1] Unterberger describes it as "a faithful version".[1]
American rock band Pixies recorded a version of the song in Spanish. It was released as a B-side on the "Planet of Sound" single.[11]
"Evil Hearted You" is a 1965 song by the English rock group the Yardbirds. It was written by future 10cc member Graham Gouldman, who also wrote the group`s two prior singles, "For Your Love" and "Heart Full of Soul".[1] It reached No. 3 on the main UK singles chart.[2]
The Yardbirds recorded the song at Advision Studios, London, on 26 August 1965.[3][a] When it was released 1 October 1965 in the UK, "Evil Hearted You", along with the second side, "Still I`m Sad" became a double A-side hit.[6] The Record Retailer singles chart counted both sides and reported it reached number three.[6] The NME singles chart reported the two songs separately – "Evil Hearted You" at number ten and "Still I`m Sad" at number nine.[6] There was no single release in the US, but the song was included on the Yardbirds` second Epic Records album Having a Rave Up,[7] which was released 15 November 1965.
In her pop music column in Disc Weekly, Penny Valentine thought the decision to release the single as a double A-side was "madness", since "Still I`m Sad" was "super" while "Evil Hearted You" was "so dull".[8]
Among retrospective reviewers, the music critic Cub Koda describes the song as a "minor-key pop classic" and the guitarist Jeff Beck`s solo as "equal parts classical and James Bond soundtrack".[9] The biographer Martin Power writes:
"Evil Hearted You" had a hint of Italian composer Ennio Morricone, with Beck`s contribution taking it to a whole new level of excitement, his clattering, heavily reverbed guitar and shimmering, two-octave slide solo sounding almost ghostly.[10]
In a review for AllMusic, Richie Unterberger calls the song "one of the gloomiest hit singles in all of 1960s British rock" and adds:
[It] throws in all of Gouldman`s mid-`60s bag of tricks: multiple abrupt tempo changes, a haunting Middle Eastern-influenced melody extremely heavy on the minor chords, a lyric abjectly pining for a woman`s love, and adroit integration of several contrasting sections.[1]
"Evil Hearted You" was recorded by the American group the Human Beinz, prior to changing their name.[1] Unterberger describes it as "a faithful version".[1]
American rock band Pixies recorded a version of the song in Spanish. It was released as a B-side on the "Planet of Sound" single.[11]