Sometimes You Wanna Go Where Everybody Knows Your Name Its Alright

1989 single past Gary Portnoy, theme song of the idiot box series "Cheers"

1983 single by Gary Portnoy

"Where Everybody Knows Your Name"
Where Everybody Knows Your Name by Gary Portnoy US vinyl song title side.png

Sleeve for 1 of U.s.a. unmarried releases. The release's other side displays just a greyscale variant of Cheers championship carte.

Single by Gary Portnoy
from the album Music from Cheers
Released 1983
Recorded August 13, 1982
Genre Popular
Length 2:28
Label Applause
Songwriter(s) Gary Portnoy, Judy Hart Angelo
Producer(due south) Gary Portnoy and Judy Hart Angelo
Gary Portnoy singles chronology
"Where Everybody Knows Your Name"
(1983)
""Theme from Punky Brewster (Every Fourth dimension I Turn Around)""
(1984)

"Where Everybody Knows Your Proper name", besides credited equally "Theme from Cheers (Where Everybody Knows Your Proper name)", is the theme song from the television sitcom Cheers, besides as the debut unmarried for Gary Portnoy. The song was written past Portnoy and Judy Hart Angelo, and performed by Portnoy in 1982. Shortly after the premiere of Cheers, Portnoy went dorsum into the studio to record a longer version of the song that fabricated the U.Southward. and British pop charts.

The full-length version was made available on Portnoy'due south 2004 album Keeper. In January 2013, Argentum Records released a five-song EP entitled Cheers: Music from the Boob tube Series which as well includes Portnoy's original demo version, besides every bit several earlier attempts past Portnoy and Angelo at composing the theme.

History [edit]

By 1981, New York songwriter Gary Portnoy had already written songs for Air Supply ("I'll Never Go Enough of You") and Dolly Parton ("Say Goodnight"). One night in the summer of that same year, his friend Judy Hart happened to be seated next to a Broadway producer at dinner. Upon finding out that Hart was working for a music publisher, he asked her if she could recommend someone to compose the score for a new musical he was producing. On a whim, Hart, who had never written a song, approached Portnoy, who had never written for the theater. Together they set out to etch the words and music for the musical named Preppies.[1]

In the spring of 1982, Judy, at present using her total married name of Judy Hart Angelo, sent a tape of Preppies ' opening number "People Like Us" to a friend in California, who so passed information technology on to television producers Glen and Les Charles. Upon hearing information technology they each felt that with a lyric re-write "People Like Us" would be the perfect theme vocal for their upcoming NBC sitcom, Cheers. Upon learning that "People Like The states" was legally bound to the musical Preppies, the Charles Brothers asked Portnoy and Hart Angelo to accept a shot at composing a theme specifically for Cheers. The song that resulted, "My Kind of People", was somewhat of a reworked version of "People Like U.s.a.". Information technology was later on rejected.

Portnoy and Hart Angelo then wrote and submitted two more than potential themes for Cheers. I of them, entitled "Another 24-hour interval", contained a lyric line "There are times when information technology'southward fun to accept the long way domicile" that profoundly appealed to the Charles brothers. But overall, the song missed the mark and was passed over. The fourth song began with a catchy intro followed by uncomplicated alternating chords on a piano. The opening poetry lines, both musically and lyrically, were something of a complaining. The verse then transitioned into a soaring refrain that seemed to capture the essence of why people might want to go to a place like "Thank you"—a identify "Where Everybody Knows Your Name". The two songwriters recorded a simple piano/vocalisation demo of the new song for the Cheers producers. Upon hearing it, the Charles Brothers gave it their stamp of blessing, and once Portnoy and Hart Angelo had complied with a request for a few lyric changes intended to broaden the song's appeal to a more general audience, "Where Everybody Knows Your Name" was officially designated the "Theme from Cheers". The original opening verse,

Singin' the blues when the Red Sox lose,
it'due south a crunch in your life.
On the run 'cause all your girlfriends
wanna be your wife.
And the laundry ticket's in the wash.

was changed to

Makin' your way in the world today
takes everything you've got.
Takin' a pause from all your worries
certain would aid a lot.
Wouldn't you like to get away? [1]

Later on several months of mulling over possible outside singers, the producers eventually asked Gary Portnoy to record the vocal for the opening credits of their new series. (The chorus of the song is six of Portnoy's vocals that he recorded one on top of the other to create the "group sound" of the claw.) It was also decided to maintain the unproblematic feel of the New York demo in the TV version past keeping the number of instruments to a minimum. The finalized version of the Thanks theme song was recorded on August 13, 1982 at Paramount Pictures in Los Angeles, California.[2]

Accolades [edit]

The song received an Emmy Honor nomination in 1983 for Outstanding Achievement in Music and Lyrics.[3] In a 2011 Readers Poll in Rolling Rock mag, "Where Everybody Knows Your Proper noun" was voted the best telly theme of all time. In 2013, the editors of Telly Guide magazine named "Where Everybody Knows Your Name" the greatest TV theme of all time.[four]

Chart history [edit]

Nautical chart (1983–84) Peak
position
United kingdom of great britain and northern ireland Singles (OCC)[5] 58
US Billboard Hot 100[half-dozen] 83
US Adult Gimmicky (Billboard)[7] 28

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b "Gary Portnoy.com". Gary Portnoy.com. Retrieved 2013-08-ten .
  2. ^ Nemetz, Dave (Apr 3, 2013). "How Gary Portnoy Made 'Cheers' the Identify 'Where Everybody Knows Your Name'". yahoo.com. Yahoo! Tv.
  3. ^ "Primetime Emmy Awards: Date: September 18, 1983". IMDb.com. Retrieved 2013-08-10 .
  4. ^ Wagmeister, Elizabeth (Apr 16, 2013). "Supreme Themes: The lx Greatest Title Songs of All Time". TV Guide.
  5. ^ "Official Singles Nautical chart Acme 100". Official Charts Company.
  6. ^ "Gary Portnoy Chart History (Hot 100)". Billboard.
  7. ^ Whitburn, Joel (1993). Superlative Adult Contemporary: 1961–1993. Record Research. p. 190.

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Where_Everybody_Knows_Your_Name

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