Dreamboat Annie (song)

"Dreamboat Annie"
Single by Heart
from the album Dreamboat Annie
B-side "Sing Child"
Released December 1976
Format 7" single
Recorded August 1975
Genre Folk rock
Length 2:59 (Single)
Label Mushroom Records
Writer(s) Ann Wilson
Nancy Wilson
Producer(s) Mike Flicker
Heart singles chronology
"Magic Man"
(1976)
"Dreamboat Annie"
(1976)
"Barracuda"
(1977)

"Dreamboat Annie" is a song written and recorded by the rock band Heart. It is the title track from their debut album Dreamboat Annie and was released as its third single in 1976. The song had originally appeared as the B-side to Heart's debut single "Crazy on You" earlier that year.

There are three different versions of the song "Dreamboat Annie" on the Dreamboat Annie album:

Track 2 "Dreamboat Annie (Fantasy Child)" 1:10
Track 5 "Dreamboat Annie" 2:02
Track 10 "Dreamboat Annie (Reprise)" 3:50

The version released on the single was listed on the 45 as 2:59 but was actually around 2:40. It is not included on the album. The single is a variation of Track 5, with the intro to "Crazy On You" grafted onto the beginning of the single. This version remains unreleased on any Heart album. It's assumed this was done to increase the playing time of the single to the more standard 3 minute format.

"Dreamboat Annie" became Heart's third U.S. chart entry, peaking at number forty-two on the Billboard Hot 100. Being markedly softer in sound than the other singles Heart had released previously, the song was also Heart's first entry onto the U.S. Adult Contemporary singles chart, where it reached number seventeen (Heart's highest-charting AC hit until "These Dreams" in 1986).

In 2011 Nancy Wilson recorded a reworked version of the song with American classical guitarist Sharon Isbin for the latter's album Guitar Passions.[1]

In popular culture

The song is featured in Ari Gold's 2008 film Adventures of Power.

The song is featured in season 1 episode 10 (the season finale) of Transparent. A cover opens the episode and plays over a montage. The actual track closes out the show, playing over the credits.

Personnel

Additional musicians

Chart performance

Chart (1976-77) Peak
position
Canadian Singles Chart[2] 53
French Singles Chart 2
U.S. Billboard Hot 100[3] 42
U.S. Billboard Adult Contemporary 17
U.S. Cash Box Top 100[4] 32

References

  1. Sony notice in Classic fm, October 2011
  2. "Results - RPM - Library and Archives Canada". Collectionscanada.gc.ca. Retrieved 2012-02-14.
  3. "Heart - Chart history". Billboard. Retrieved 2016-10-11.
  4. "Cash Box Top 100 1/29/77". 98.130.35.56. 1977-01-29. Retrieved 2016-10-11.

External links


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