About: Alfie (song)   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : dbkwik:resource/BsGvAXneo6iaKFHC2AsvFQ==, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

Although Burt Bacharach has cited "Alfie" as his personal favorite of his compositions, he and Hal David had not been very interested when approached by Ed Wolpin, who headed the composers' publishers Famous Music, to write a song to serve as a promotional tie-in with the upcoming film Alfie (a release from Paramount Pictures who owned Famous Music). Hal David would attribute the composers' disinterest to the title character's name being pedestrian: "Writing a song about a man called 'Alfie' didn't seem too exciting at the time."

AttributesValues
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Alfie (song)
rdfs:comment
  • Although Burt Bacharach has cited "Alfie" as his personal favorite of his compositions, he and Hal David had not been very interested when approached by Ed Wolpin, who headed the composers' publishers Famous Music, to write a song to serve as a promotional tie-in with the upcoming film Alfie (a release from Paramount Pictures who owned Famous Music). Hal David would attribute the composers' disinterest to the title character's name being pedestrian: "Writing a song about a man called 'Alfie' didn't seem too exciting at the time."
Next Single
  • "Don't Answer Me"
  • "I Feel Something in The Air"
  • "The Windows of the World""
Length
  • 160.0
  • 164.0
  • 170.0
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:jaz/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
B-side
  • "Night Time Is Here"
  • "She's No Better Than Me"
  • "The Beginning of Loneliness"
Label
from Album
Last single
  • "Another Night"
  • "Bang Bang (My Baby Shot Me Down)"
  • "Love's Just a Broken Heart"
Producer
filename
  • Cher - Alfie.ogg
Name
  • Alfie
Genre
This Single
  • "Alfie"
  • "The Beginning of Loneliness"/
  • Alfie"
Title
  • "Alfie"
Pos
  • right
Format
Cover
  • cher_alfie.jpg
Released
  • 1966(xsd:integer)
  • 1967(xsd:integer)
  • January 1966 ; July 1966
Artist
Recorded
  • 1966(xsd:integer)
Writer
abstract
  • Although Burt Bacharach has cited "Alfie" as his personal favorite of his compositions, he and Hal David had not been very interested when approached by Ed Wolpin, who headed the composers' publishers Famous Music, to write a song to serve as a promotional tie-in with the upcoming film Alfie (a release from Paramount Pictures who owned Famous Music). Hal David would attribute the composers' disinterest to the title character's name being pedestrian: "Writing a song about a man called 'Alfie' didn't seem too exciting at the time." The composers agreed to submit an "Alfie" song if they were able to write a worthy candidate so named within a three-week period. When Bacharach, resident in California, was shown a rough cut of the film Alfie the quality of the film's depiction of a Cockney womanizer played by Michael Caine instilled in Bacharach a dedication to writing a complementary song and as Bacharach felt - in his own words - "with 'Alfie' the lyric had to come first because it had to say what that movie was all about" [1] he arranged for David - in Long Island - to receive a script of the film to facilitate writing the lyrics for an "Alfie" song. David utilized one of Michael Caine's lines in the film: "What's it all about", as the opening phrase for the song's lyrics which when completed were set to music by Bacharach.
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