For months, the song sat in a drawer. Bacharach himself was hesitant; he worried the lyrics were a bit too simple, maybe even naive, for such a cynical time. But then, they thought of Jackie. She had a voice that sounded like sunlight hitting gravel—sweet, but with enough "grit" to make you believe she’d seen some things. The Session
Create a that shared this same soulful, social vibe. What part of that era or song interests you most?
Break down the of why Bacharach’s melody is so "catchy yet complex."
The "interest" in the story isn't just in the recording, but in its timing. Only a few years later, after the assassinations of Robert F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr., the song was played almost constantly on the radio. It transformed from a catchy Bacharach tune into a cultural sigh of relief.
Hal David and Burt Bacharach, the legendary songwriting duo, had written "What the World Needs Now Is Love" a year earlier. They first offered it to Dionne Warwick. Dionne, usually the perfect vessel for their sophisticated melodies, turned it down. She thought it was "too preachy."
Jackie Deshannon ~ What The World Needs Now Is Love (1965) [ HIGH-QUALITY ]
For months, the song sat in a drawer. Bacharach himself was hesitant; he worried the lyrics were a bit too simple, maybe even naive, for such a cynical time. But then, they thought of Jackie. She had a voice that sounded like sunlight hitting gravel—sweet, but with enough "grit" to make you believe she’d seen some things. The Session
Create a that shared this same soulful, social vibe. What part of that era or song interests you most? Jackie Deshannon ~ What the World Needs Now is Love (1965)
Break down the of why Bacharach’s melody is so "catchy yet complex." For months, the song sat in a drawer
The "interest" in the story isn't just in the recording, but in its timing. Only a few years later, after the assassinations of Robert F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr., the song was played almost constantly on the radio. It transformed from a catchy Bacharach tune into a cultural sigh of relief. She had a voice that sounded like sunlight
Hal David and Burt Bacharach, the legendary songwriting duo, had written "What the World Needs Now Is Love" a year earlier. They first offered it to Dionne Warwick. Dionne, usually the perfect vessel for their sophisticated melodies, turned it down. She thought it was "too preachy."