Spring Rain (Bebu Silvetti song)
"Lluvia de primavera", released in America as "Spring Rain", is an instrumental composition by Bebu Silvetti.[1]
""Lluvia de primavera" "Spring Rain"" | |
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Single by Bebu Silvetti | |
B-side | "Travel Check" (original release) "Sortilegio" (1977 Spanish re-release) |
Released | 1975 |
Recorded | 1975 |
Length | 3:08 (Original Version) (Mix used for the album "World Without Words" and the original 1975 single release)
5:56 (Tom Moulton mix) (Mix used in the album "Spring Rain" and the 1976 Maxi-Single released by Salsoul Records) 2:58 (Short version of the Tom Moulton mix) (Mix used in the 1977 re-release of the single) |
Label | Hispavox (Spain) |
Composer(s) | Bebu Silvetti |
Released in 1975 the Single did not receive airplay and chart in the USA until January 1977 when, driven by popularity in discos, it peaked at #39 the week of March 19, 1977,[2] joining the list of 1970s one-hit wonders in the United States. The single charted in South Africa in June 1977 at #4. The album version is longer than the original 1975 single version, which covered only the Hispavox A-side, with "Travel Check" on the B-side. In March 1977 Polydor Germany issued the album version split over 2 x 7" sides for discotheque use as "Spring Rain Part I / Part II".
The single has been reissued on many compilations, such as Salsoul Jam 2000, and sampled on songs including Shangri-La (Denki Groove song), and Helter Stupid.
TV themes
The tune was used as the theme of The Love Experts, the 1978 pilot of Mind Readers (hosted by Geoff Edwards at the time), the 1984 pilot of Jackpot! (hosted by Nipsey Russell at the time) and The Big Spin.
References
- Billboard - 29 Dec 2001 - Page 15 " listeners worldwide may remember Silvetti as the pianist/author of "Spring Rain," a pop instrumental hit in the late 70s written ..."
- The Hot 100, Week of March 19, 1977 – Billboard. Retrieved May 18, 2020