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Itchycoo Park

 
Wikipedia: Itchycoo Park
"Itchycoo Park"
Single by Small Faces
B-side "I'm Only Dreaming"
Released August 4, 1967 (UK)
November 11, 1967 (US)
Format 7"
Recorded Olympic Studios London England 1967
Genre Psychedelic pop
Length 2:45
Label Immediate
Writer(s) Steve Marriott
Ronnie Lane
Producer Glyn Johns
Small Faces singles chronology
"Here Come the Nice"
(1967)
"Itchycoo Park"
(1967)
"Tin Soldier"
(1967)

"Itchycoo Park" is a psychedelic pop song written by Steve Marriott and Ronnie Lane of the group Small Faces. The song reached number three in the UK Singles Chart, 1967.

Contents

Song profile

"Itchycoo Park" was released by mod band The Small Faces in August, 1967. Together with "Lazy Sunday", "Tin Soldier" and "All or Nothing", the song is one of the band's biggest hits and has become a classic of its time.[1]

The song reached number 16 in the American Billboard Hot 100 chart in 1968.[2]

Long running British music magazine NME cites readers poll voting "Itchycoo Park" number 62 out of top 100 singles of all time.[3]

"Itchycoo Park" climbed to the top of the charts again when it was re-released on 13 December 1975.[4]

Inspiration

The song was first thought of by Ronnie Lane, who had been reading a leaflet on the virtues of Oxford which mentioned its dreaming spires.[5]

A number of sources claim the song's name is derived from the nickname of Little Ilford Park, on Church Road in the London suburb of Manor Park, where Small Faces' singer and song-writer Steve Marriott grew up. The "itchycoo" nickname is, in turn, attributed to the stinging nettles which grew there. Other sources cite nearby Wanstead Flats (Manor Park end) as the inspiration for the song.[6]

Photo of Wanstead Flats, London E12 near Marriott's Manor Park home

Marriott and Small Faces manager Tony Calder came up with the well-known story when Marriott was told the BBC had banned the song for its overt drug references, Calder confirms:

"We scammed the story together, we told the BBC that Itchycoo Park was a piece of waste ground in the East End that the band had played on as kids - we put the story out at ten and by lunchtime we were told the ban was off." - Tony Calder (Manager)[7]

Ronnie Lane on the true location of Itchycoo Park:

"It's a place we used to go to in Ilford years ago. Some bloke we know suggested it to us because it's full of nettles and you keep scratching". - Ronnie Lane

[8]

Other possible etymologies

Another local park, in the nearby town of Ilford, called Valentines Park, was also often referred to as Itchycoo Park.

Itchy Park is located in the East End of London and dates back to the Victorian era.[9]

The hairy seeds from the Rose hip (or wild Dog Rose) were called "Itchycoos" by English children in the 1950s[citation needed] The seeds could be broken out of the berry and dropped down someone's collar between shirt and back to cause itching.[10]

Uses and cover versions

Notes

Notes:

  1. ^ "Guide to British Music of the 1960s". Making Time. http://www.makingtime.co.uk/small_faces.html. Retrieved 2007-08-10. 
  2. ^ Hewitt & Rod Stewart, Paulo; Hellier, John. Steve Marriott - All Too Beautiful.... Helter Skelter. p. 160. ISBN 1-900924-44-7. 
  3. ^ "NME Readers all time top 100 singles published 1976". NME. http://www.rocklistmusic.co.uk/nme_readers.htm. Retrieved 2007-08-10. 
  4. ^ "Top 40 Hits of Mid January 1976". everyHit.com. http://everyhit.com/retrocharts/1976-JanuaryB.html. Retrieved 2007-08-10. 
  5. ^ Hewitt, Paulo; Kenney Jones (1995). small faces the young mods' forgotten story. Acid Jazz. p. 99. ISBN 0 9523935 0 6. 
  6. ^ "Small Faces London- Ilford Park". Making Time. http://www.makingtime.co.uk/rfr/london5.htm. Retrieved 2007-08-10. 
  7. ^ Steve Marriott, All Too Beautiful p.154
  8. ^ Hewitt, Paulo; Kenney Jones (1995). small faces the young mods' forgotten story. Acid Jazz. p. 98. ISBN 0 9523935 0 6. 
  9. ^ Itchy Park Retrieved September 16 2008
  10. ^ "Itchy Secrets". www.show.me.uk. http://www.show.me.uk/site/make/20th-Century-Britain/ACT18.html. Retrieved 2007-08-10. 
  11. ^ "Itchycoo Park, soundtrack to Severance film 2006 http://www.calendarlive.com/movies/reviews/cl-et-severance25may25,0,288807.story Retrieved 22/09/07

References:

External links


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