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Soul Music

I Only Have Eyes for You

Soul Music

BBC

Personal Journals, Music Commentary, Society & Culture, Music

4.7772 Ratings

🗓️ 10 June 2023

⏱️ 29 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

When I Only Have Eyes For You first emerged in 1934 it was a jaunty ditty written by Harry Dubin and Al Warren for the movie "Dames". But it gained huge popularity when the 1950s doo wop group The Flamingos under the musical arrangement of Terry Johnson transformed it into a dreamy otherworldly love song. Terry explains how he went about turning the song into an evergreen hit that has been covered by many including Art Garfunkel and Carly Simon. Musicologist Luis Cruz attributes the genius of the song to its pedal chord - the repeated use of the C note. It adds to the feeling of fixation he says where the singer cannot see anyone else but the object of his affection. The song is obviously one that speaks of deep love and Vivian Fransen was one of many who chose the song to play at her wedding. She'd been introduced to the Art Garfunkel version in 1975 when she met the man who was to become her husband. 12 years later he revealed a secret he'd been keeping from her which ended their marriage and caused her to reassess the song's meaning. Jess Farr Cox would sing the song to her aged rescue dog Pico as his health deteriorated. Only that song and the theme to Antiques Roadshow would send him to sleep when he was in pain and distress and she still gets emotional when she hears it over a year after he was eventually put to sleep. People underestimate the love you get from a rescue dog, she says. Chris Deerin is a political journalist and part of Scottish band Fat Cops. He recorded a version of I Only Have Eyes For You for the Tiny Changes Young People's Mental Health Charity founded following the death of the singer Scott Hutchison in 2018. Chris says he and fellow musician Bobby Bluebell had always loved the song and felt it was a fitting tribute to fellow musician Scott.

Producer: Maggie Ayre

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

I'm Mariana Spring, the BBC's social media investigations correspondent.

0:06.0

In my podcast, I've been investigating what happened to the daughter of a conspiracy theorist who died having rejected chemotherapy.

0:13.0

It would mean the world to me if I could make it that she wasn't just another in the long line of people that die in this way.

0:19.0

How does this reflect the rise of health conspiracy theories on social media and beyond?

0:24.8

The new series of Mariana in Conspiracy Land.

0:27.9

Listen on BBC Sounds.

0:31.1

BBC Sounds, music, radio, podcasts.

0:35.0

I know people and couples, you'll have your song.

0:39.0

I have a song with my dog.

0:42.0

And I associate it really strongly with him.

0:49.9

I can't see anyone but you.

0:55.5

For people who don't have kids particularly,

0:57.7

I think often it's difficult to understand

1:00.1

the relationship that you have with a rescue dog,

1:03.0

where you are the only person in its life,

1:05.8

or you're the first person in its life anyway,

1:07.3

to treat it well.

1:09.0

The bond that you have with them is extraordinary.

1:13.0

Are the stars out tonight?

1:21.6

I don't know if there's cloudy are bright.

1:42.3

I only all right. My name is Jess Varkox. I'm a lecturer in the Department of English at the University of Bristol, and I've been a singer for 25 years.

1:49.5

My dog was a miniature Jack Russell, so very, very tiny, only six kilos.

...

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