Ear Candy (Helen Reddy album)


Ear Candy is the ninth studio album by Australian-American pop singer Helen Reddy, released on April 25, 1977 by Capitol Records. The album included a modern take on the doo-wop genre, a Cajun number that gave the Melbourne native her first and only appearance on Billboard magazine's Country chart, and a dark self-parody on which Reddy proclaims: "I don't take no shit from nobody". Unprecedented for a Helen Reddy album, half of the songs recorded for Ear Candy were co-written by Reddy herself, including the second single: "The Happy Girls", Reddy's first self-penned A-side single since "I am Woman": however it was the first single: a remake of the 1964 Cilla Black hit "You're My World", which would afford Reddy a final Top 40 hit.

Recording and release history

Ear Candy debuted on the Billboard 200 album chart in the 21 May 1977 issue of Billboard: during its nineteen-week album chart tenure Ear Candy would peak at #75. RPM, the music trade magazine for Canada, would afford Ear Candy an album chart peak of #84. Despite being the parent album of Reddy's Top 20 comeback hit "You're My World", Ear Candy would become the singer's first album since her 1971 eponymous sophomore LP not to receive Gold certification from the RIAA Although Reddy would have five more studio albums released - and also the 1978 Live in London concert album - before retiring as a career recording artist after her 1983 album release Imagination Ear Candy would afford Reddy her final charting album in Billboard. Reddy would be afforded one more charting album in Canada, that being Reddy.
Ear Candy was recorded at Brother Studios in early February 1977 with production by Kim Fowley, assisted by Earle Mankey. Although Reddy's precedent 1976 album Music, Music had been certified gold its second single release "Gladiola" had been Reddy's first Billboard Hot 100 shortfall since her 1971 Hot 100 debut with "I Don't Know How to Love Him". Jeff Wald, then Reddy's husband and manager, would state in 1977: "Helen has enough hits to be established in the public mind...but it still shakes you when you're suddenly not on the charts". Wald therefore had not wanted Reddy's ninth studio album to be "just another Helen Reddy album I let it be known on the street that whoever came to me with the right material, with a hit song, was going to produce Helen Reddy"..."I wanted hit singles and something a little different" ..."I called every publisher in town: listened to 800-900 songs"..."I let a dozen producers walk into this office and play me a song. I called Kim Fowley" - "I've always thought he was bright" - "and let him know I would like to hear from him, what his ideas were": "Of the several producers who played me stuff he was the best prepared...He played me five songs, four of which I liked immediately".
Wald further said of Fowley: "He doesn't read a note of music, he doesn't work a dial in that studio, but he's a catalyst. He worked completely opposite from any way we've worked we've always picked the ten songs before we've gone into the studio, worked on all ten of them down perfect and then recorded them. But it wound up on that five of the songs were written in the studio. Helen has always had a writer's block but this time she wrote or co-wrote five songs. Kim loosened her up in the studio and he let her take chances."
Fowley, then known primarily for his involvement in the Los Angeles proto-punk scene, would explain his surprising assignment of producing Helen Reddy - cited by Fowley as "the queen of housewife rock" - thus: "Jeff wanted us to get together and I simply wanted to have fun", with Fowley likening his producing a Helen Reddy album to "Bloody Sam" Peckinpah directing a movie starring Julie Andrews. However Fowley also stated: "I see Helen Reddy as the great American voice. is easily accepted and digested by large groups of people. I'm not trying to compromise her position but extend it in the same way Simon & Garfunkel went from the 'Sounds of Silence'to 'Mrs Robinson'. It was still Simon & Garfunkel but in a different perspective."
Reddy began promotion of her upcoming album with a performance of the track "One More Night" on The Tonight Show episode broadcast 21 February 1977, with an unspecified advance single release anticipated within the upcoming two weeks: however the track "You're My World" was not issued as a single until 4 April 1977: Reddy would reminisce of the song "You're My World": "I used to sing along with Cilla Black on the radio when they played this song back in the early 1960s. When it was suggested as a track for me to record, I leapt like a trout to the fly." The Ear Candy album itself was released issued 25 April 1977, with its 21 May 1977 Hot 100 debut closely followed on Reddy's performing four songs featured on the album: "Aquarius Miracle", "The Happy Girls", "Midnight Skies" and "You're My World" - on the 6 May 1977 broadcast of The Midnight Special.
"You're My World" debuted on the Billboard Easy Listening Top 50 dated 16 April 1977, to reach a #5 peak within a 21-week chart tenure "You're My World" would return Reddy to the Billboard Hot 100 as of the chart dated 30 April 1977 with a Top 40 comeback effected on the Hot 100 dated 11 June 1977: the single would peak at #18 on Hot 100 charts dated 23-&-30 July 1977 with an overall Top 40 tenure of 12 weeks while an overall Hot 100 tenure of 22 weeks would tie "You're My World" with Reddy's signature #1 hit "I am Woman" as Reddy's longest-lasting Hot 100 entry.
"You're My World" also reached number #13 on the Canadian pop chart. The potential for further international success for Reddy's version of "You're My World" was narrowed by the concurrent release of a remake by UK pop group Guys 'n' Dolls which was a #1 hit in the Netherlands and Flemish Belgium: although the Guys 'n' Dolls version was unsuccessful in the British Isles its release there did cause Capitol UK to make Ear Candy's lead single the track "Long Distance Love" with "You're My World" as B-side, while in the Netherlands Reddy's co-write "Midnight Skies" was the choice for single with neither local release affording Reddy any success. In Reddy's native Australia a remake of "You're My World" had been a #1 hit in January 1975 for Daryl Braithwaite factoring into the Australian release of Reddy's version being unsuccessful.
The second single from Ear Candy: the Reddy co-write "The Happy Girls", began a seven-week Hot 100 tenure with 8 October 1977 chart with an eventual peak of #57, the 8 October 1977 issue of Billboard also inaugurated the eleven-week Easy Listening chart tenure of "The Happy Girls", the Easy Listening peak of which was #14. The single's B-side: "Laissez les Bontemps Rouler", afforded Reddy a unique Hot Country Songs chart appearance with a one-week tenure at #98 reported in the 22 October 1977 issue of Billboard. In November 1977, "The Happy Girls" reached #65 on the Canadian pop chart.
Cash Box magazine afforded "You're My World" a #16 chart peak in Top 100 singles chart dated 6 August 1977 and afforded the track a six-week Top 20 tenure, as opposed to the three weeks over which the track ranked in the Billboard Hot 100. Conversely "The Happy Girls" fared less well on the Cash Box singles chart than in Billboard, the Cash Box peak for "The Happy Girls" being #75 with a four-week tenure.
Reddy had announced in the summer of 1977 that she intended to record her next studio album with Fowley as producer and also that Fowley would helm a Helen Reddy live album with the latter tentatively announced as a recording of Reddy's 8 November 1977 concert at Radio City Music Hall. However the production duties on Reddy's tenth studio album: the 1978 release We'll Sing in the Sunshine, were split between Fowley and veteran easy listening producer Nick De Caro : although De Caro had not previously produced Reddy he had been arranger and conductor on Reddy's 1971 breakout hit "I Don't Know How to Love Him", on her 1975 #1 hit "Angie Baby" and also her final hit to reach the Top Ten of the Billboard Hot 100: "Ain't No Way to Treat a Lady" , "Somewhere in the Night" and "I Can't Hear You No More" . Also Reddy's concert album would be the Live in London - recorded at the London Palladium in May 1978 - with production by Reddy herself collaborating with John Palladino.
On 23 February 2010, Ear Candy was released for the first time on compact disc as one of two albums on one CD, the other album being Reddy's tenth studio album release: We'll Sing in the Sunshine.

Track listing

Side 1
  1. "You're My World" – 2:41
  2. "One More Night" – 3:32
  3. "Long Distance Love" – 2:56
  4. "If It's Magic" – 3:50
  5. "Aquarius Miracle" – 2:36
Side 2
  1. "Laissez les Bontemps Rouler" – 2:28
  2. "The Happy Girls" – 5:02
  3. "Midnight Skies" – 3:32
  4. "Baby, I'm a Star" – 4:03
  5. "Thank You" – 4:00

    Personnel

; Production
  • Helen Reddy – vocals
  • Kim Fowley – producer; arranger and conductor
  • Earle Mankey – producer; recording and mixing engineer; arranger and conductor
  • Chris Darrow – arranger and conductor
  • Rick Henn – arranger and conductor
  • Marc Peters – arranger and conductor
  • Wally Traugott – disc mastering
  • Charles Veal – session contractor
  • Jack Sholman – session contractor
  • Jeff Wald – management
  • Francesco Scavullo – photography
  • Roy Kohara – art direction
; Background vocalists
  • Curt Becher
  • Joe Chemay
  • Laura Creamer
  • Pat Henderson
  • John Joyce
  • Stacey O'Brien
  • Gloria O'Brien
  • Myrna Matthews
  • Brent Nelson
  • Nigel Olsson
  • Helen Reddy
; Musicians
  • Arthur Amabe
  • Dorothy Ashby
  • Alfred Barr
  • Richard Bennett
  • Hal Blaine
  • H. Arthur Brown
  • Dennis Budimir
  • Denyse Buffum
  • David Carr
  • Stella Castellucci
  • Ronald Cooper
  • Chris Darrow
  • Richard Dickler
  • Assa Drori
  • Dave Duke
  • John Ethridge
  • Kim Fowley
  • Winterton Garvey
  • Nathan Gerschman
  • Harris Goldman
  • Gary Grant
  • Bob Henderson
  • Rick Henn
  • Mitch Holder
  • John Hornschuch
  • Jim Hughart
  • Dick Hyde
  • Dennis Karmazyn
  • Louis Kieveman
  • Bernard Leadon
  • Alan Lindgren
  • Leonard Malarsky
  • Earle Mankey
  • Gordon Marron
  • Mike Melvoin
  • Alex Neiman
  • Louis Newkirk
  • John Perez
  • Paul Poliynick
  • Jeff Porcaro
  • Mike Porcaro
  • Francis Reckard
  • Jerome Reisler
  • Emil Richards
  • Doug Rohen
  • Dale Rollice
  • Harry Roth
  • Henry Roth
  • Sheldon Sanov
  • Gene Sipriano
  • Bobby Shew
  • Jack Shulman
  • Marshall Sosson
  • Gloria Strassner
  • Robert Sushel
  • Ernie Tack
  • Dorothy Wade
  • Bill Watrous
  • John Wittenberg
  • album jacket does not indicate instruments used