February 8, 2011

1964 Purple Snowflakes

.....Marvin Gaye seems to have spent ten years intermittently trying to get a Christmas recording of some kind off the ground. The earliest attempt I could find was a live recording of Cole's "THE CHRISTMAS SONG", but this one is not only an original composition, it's a real gem that the public never heard until years after he died. Take your pick, mono or stereo mixes:
  • 02:53 "PURPLE SNOWFLAKES" (Dave Hamilton, Clarence Paul)
  • performed by Marvin Gaye
  • recorded in 1964 but not contemporarily released; instrumental track used for "PRETTY LITTLE BABY" [Tamla 54117 (US) 6/18/65]
  • original source: VACD CHRISTMAS IN THE CITY Motown Master Series 37463-6326-2 (G) 10/19/93
  • and my source: the same
  • produced by Clarence Paul
.....That was the mono; here's the stereo:
  • 02:54 "PURPLE SNOWFLAKES" (Clarence Paul, Dave Hamilton)
  • performed by Marvin Gaye; background vocals by The Supremes
  • recorded November 5 and 7, 1964 but not contemporarily released; "Track used with different lyrics as Gaye's single PRETTY LITTLE BABY, Tamla 543117, June 1965"[*]
  • original source: VACD A MOTOWN CHRISTMAS 2 Motown/Universal 440 016 364-2 (US) 11/06/01
  • and my source: the same
  • produced by Clarence Paul
.....First of all, the [*] is to note that the catalog number is incorrect in the liner notes that came with the stereo version. I gave the correct number with the mono version. Secondly, I want to identify Clarence Paul as a Motown songwriter and producer and Dave Hamilton as a jazz musician in the Funk Brothers. Although both had careers prior to their time in Motown the song seems to be a Motown original with Gaye being the only artist to record it before using the music as the basis for "PRETTY LITTLE BABY", which was credited to Gaye, Paul and Hamilton. And in an odd coincidence, Clarence Paul soon after produced a Stevie Wonder B-side called "PURPLE RAINDROPS", written by Ted Hull and found on the flip of "UPTIGHT (EVERYTHING'S ALRIGHT)" Tamla 54124 (US) 11/22/65.

.....Not exactly a Christmas song per se, it's one of the many seasonal songs that doesn't mention the holiday but is often remembered alongside carols and standards because it so effectively evokes the time of year. Had it been released three years later at the height of psychedelia it might have been remembered differently due to the lyrics alone. Speaking of lyrics, the numerous online sites that clog every musical term search with offers of free lyrics and mp3's are annoying enough, but those purporting to have the lyrics to this song must have set a record for errors. One site calling itself "Song Meanings" had a mistake on nearly every line of every verse. Since this is one of the few songs from that early soul period with only one known recording, how they managed to be so wrong so often is one of those mysteries that, as Spinal Tap said, "is better left unsolved".

2 comments:

Nurse C said...

Can not find the lyrics to Purple Snowflakes anywhere. Do you know them? Thanks! Interesting blog btw.

pblfsda said...

Thank you, I'm glad you enjoyed it. Not surprisingly, it gets a little busy this time of year. It took me about 15 minutes with a walkman and pause button to write out the lyrics. I then compared them to what's online and HOO-boy are there some mistakes out there. I've long ago concluded that these sites promise the lyrics to every song under the sun to get you to click onto their link. All they're really concerned with is either maximizing pageviews (to sell ads) or downloading software you wouldn't want. They'll throw any combinations of words up there and lately I've found some that don't even bother using any lyrics whatsoever.

Anyway, the people you really want are the publishers, Stone Agate Music (BMI). They're part of Jobete now, but most of the compilations that I own containing "PURPLE SNOWFLAKES" are from the 90's. EMI bought Jobete in 2004. It could all be absorbed by Universal now. I've just tried contacting them online and they don't seem to be an independent entity anymore.

Here's what I heard, with the female backing singers in parentheses.

Softly they flow; where do they go?
(Purple snowflakes)
Cover the ground without a sound
(Gentle snowflakes)
Fall from the sky before your eye
(It's so thrilling)
Blankets of white brighten the night
(Such a feeling)
They seem to say
That our love is here to stay
We'll be cozy and warm until summer flowers bloom

[second verse]
Here in our nest we're surely blessed
(Chestnuts roasting)
Over the heat; gee, ain't life sweet?
(Snifters toasting)
Drifting on air without a care
(Purple snowflakes)
Cover the ground without a sound
(Loving snowflakes)
As sure as snowflakes
Fall from the blue
I will always remember this night here with you

It ends with Gaye singing "Snowflakes, pretty purple snowflakes", repeating and fading.