"Evie" is a rock song performed by Australian singer and former frontman of the Easybeats, Stevie Wright. It was written by Harry Vanda and George Young and released as a single in 1974. It has been suggested that it is the first 11-minute song to chart at #1 anywhere in the world.[1]
"Evie" | |
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Single by Stevie Wright | |
from the album Hard Road | |
A-side | "Evie" (part 1) |
B-side | "Evie" (part 2 and 3) |
Released | 1974 |
Recorded | 1973 |
Genre | Hard rock, blues rock (part 1), soft rock (part 2), rock (part 3) |
Length | 11:11 |
Label | Albert |
Songwriter(s) | Harry Vanda, George Young |
Producer(s) | Harry Vanda, George Young |
The song features three parts—Part 1, "Let your hair hang down"; Part 2, "Evie"; and Part 3, "I'm losing you"[2]—and some critics consider it as one of the most perfect rock n' roll songs ever.[3]
Part One (when they meet) is a guitar driven, hard rocking and bluesy, swaggering and swayful song. Part Two (the marriage) is more piano and string based, a much softer emotional ballad style. Part Three (the death of Evie in childbirth) is more of a disco-rock style, being quicker, relatively urgent and guitar driven track with a strong vocal.
In January 2018, as part of Triple M's "Ozzest 100", the 'most Australian' songs of all time, "Evie" was ranked number 17.[4]
In 1973, Vanda & Young returned to Australia from the UK. Stevie Wright had found life difficult since the Easybeats disbanded and had developed a heroin addiction.[5]
"Stevie was still a great performer, still a great singer," George Young says. "So Harry and I got to work to see if we could come up with something that could put him back in the charts."[6]
Vanda and Young signed Stevie Wright and began working on the Hard Road album together.[7]
The song features Malcolm Young of AC/DC on guitar. Young plays the guitar solo in Part One, while the solo in Part Three is played by Harry Vanda.[1]
The song was released in April 1974. The single version was divided across the A and B sides and peaked nationally during July.[7] It remained in the charts for 26 weeks, the biggest Australian single of the year and the only pop song over six minutes to reach No 1.[6]
In June 1974, Stevie Wright performed the song at Sydney Opera House in front of 2,500 people, with over 10,000 having been turned away.[6] For this performance Wright's band included Harry Vanda, George Young and Malcolm Young. This was the first time that Stevie, George and Harry had appeared together post-Easybeats.[7]
On 4 November 1979, Wright took part in the "Concert of the Decade". He performed the song on the steps of the Opera House in front of 100,000 people.[5]
Wright also performed the song during the 2002 Long Way to the Top tour.
Chart (1974) | Peak position |
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Australia (Kent Music Report)[8] | 1 |
Chart (1974) | Position |
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Australia (Kent Music Report)[9] | 1 |
Australian supergroup the Wrights recorded a cover version of the song and released it as a single on 28 February 2005.[10] It debuted at its peak of number two on the Australian ARIA Singles Chart in March 2005 and spent 14 weeks in the top 50.[11] It was certified gold by the ARIA and was Australia's 47th-most-successful song of 2005.[12]
CD single
Chart (2005) | Peak position |
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Australia (ARIA)[13] | 2 |
Chart (2005) | Position |
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Australia (ARIA)[14] | 47 |
Region | Certification | Certified units/sales |
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Australia (ARIA)[15] | Gold | 35,000^ |
^ Shipments figures based on certification alone. |
Suzi Quatro recorded a cover version of part one that appeared on the European version of her album If You Knew Suzi... in 1978.
Pat Travers Band recorded a shortened version for their 1978 album, "Heat in the Street".
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