I Believe in Music | |
Cover: | I_Believe_in_Music_-_Mac_Davis.jpg |
Type: | single |
Artist: | Mac Davis |
Album: | I Believe in Music |
B-Side: | Hollywood Humpty Dumpty |
Released: | October 1970[1] [2] August 31, 1971[3] (re-release) |
Recorded: | 1970 |
Genre: | Pop |
Length: | 3:13 |
Label: | Columbia |
Producer: | The Tokens, Dave Appell |
Prev Title: | Beginning to Feel the Pain |
Prev Year: | 1971 |
Next Title: | Baby Don't Get Hooked on Me |
Next Year: | 1972 |
I Believe in Music | |
Cover: | I_Believe_in_Music_-_Gallery.jpg |
Type: | single |
Artist: | Gallery |
Album: | Nice to Be with You |
B-Side: | Someone |
Released: | August 1972 |
Recorded: | 1971 |
Genre: | Soft rock |
Length: | 2:26 |
Label: | Sussex Records |
Prev Title: | Nice to Be with You |
Prev Year: | 1972 |
Next Title: | Big City Miss Ruth Ann |
Next Year: | 1972 |
"I Believe in Music" is a 1970 song written and recorded by Mac Davis and later included on his second album I Believe in Music.[4] Gallery covered it in 1972 as the second of three singles off their Nice to Be with You album[5] and the follow-up release to their title track.
Gallery's version reached #22 on the US Billboard Hot 100 and #13 on the US Cash Box Top 100. It hit #5 in Canada.[6]
Mac Davis's original had been released as a single nearly two years earlier and made a minor dent in the pop charts (US #117). His effort achieved #25 on the Adult Contemporary chart.[7] It later became his signature song and an iconic anthem of the early '70s.
In a 2017 interview, Davis said the song was inspired while he was in England at the home of Lulu and Maurice Gibb, who were married at that time:[8]
Davis said he kept and framed the piece of paper from the hotel room where he completed the song. According to him, the line "Lift your voices to the sky, God loves you when you sing" was inspired by a piece of folk art he had seen that said, "God respects you when you work, but He loves you when you sing".[9]
Chart (1970) | Peak position |
---|---|
US Billboard Bubbling Under the Hot 100[10] | 117 |
US Billboard Easy Listening[11] | 25 |
Chart (1971) | Peak position |
---|---|
US Billboard Bubbling Under the Hot 100[12] | 111 |
US Billboard Easy Listening[13] | 27 |
Chart (1972) | Peak position | |
---|---|---|
Canadian RPM Top Singles | 5 | |
22 | ||
US Billboard Easy Listening[14] | 12 | |
US Cash Box Top 100[15] | 13 |
Chart (1972) | Rank | |
---|---|---|
US Billboard Top Easy Listening Singles[16] | 47 | |
US Opus | 81 | |
US Joel Whitburn's Pop Annual[17] | 160 |
Helen Reddy's version was the first commercial recording of the song, and it was featured as the B-side of her first American success, "I Don't Know How to Love Him," which became a hit in February 1971.[18] "I Believe in Music" has also been covered by Marian Love (#111, 1971; AC #27), Donny Hathaway, B.J. Thomas, Liza Minnelli, Perry Como, Louis Jordan, Lee Towers, Wayne Newton, Kenny Rogers, Glen Campbell, Lynn Anderson and The Statler Brothers.