Who sings the song love hurts

Who sings the song love hurts

  • Nazareth made this song a hit, but it was originally released by the Everly Brothers on their 1960 album A Date With The Everly Brothers. Like their heartbreak hit from 1957, "Bye Bye Love," it was written by Boudleaux Bryant.

    Young love is hot with passion, but it burns you when it's hot. The guy in this song has just made this discovery, which is a revelation of sorts - all those singing the praises of love are fools who will soon be burned, as love is just a lie made to make you blue.

  • The original Everly Brothers version runs 2:23 and is delivered in their distinctive, pleasing harmonies. The Nazareth version is 3:03, with sandpaper vocals by lead singer Dan McCafferty screamed out as if he's falling into the pit of despair. The group is from Scotland and had three UK hits under their belts when they released "Love Hurts" late in 1974. Surprisingly, it tanked, but in April 1975 it became a hit in South Africa, prompting their label, A&M, to release it in America. It took a while, but radio stations in Texas started playing the song, and others around the country gradually followed suit. It reached its peak position of #8 in March 1976. In the UK, the song finally made the chart in 1977, peaking at #77.

    Nazareth's Stateside success was short lived: "Holiday" reached #87 in 1980, and "Love Leads To Madness" went to #105 in 1982, but none of their other songs charted there.

  • The album version runs 3:52, with a guitar solo by Manny Charlton that is not on the 3:03 single.

  • According to Don Everly, the Everly Brothers planned to release this as a single, but industry politics got in the way. The group was managed by Wesley Rose, who was part owner of the publishing company Acuff-Rose. After a string of hits for Cadence Records, they left for Warner Bros. in 1960, continuing their hit parade with "Cathy's Clown" and "So Sad (To Watch Good Love Go Bad)." But Rose wanted them to release singles for which Acuff-Rose owned the publishing, and when the duo recorded covers of "Lucille" and "Temptation" (a song from 1933), he protested, leading to a split and a legal dispute. Rose had another one of his clients, Roy Orbison, record "Love Hurts" and released it as the B-side to his #1 hit "Running Scared" in 1961.

    "Wesley covered us with Roy Orbison, which was outlandishly selfish," Don Everly said in Walk Right Back: The Everly Brothers On Warner Bros. "The arrangement was ours, and it was written for us. We couldn't release it as a single because we didn't know if Acuff-Rose would license it or not because we were in a lawsuit with them. It got that bitter."

  • By the time Nazareth brought this song to life, the Everly Brothers had been split for three years. When they re-formed in 1983, they added the song to their setlists for the first time, starting with their reunion concert at Royal Albert Hall, which was released as a live album. In later years, it sometimes seemed like they were singing it to each other on stage, as their relationship had clearly soured.

  • The Everly Brothers recorded a new version on their 1965 album Rock'n Soul. Other artists to release it include Ray Peterson, Jimmy Webb, and Gram Parsons with Emmylou Harris. Jim Capaldi is the only other artist to chart with the song; he took it to #97 US in December 1975. Dave Stewart of Eurythmics and Amy Lee of Evanescence covered "Love Hurts" as a duet in 2022.

  • Nazareth got their name from the first line of the Band's "The Weight" - "I pulled into Nazareth..."

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Who sings the song love hurts

“Love Hurts” is a song written and composed by the American songwriter Boudleaux Bryant, who was a very prolific and successful songwriter for other artists throughout the 1950s and beyond. Love Hurts was first recorded by the Everly Brothers in July 1960, and was covered by many, many artists before it truly got international fame when Nazareth – a rock band hailing from Dunfermline, Scotland – recorded their version of it in 1974.

The Everly Brothers may have been the first to cover it, but as they never released the song as a single, it was Roy Orbison who first had a hit with it when he took it to the Top 5 of the Australian charts in 1961. A recording of the song by Emmylou Harris and Gram Parsons is also notable, not the least in being the version that inspired Nazareth to do theirs.

Post-Nazareth covers include Jennifer Warnes, Jim Capaldi, Cher, Joan Jett, Rod Stewart and many others.

The Nazareth version is without question the most popular version of the song. The group had three UK hits under their belts when they released Love Hurts late in 1974.

Surprisingly, it tanked, but in April 1975 it became a hit in South Africa, prompting their label, A&M, to release it in America. It took a while, but radio stations in Texas started playing the song, and others around the country gradually followed suit.

It reached its peak position of #8 on the Billboard Hot 100 in April 1976, making Nazareth’s rendition of the song the first and only US hit single of this song.

The track was largely a huge hit in most other markets as well, frequently hitting the top ten (or close to it). It made it all the way to #1 in Canada, the Netherlands, Belgium, South Africa, and Norway.

Who sings the song love hurts

The Norwegian success was particularly spectacular, as it charted for 61 weeks on the official chart, including 14 weeks at #1. What makes that especially impressive is that the singles chart only had ten slots during those years – in other words, it was constantly in the top 10 for all of those 61 weeks! When a list of the most successful singles of all time in Norway was compiled in 2014, it wasn’t a big surprise to see that song coming out on top. We certainly could have done so much worse – #2 was Donkeyboy!

The single even made it full circle back to the UK, finally making the chart in 1977 where it peaked at #77. This may have been lower than elsewhere, but for an old track that had already been released as a single there three years prior, that is probably still above expectations.

Knowing how well Love Hurts did, it is perhaps surprising to learn that it was never meant to go out as a single. It was not even meant to be an album track. The song was attempted during a session where they recorded b-sides for the coming singles from their new album. Without the pressure of needing to come up with a hit or solid album track, unusual things can happen – perhaps even covers of old country-folk tracks?

In an interview with classicbands.com, bassist Pete Aginew reveals that the band had always intended to record the track: “We all loved the song. We often covered songs that we liked that we used to listen to on tape. Every now and then, we’d just go back and try to do something with one of these things. If you could change it and make it yours, we’d do it in the studio and see if we could do something about it. When we did Love Hurts, I believe there were 42 different versions recorded of it. The one we used to listen to was Gram Parsons and Emmylou Harris, off the “Grievous Angel” [1974] album. We used to have that in our van and we loved the song. […] We recorded “Love Hurts” as a b-side and that’s how we saw it. Of course, when I hear it now, it’s probably one of the best rock ballads of all time and definitely the vocal is in the top three.”

The way to make the track their own was to remove it from its country roots and perform it as a slow-burning power ballad. Also, instead of the more wistful vocals found of most versions up till then, Nazareth’s version would have a much more emotional vocal delivery, masterfully delivered by lead vocalist Dan McCafferty.

More than any other version of the song, you truly believe that this singer is hurting. In actual fact, he might have been, albeit physically rather than emotionally. If you take note of the key of the song, it is set much higher than McCafferty’s normal range. He really had to strain to reach the highest notes.

Pete Aginew: ”There’s a story behind that. Dan and I went to this wedding. We were recording down in England and we came up to Scotland to a wedding of a friend of ours. We left the drummer and the guitar player in the studio. They decided they would start the backing tracks of Love Hurts.”

“When we came down the next day, they had recorded it in exactly the same key as Gram Parsons and Emmylou Harris. Of course they sung it in a very low octave – far too low. Dan had no choice but to take it up an octave, and that’s how it ended up being sung in that high key. If we had been in the studio when they did that, it probably would never have been a hit because we would have never have done it in that key!”

The lyrics of the song remained unchanged on all versions up until Nazareth’s recording, where the original line “love is like a stove/it burns you when it’s hot” was changed to “love is like a flame/it burns you when it’s hot.” Perhaps the stove was deemed too domestic and old-fashioned for young teenage heartbreaks of 1975.

I’m young, I know, but even soI know a thing or twoI learned from youI really learned a lot, really learned a lotLove is like a flameIt burns you when it’s hot

Love hurts…… ooh, ooh love hurts