Home | Songs By Year | Songs from 1968


The Windmills of Your Mind

Buy The Windmills of Your Mind now from Amazon

First, read the Wikipedia article. Then, scroll down to see what other TopShelfReviews readers thought about the song. And once you've experienced the song, tell everyone what you thought about it.

Wikipedia article




"'The Windmills of Your Mind'" is a song with music by French composer Michel Legrand and English lyrics written by Americans Alan and Marilyn Bergman. The French lyrics, under the title "", were written by Eddy Marnay.

The song (with the English lyrics) was introduced in the film 'The Thomas Crown Affair' (1968),

and won the Academy Award for Best Original Song. In 2004, "Windmills of Your Mind" was ranked 57 in AFI's 100 Years...100 Songs survey of top songs in American cinema. A cover by Sting was used in the 1999 remake of 'The Thomas Crown Affair'.

Composition/original recording



In the original 1968 film 'The Thomas Crown Affair', the song is heard sung by Noel Harrison during opening credits; and, during the film, in a scene in which the character Thomas Crown flies a glider at the glider airport in Salem, New Hampshire: having edited the rough cut for this scene using the Beatles track "Strawberry Fields Forever", producer/director Norman Jewison commissioned an original song be written for the glider scene which would reference the ambivalent feelings of Thomas Crown as he engages in a favorite pastime while experiencing the tension of preparing to commit a major robbery.

Alan Bergman: "Michel [Legrand] played us [ie. Alan and Marilyn Bergman] seven or eight melodies. We listened to all of them and decided to wait until the next day to choose one. We three decided on the same one, a long baroque melody... The lyric we wrote was stream-of-consciousness. We felt that the song had to be a mind trip of some kind" "The [eventual] title was [originally] a line at the end of a section... When we finished we said: 'What do we call this? It's got to have a title. That line is kind of interesting.' So we restructured the song so that the line appeared again at the end. It came out of the body of the song. I think we were thinking, you know when you try to fall asleep at night and you can't turn your brain off and thoughts and memories tumble."

Noel Harrison recorded the song after Andy Williams passed on it: according to Harrison: "It was recorded live on a huge sound stage at Paramount, with the accompanying film clips running on a giant screen and Michel blowing kisses to the orchestra." Harrison took issue with the couplet "Like a tunnel that you follow to a tunnel of its own / Down a hollow to a cavern where the sun has never shone", singing the word "shone" British-style with a short vowel sound making the rhyme with "own" imperfect. Marilyn Bergman: "We said 'No, it's shone [long vowel sound].' And he said 'No, it's our language!' And we said: 'Yes, but it's our song.' So reluctantly, he sang shone [long vowel sound] and our rhyme was intact." However, Harrison evidently had the last laugh; in the finally released version he sings "shone" with a short vowel. Harrison's version had a US single in the US in July 1968 soon after the premiere of the film and similarly was released in the British Isles at the time of the film's 7 February 1969 premiere in the UK and Ireland.

As a result, it was a current UK release when "The Windmills of Your Mind" received an Academy Award nomination on 24 February 1969: Harrison's single debuted at No. 36 in the UK Top 50 dated 4 March 1969 and had risen to No. 15abetted by performances by Harrison on the 27 March 1969 broadcast of 'Top of the Pops' and also on variety shows hosted by Rolf Harris and Scott Walkerwhen the song won the Academy Award on 14 April 1969, an endorsement which facilitated the Top Ten entry of Harrison's single on the UK chart dated 22 April 1969 with its chart peak of No. 8 effected two weeks later.[http://www.officialcharts.com/search/singles/the%20windmills%20of%20your%20mind/ "The Windmills of Your Mind" Noel Harrison, 3 April 1969], officialcharts.com

"The Windmills of Your Mind" was performed on the Academy Awards ceremony broadcast of 14 April 1969 by Jos Feliciano; Noel Harrison would recall: "I was invited to sing it at the Academy Awards... but I was making a movie in England at the time, and the producer (who didn't like me) refused to let me go." The film which caused the scheduling conflict has been identified as 'Take a Girl Like You' directed by Jonathan Miller.

Dusty Springfield version



Jerry Wexler, president of Atlantic Records, heard "The Windmills of Your Mind" on the soundtrack of 'The Thomas Crown Affair' and championed having Dusty Springfield record the song for her debut Atlantic album 'Dusty in Memphis', overcoming the singer's strong resistance; Springfield's friend and subsequent manager Vicki Wickham would allege: "Dusty always said she hated it because she couldn't identify with the words." During the first sessions for the track at American Sound Studio in Memphis, problems with getting the proper chords down arose, and at Springfield's suggestion the song was arranged so the first three verses were sung in a slower tempo than the original film version.

In April 1969, the third A-side release from 'Dusty in Memphis' was announced as "I Don't Want to Hear It Anymore" with "The Windmills of Your Mind" as the B-side: however, Wexler was prepared to promote "Windmills" as the A-side if it won the Oscar for Best Song, reportedly instructing mailroom clerks at Atlantic Records' New York City headquarters to listen to the Academy Awards broadcast the night of 14 April 1969; hearing "The Windmills" announced as the Best Song winner was the clerks' cue to drive a station wagon loaded with 2500 copies of a double-sided promo single of Springfield's version identified on the label as "Academy Award Winner" to the New York City general post office, where the copies of the single were mailed out to key radio stations across the US. Although its Hot 100 debut was not effected until the 5 May 1969 issue of 'Billboard' and then with a No. 99 ranking, Springfield's "The Windmills" made a rapid ascent to the Top 40 being ranked at No. 40 on the Hot 100 dated 24 May 1969 only to stall over the subsequent three weeks peaking at No. 31 on the Hot 100 dated 14 June 1969 with only one additional week of Hot 100 tenure, being ranked at No. 45 on the 21 June 1969 chart. On the 'Cash Box' chart, the song rose as high as No. 22.[http://98.130.35.56/archives/60s_files/19690614.html Cash Box Top 100 Singles, June 14, 1969]

Local hit parades indicate that Springfield's "Windmills" had Top Ten impact in only select larger markets: Boston, Southern California, and Miami. The track did reach No. 3 on the Easy Listening chart in 'Billboard' a feat matched by Springfield's third subsequent single "Brand New Me" which therefore ties with "The Windmills" as having afforded Springfield her best-ever solo showing on a 'Billboard' chart.Whitburn, Joel (2004). 'The Billboard Book of Top 40 Hits', 8th Edition (Billboard Publications), p. 592.

Jos Feliciano version



"The Windmills of Your Mind" was recorded by Jos Feliciano for his 1969 album '10 to 23', and Feliciano performed the song on the Academy Awards ceremony broadcast of 14 April 1969. The song's original singer, Noel Harrison, would later opine of Feliciano's performance: "A wonderful musician and compelling singer, he made much too free with the beautiful melody in my humble opinion. But that's jazz." It was Feliciano's version of "The Windmills" which became a hit in the Netherlands, reaching No. 11 on the Dutch chart in November 1969. and No. 4 in the Turkish hit parade in April 1970.

Chart history



;Dusty Springfield

;Noel Harrison

;Jimmie Rodgers

;Jose Feliciano

Other versions



In English

* Johnny Mathis Version #1: on his album 'Love Theme from 'Romeo & Juliet' (1969)'Billboard' vol 81 #36 (6 September 1969) p. 20
Version #2: with Toots Thielemans on Thielemans' album 'Chez Toots' (1998)
'Chez Toots' track listing reads "Les Moulins de mon cur (The Windmills of Your Mind)" Mathis sings only the English-language lyrics.

* Eva Mendes recorded for commercial (starring Mendes) for Angel perfume

In French: "Les Moulins de mon cur"

The lyrics for the French-language rendering of "The Windmills of Your Mind" were written by Eddy Marnay and this version, entitled "Les Moulins de mon cur", was first recorded in 1968 by Marcel Amont who had a minor French chart hit (peak No. 49).

In other languages

In 1970 Helena Vondrkov, prior to recording "The Windmills of Your Mind" with its original English lyrics for her album 'Isle of Helena' (1972), recorded the song as rendered in Czech: "Me zstat, me jt", and also Japanese: "Kaze no sasayaki". Introduced on the album 'Ostrov Heleny Vondrkov', "Me zstat, me jt" has become a signature song for Vondrkov: in 2012 when her three CD retrospective '(Nejen) o lsce' was issued, Vondrkov cited "Me zstat, me jt" as "the song on the [anthology] dearest to [her] heart".

"The Windmills of Your Mind" has also been rendered as "Cirkels", in Dutch, released as a single by Herman van Veen (1968), reaching the Top 40 in the Netherlands.

References



Category:1968 songs

Category:Pop standards

Category:Pop ballads

Category:Best Original Song Golden Globe winning songs

Category:Best Original Song Academy Award-winning songs

Category:Songs with music by Michel Legrand

Category:Songs with lyrics by Alan Bergman

Category:Songs with lyrics by Marilyn Bergman

Category:Dusty Springfield songs

Category:Sting (musician) songs

Category:1960s ballads

Category:Reprise Records singles

Category:Atlantic Records singles

Buy The Windmills of Your Mind now from Amazon

<-- Return to songs from 1968



This work is released under CC-BY-SA. Some or all of this content attributed to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=1107489911.