Home » The band that just walked away Renee (Part I: the song)

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The band that just walked away Renee (Part I: the song) — 34 Comments

  1. Oh my, oh sigh. oh goodbye,….

    Lord how I loved and still loved that haunting song.

  2. Yes, yes. I don’t remember it quite as you remember it. I listened to the oldies on the radio, despising most of the music of the 70’s… at the time, if to a degree even now.

    I collected some, just as I collect favored words, thoughts, and ideas. This song was among them. Albeit, I heard it at a time when the fullness of romance was unknown, if sex already was. A strange school, this thing called life.

  3. great song, it has a *classical * bent to it
    It seems like the musical prodigies usually come from
    musically oriented families, which affirms that it takes a generation or 2 to produce a winner !
    Sadly, I guess Cher is the exception !

  4. I hadn’t thought of that in a long time but what a great song. It points up how songwriting is really the crux of pop music. Unlike playing an instrument and to a lesser extent singing, where once you achieve a level of ability you can maintain it most of your life, songwriting is like catching lightning in a bottle and there are many who wrote one or two great songs but could never repeat it. Only a few (e. g. Beatles, Bob Dylan) have been able to build up a large catalog of memorable songs.

    Even in the Tin Pan Alley days, when there were supposedly dozens of songwriters churning out pop hits in Manhattan rabbit hutches, a large proportion of the enduring songs were written by a comparatively small cohort – Gershwin, Cole Porter, Richard Rogers, Jerome Kern and a few others.

  5. Oh no, this is the first I’ve heard about the passing of Chuck Bedarik. He is a special favorite of mine because I have significant family ties to the University of Pennsylvania where “Concrete Charlie” played college ball; he is probably the last NFL player of significance to come from Penn.

    There have been some supposed “two-way” players in recent years but nearly all of them (e. g. Deion Sanders) have played wide receiver and defensive back, where you see rugged contact on only a small handful of plays per game. In the 1960 NFL chamionship game – the last NFL championship won by the Philadelphia Eagles – Bednarik played 58 minutes at *center* and *middle linebacker*. In other words on almost every single play of the game he was either receiving major punishment or dishing it out, usually the latter. He is also known for laying a devastating hit on Frank Gifford that caused Gifford to miss an entire season. RIP, Chuck.

  6. Not the 70s, the 60s. 67 at the latest. There was a lot of experimentation back then. Even the Rolling Stones did such classically-tinged songs as “Ruby Tuesday,” “She’s Like a Rainbow,” and “The Lantern.” Songs which were a product of the studio and hard to replicate on tour.

    Those were the days when the Kinks (and Stones)often used pianist Nicky Hopkins, and the band Love featured a harpsichord in almost every song.

    Before things got so lead guitar-based and blues-heavy, no matter the great songs generated when young white guys played the blues.

  7. I admire musical people, it really is in their blood, happily for the rest of us.
    great bio on chuck FOAF, he served in the war too
    found himself in a dire situation & promised a daily rosary
    if he was spared, a man of his promise !

  8. Also wanted to register my “thanks”.
    A young kid at that time, this was one of many regular songs played at the weekend parties in a friend’s basement. Pool table, great sound system, several comfortable chairs.
    Nehru shirt, Beatles hairstyle, and a girl one year my senior, in tow. Holy smokes, it simply did not get any better than that. And so short lived. Only one thing ensured a lasting memory; songs like this one

  9. Michael Brown went on to brief fame as a singer for Stories, the band that gave us “Brother Louie.”

  10. My first post at this site was when neo put up a thread on “walking songs”. I suggested Walk Away Renee and no doubt had profound insights into the song.

    That thread made me realize that neo had to be read. The bonus was agreeing with and being edified by all the other stuff.

    The Muses are a reality; something to do with how our brains / souls are communications devices.

    The Muse for “Renee” conveyed the sense of infinity found in all good songs.

  11. I associate some songs with particular moments and locations, I just do. Sometimes I can put myself back in that moment and look around. This is one of those songs. 1966 or 67, driving in the evening. Good memories, those. Thanks for the reminder, Neo.

  12. Walk Away Renee is a wonderful song and reminds me of the beautiful ballads of the zombies. Great 60s and early 70s music. Ah to be so young again.

  13. Look throught any window is my cell ring tone. Greatest guitar chord opening ever… better than the Searchers who were better than the Beatles.

  14. This song didn’t really sink in on me at the time it was popular, maybe because I was more into folk than pop at the time. It was on the radio and I liked it, but I don’t remember going out of my way to hear more of the band. It was only eight or ten years later, in the ’70s, hearing it as an “oldie”, that I really grasped how magical it is. I then went to some trouble to find the 45. Which now that I think about it was kind of odd–how did one find 45s that were not current hits? But I did.

    Anyway, it is truly one of the masterpieces of that period in pop music. A shame the group never realized the potential it suggested.

    And oh how well I remember that feeling.

  15. The Left Banke were pioneers at what was then being thought of as “baroque rock”.

    “Walk Away Renee” was and is a terrific tune. The Left Banke narrowly avoided being one-hit wonders, though, because the follow-up to “Walk Away Renee” — “Pretty Ballerina” — charted as well.

    Give a listen, if you will, to “Pretty Ballerina” . . .

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8rzeGqqethE

    (At the opening of the video there is pictured The Left Banke’s big LP; I bought it back then and I still have it.)

  16. Ah, the Hollies. Bus Stop and Look Through Any Window both written by Graham Gouldman, another great unheralded songwriter. He wound up in several other bands, Godley and Creme and 10CC.

  17. Molly, thank you for alerting me to Bednarik’s passing. So far I have heard surprisingly little on it.

  18. Pretty Ballerina was – is – one of my very favorites. Michael will not be forgotten.

    One small correction, though: Walk Away Renee is not written in a minor key. It just sounds that way because of the mournful violins.

  19. CapnRusty,
    Do the young today eben know what a love song is? What is really different is that guys weren’t afraid to express their vulnerability. You have to be open to heartbreak to really understand love.

  20. Let’s not forget another Left Banke song: She May Call You Up Tonight. A gem. Covered by Richard Thompson as part of his “1000 Years of Popular Music” bit.

  21. “She May Call You Up Tonight” is a track on the LP by The Left Banke, that I referenced in my March 22nd, 2015, 1:00 am comment. Yes, a gem.

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  23. I doubt they saw any money at all. Record companies are notorious for not paying royalties. I think only the most established bands saw royalty money, but even The Stones got cheated by Allen Klien. Money was made by touring, as it is today, but The Yardbirds toured America in 1966, played sold out gigs, and each member got 128£ at the end of the tour for 6 weeks of work.

  24. Pingback:The band that just walked away, Renee | M.C. Tuggle, Writer

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