"Ride a White Swan" is a song by the British glam rock act T. Rex which became their first hit single in 1970, and is regarded as the birth of glam rock. Like all of the band's songs, it was written by the group's singer, guitarist and founder Marc Bolan.
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- "Is It Love?" + "Summertime Blues"
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- "Is It Love?" + "Summertime Blues"
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- "Ride a White Swan" is a song by the British glam rock act T. Rex which became their first hit single in 1970, and is regarded as the birth of glam rock. Like all of the band's songs, it was written by the group's singer, guitarist and founder Marc Bolan. Less than a year earlier, Bolan had decided to make the transition from basing his band's sound around an acoustic guitar to an electric one, having previously released a number of albums and singles with this style of music to limited appeal, and replaced wayward percussionist Steve Peregrine Took with Mickey Finn. Shortly thereafter, he shortened the group's name from Tyrannosaurus Rex to the more manageable T. Rex. "Ride a White Swan", a simple four-stanza lyric with the second repeated as the fourth, was written in west London home Bolan shared with his wife June. He immediately rang producer Tony Visconti to organise a studio session, and the song, which was brimming with mythological references, was recorded on July 1, 1970. It was little more than two minutes long and contained four layered guitar tracks, with Bolan also playing bass. It included a small string section but no drums. The song was released as a single on October 24. T. Rex had appeared in the lower reaches of the UK Top 40 on two previous occasions, but were little-known among music fans. The progress of "Ride a White Swan" was slow but steady; it entered the Top 40 on October 31 but it wasn't until 11 weeks later — on January 23, 1971 — that it reached a peak position of #2. It was ultimately a novelty record by Dad's Army actor Clive Dunn — "Grandad" — which stopped "Ride a White Swan" from completing its climb to the top. The climb was made all the more remarkable by the song dropping a whole six places out of the Top 10 in the week leading up to Christmas 1970, only to find a second wind in the New Year. The song reached #48 in Canada in February 1971. Bolan performed the song twice on Top of the Pops with Mickey Finn miming bass, performances which were a major contribution to the single's success. For one performance 6 years after its first release, on ITV's Supersonic in 1976, he was memorably standing in a large swan model and the corkscrew hair was gone. Also unusual was that he wasn't holding a guitar. "Ride a White Swan" made Bolan a star and boosted T. Rex's fame and reputation, and the follow-up single "Hot Love" went to No. 1 for six weeks as the phenomenon of glam rock took hold. At this point Bolan introduced bassist Steve Currie and, prior to the next single and a major tour, recruited drummer Bill Legend to complete the line-up which remains the representation of T. Rex's halcyon era. The band would ultimately enjoy four No. 1 singles and four No. 2 singles in the UK by the end of 1972. When Bolan died in a car crash in 1977, a mourner paid tribute to Bolan by laying a large swan made of flowers among the floral tributes on display at Golders Green Crematorium in North London, where his funeral was held. In September 2002, the Official Marc Bolan Fan Club placed a second plaque dedicated to Bolan's memory at Golders Green Crematorium. The inscription on the stone, which also bears his image, reads '25 years on - his light of love still shines brightly'. Beneath the plaque is an appropriately placed ceramic, white swan. "Ride a White Swan" has been covered by numerous acts, with perhaps a reggae-like version by supermodel Naomi Campbell during her brief attempt at a recording career being the most infamous and maligned. The song is one of many T. Rex tracks which feature in the film Billy Elliot.
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- "Ride a White Swan" is a song by the British glam rock act T. Rex which became their first hit single in 1970, and is regarded as the birth of glam rock. Like all of the band's songs, it was written by the group's singer, guitarist and founder Marc Bolan.
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