Captain Of Your Ship
"Captain of Your Ship" is the title of a pop song first recorded by the US girl group Reparata and the Delrons and released as a single in 1968 on the Bell record label. It was written by Kenny Young and Ben Yardley.
The song is unusual in its atmospheric use of sound effects (foghorn, ship's bell, Morse code) and features psychedelic instrumentation and treatments including electric sitar, backwards piano, filtered vocals and phasing. Lead singer Mary O'Leary told Mojo magazine in May 2008, "I thought it was horrible — the foghorn, the way they had changed my voice with effects. But I grew to like it, and it afforded the opportunity to go over to London ... In America, it fizzled. People in England liked quirkier stuff, and 'Captain of Your Ship' was quirky."
To be precise, although the song only made #127 in the U.S. national charts, it became the group's biggest hit when it made #13 in the UK Singles Chart, and the group toured the United Kingdom, with the backing group Clouds.
Young said of this period: "I accompanied them to Top of the Pops......attended the reception for their hit single 'Captain of Your Ship', along with John Lennon and Ringo at the Revolution Club in London. I met half the Beatles at our own reception..."
Some sources credit Lorraine Mazzola with the lead vocal on the recording of "Captain of Your Ship", but a filmed live performance from German television, widely available on video sharing websites, shows Mary Aiese singing lead. This filmed performance, with an introduction in German by Dave Lee Travis, appears to be the only existing archive television footage of the group.
The single was re-released in the UK on Bell Records in 1972, but it did not chart.
"Captain of Your Ship" was re-released as a B-side in the UK in January 1985 on the Old Gold label as OG 9504, with the A-side, "Keep On", by Bruce Channel.
Read more about Captain Of Your Ship: Cover Versions and Other Uses of The Song
Famous quotes containing the words captain and/or ship:
“Fear has nothing to do with cowardice. A fellow is only yellow when he lets his fear make him quit.”
—Jerome Cady, U.S. screenwriter, and Lewis Milestone. Captain Ross (Dana Andrews)
“I do not know if you remember the tale of the girl who saves the ship under mutiny by sitting on the powder barrel with her lighted torch ... and all the time knowing that it is empty? This has seemed to me a charming image of the women of my time. There they were, keeping the world in order ... by sitting on the mystery of life, and knowing themselves that there was no mystery.”
—Isak Dinesen [Karen Blixen] (18851962)