This One's For You

Album: This One's For You (1976)
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • Barry Manilow named his fourth studio album after this love song, which he wrote with his longtime friend and collaborator Marty Panzer. It's about singing his heart out on a song that will never sell just so he can get a message to an old flame he lost track of.

    "I remember the exact moment when Marty read me this lyric. I was hooked from the very first line, 'This one'll never sell.' It wouldn't have mattered if the rest of the lyric had been about a lamb chop, I loved it. When he read me the rest, I couldn't wait to get to the piano because I could hear the melody in my head," the singer recalled in the liner notes to his 1992 compilation, The Complete Collection And Then Some.

    "It's a real beautiful sentiment - one of Marty's most heartfelt. I'm proud to have been able
    to write the music."
  • Manilow had written romantic songs before on his own - one of his early tunes was the aching ballad "Could It Be Magic" - but this was the first proper love song he wrote with Panzer, his "New York City Rhythm" co-writer.

    "The first love song we ever wrote," Panzer noted. "It sounds young and innocent because we were."
  • Aside from peaking in the Top 30 of the Hot 100, this also went to #1 on the Adult Contemporary chart. Most of Manilow's AC hits were written by other songwriters, but a few of them, like this one, were originals.
  • Around the time this reached its peak on the charts, Manilow spoke with The Los Angeles Times about the criticism he faced despite his popularity.

    "Some say I'm too middle-of-the-road, some say I'm too bubblegum, some say I'm trying to replace Perry Como, some say this, some say that," he said. "I'd be a fool to worry about the negative stuff because I'm not going to change what I do. I like it and so do a lot of other people."

    His next single, "Weekend In New England," confirmed his belief: It peaked at #10 on the Hot 100, and #1 on the Adult Contemporary chart.
  • The album was certified Platinum in January 1977 for selling 1 million copies in the US. In 1987, around the time he issued Swing Street, it earned double-Platinum status.
  • R&B singer Teddy Pendergrass recorded this for his 1982 album, also titled This One's For You.

Comments

Be the first to comment...

Editor's Picks

American Hits With Foreign Titles

American Hits With Foreign TitlesSong Writing

What are the biggest US hits with French, Spanish (not "Rico Suave"), Italian, Scottish, Greek, and Japanese titles?

Steve Cropper (Booker T & the MG's, Blues Brothers)

Steve Cropper (Booker T & the MG's, Blues Brothers)Songwriter Interviews

Steve Cropper on the making of "In the Midnight Hour," the chicken-wire scene in The Blues Brothers, and his 2021 album, Fire It Up.

They Might Be Giants

They Might Be GiantsSongwriter Interviews

Who writes a song about a name they found in a phone book? That's just one of the everyday things these guys find to sing about. Anything in their field of vision or general scope of knowledge is fair game. If you cross paths with them, so are you.

Tommy James

Tommy JamesSongwriter Interviews

"Mony Mony," "Crimson and Clover," "Draggin' The Line"... the hits kept coming for Tommy James, and in a plot line fit for a movie, his record company was controlled by the mafia.

Andy McClusky of OMD

Andy McClusky of OMDSongwriter Interviews

Known in America for the hit "If You Leave," OMD is a huge influence on modern electronic music.

Donald Fagen

Donald FagenSongwriter Interviews

Fagen talks about how the Steely Dan songwriting strategy has changed over the years, and explains why you don't hear many covers of their songs.