donnica59 - All By Myself

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donnica59

Sep 09, 2025 10:49am

<ul><li>Carmen explained: "The song started with the solo. </li><li>It started 4 bars at a time. </li><li>Eventually, over a period of 2 months, that entire interlude had been written. </li><li>Then my quest was to put this in the middle of an actual song. </li><li>Then it was a matter of trying to figure out what kind of song and how could I do it. </li><li>I was listening to Rachmaninoff's 2nd piano concerto (written in 1901) and I heard the melody which I used for the verse. </li><li>Then I needed a chorus. </li><li>I went back and listened to a song that I had written in 1973 called 'Let's Pretend' for the Raspberries. </li><li>I just took those notes and took it from there.</li><li> I thought, ''Let's Pretend' was a nice melody.' </li><li>The song didn't go quite as far as I thought it should have. </li><li>I'll go back and steal from myself for this."</li><li>Carmen used the same notes from "Let's Pretend" to open his song "The Way We Used To Be."</li><li>Carmen: "There's not nearly as much fuel in being happy as there is in being miserable. </li><li>Being miserable is a great catalyst for songwriting, for me anyway. I'm constantly amazed at the amount of wonderful work that Mozart did during periods when he was fairly happy. </li><li>His music during those periods reflects the happiness. </li><li>On the other hand, I can't imagine that Rachmaninoff was happy when he was writing the second symphony and second piano concerto.</li><li> I don't think the anguish and angst of those melodies comes out of being peachy keen."</li><li><br></li><li>When he wrote this, Carmen thought the Rachmaninoff music was in the public domain, meaning he could use it free of charge. </li><li>After this song came out, he found out it wasn't and agreed to a settlement with the Rachmaninoff estate.</li><li><br></li><li>Carmen: "If you walked in a record store and saw 'All By Myself' on the record label, you'd know what the song was about, and it's an emotion that everyone has felt at some point in their life. </li><li>Therefore, it's a song that goes immediately to your heart. </li><li>The lyrics are as simple as I could possibly make them. </li><li>Sometimes my melodies are so dramatic that if the lyric is that dramatic, it's overkill."</li><li class="ql-align-center"><br></li><li><br></li><li><br></li><li>O'Neal's version was used again in the third film of the series,&nbsp;<em>Bridget Jones's Baby</em>, in 2016.&nbsp;</li><li><br></li><li>The song was performed by Charice in the April 19, 2011 episode of&nbsp;<em>Glee</em>.</li><li> The actress and singer has an occasional part as talented rival glee club member, Sunshine Corazon. </li><li>The comment was made that it was a tad inappropriate to hear the teenager singing the song's opening lines, "When I was young/ I never needed anyone / And making love was just for fun / Those days are gone"?</li><li>This was used in a&nbsp;<a href="https://www.ispot.tv/ad/IS5X/t-mobile-super-bowl-2019-lyfted-song-by-eric-carmen" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank" style="color: rgb(255, 102, 0);">2019 commercial for T-Mobile</a>&nbsp;that ran during the 2019 Super Bowl. </li><li>In the spot, a guy pours his heart out before realizing he's texting his Lyft driver.</li><li><br></li></ul>