Kenny Loggins and Jim Messina had had a string of hits together in the early 1970s, but one of their first songs as a folk-rock duo remains a standout 55 years later.
Written by Loggins, “Danny’s Song” was a simple acoustic ballad that came with the promise that everything would be all right. “And even though we ain't got money/I'm so in love with you, honey,” Loggins sang, offering a message of hope that still resonates after decades.
Speaking with Rock History Music, Loggins explained the song’s origin. “[‘Danny’s Song’] was a song that I wrote for my brother Danny at the birth of his first son Collin,” he shared. “And I was 17 in high school, and that was one of the first songs, first real songs, that I wrote. And I always knew that that was an important song.”
Featured on Loggins and Messina’s debut album Sittin’ In, “Danny’s Song” wasn’t a chart hit, but it received a lot of airplay and became a fan favorite on soft rock and easy listening radio stations.
“Danny’s Song” caught the ear of Canadian singer Anne Murray. The country-pop singer recorded a hit cover version of the song with crossover appeal. It charted on the easy listening and hit country singles charts and peaked at No. 7 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 in April 1973. Murray’s version of the song also soared to No. 1 in Canada.
Murray once explained that she had been in search of a follow-up to her early ‘70s hit “Snowbird.”
“We had to search around, scrambled, and we found ‘Danny’s Song’ on a Loggins and Messina album,” she recalled to U Discover Music. “And we just said, ‘Let’s record it.’ And, before we knew it, it was getting all kinds of airplay and, so, yeah, that kind of kept things moving for a while.”
Loggins has noted that “Danny’s Song” was much simpler to write “chordally, melodically, musically” than some of his later music. He also revealed that Wingate Music, where he worked as a songwriter early on, owned most of the publishing rights for the songs on the first Loggins and Messina album—but not for “Danny’s Song.”
“I withheld ‘Danny's Song’ from my publishing deal 'cause I knew that was a winner,” Loggins told Classic Bands in an interview. “So I kept the publishing on that.”
Related: 1977 No. 1 Hit Ranked ‘Top Soft Rock Song’ Became the Ultimate Breakup Anthem
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