♫ Three Dog Night Week Grand Finale ♫

Well, folks … last day of Three Dog Night Week.  I enjoyed it and I hope you did too … though I know our Brit friends are cheering that it’s over.  I really thought I’d find at least one TDN song they liked, but nope … nary a one!  Anyway, as I’ve done with my last few artist weeks, I’m using this last ‘wrap-up’ day to play a few that I didn’t get to.  Just a short background blurb about each and no lyrics.  So, let’s start off with this one requested by Larry of “just drive will you?”


Never Been To Spain

I had no idea that this was written and initially recorded by Hoyt Axton!  It was originally released on his 1971 LP Joy to the World and later that year performed by Three Dog Night, with Cory Wells on lead vocal.  The lyrics consist of the narrator ruminating about overseas locales that he has never visited, but about which he feels he has some proxy experience, primarily via the music but also due to other presumed highlights found there. He loosely compares his own actual travels to these more worldly spots.

In the final verse, he observes that while he has “never been to heaven”, he has “been to Oklahoma”, where he was told he was born, thus implying a kinship between the two places. Hoyt Axton, who was born in Oklahoma, explained that he originally wrote, “…in Oklahoma, born in a coma….” However, it was considered inappropriate; thus, the lyrics were changed to “not Arizona”.  This one charted at #3 in Canada and #5 in the U.S.


Pieces Of April

Next up is one that was suggested by Keith (musingsofanoldfart).  This one was written and first recorded by Dave Loggins, Kenny Loggins’ second cousin, in 1972 and recorded by Three Dog Night later that year.  Here’s what Loggins (Dave, not Kenny) had to say about the song …

I wrote it at a very special time of my life. Special, because I met the ‘love of my life’ and had recently lost her. By chance, we were together for three consecutive Aprils and then she left me for good. Today, I don’t know where she is or how her life turned out. May is symbolic of the present, April was, and still remains a sweet yesterday. I have never really gotten over ‘April’ and the ‘pieces’ still remain. Those sweet Aprils… It’s my favorite song, too.


An Old Fashioned Love Song

This was written by Paul Williams, an actor in the movies Smokey And The Bandit and The Doors. He was a frequent guest star on TV shows like The Love Boat (he wrote the theme song for that show) and The Tonight Show With Johnny Carson. In the first season of The Muppet Show in 1977, Williams was a guest star, and he performed this song.

Says Williams of the song’s inspiration …

I had a date one night with a young lady named Patti Dahlstrom,” he said. “She was a songwriter. We were going to go out and have dinner. And right before I left for the date I had gotten a phone call that I had a gold record. And I walked into her house, and I said, ‘Well, got a gold record for such-and-such, it just went gold. Kid did it again with another old fashioned love song.’ It just came out of me.  I went, ‘Wait a minute.’ I went over to her piano and I sat down, and it’s the quickest I ever had a song come out of me. And it sounds like it. It’s a really simple song, I wrote it in like 20 minutes. And it was a big hit.

This one charted at #2 in Canada, #4 in the U.S., and also did well in Australia and New Zealand, but still no luck in the UK.


Easy To Be Hard

And this is one of my own favourites by Three Dog Night.  It was written in 1967 by Galt MacDermot, James Rado, and Gerome Ragni for the rock musical Hair, and was covered by Three Dog Night on their 1969 album Suitable for Framing.  I love both the music and the lyrics which reflect on the seemingly heartless and cruel nature of people. It questions how individuals can be indifferent towards the suffering of others and highlights how it is easy for them to be cold and callous.

This one, like the last one, charted at #2 in Canada and #4 in the U.S.


And that officially concludes Three Dog Night Week … I’m sure you guys across the pond are breathing a sigh of relief, but I hope the rest of you enjoyed it!

♫ Joy To The World ♫

I have posted this song twice, most recently in November 2022, but both times I titled it “Jeremiah Was A Bullfrog”.  Yeah, I knew better, and stated so in my intro paragraph, but it’s just how I always think of this song!  Anyway, I figured that for Three Dog Night Week I should at least get the title right.

While Three Dog Night has not been in my top ten list of favourite artists, I find they do have many songs that I like, and this is among my favourites of theirs.

The song was written by Hoyt Axton, a folk singer from Oklahoma.  You may remember him from the movie Gremlins. He also wrote songs that were covered by the likes of Joan Baez, Arlo Guthrie, BJ Thomas, John Denver, Waylon Jennings, Jonathan Edwards, and Anne Murray.  As for Joy to the World … some have tried to give it a religious connotation, but Mr. Axton says differently …

“Jeremiah was an expedient of the time. I had the chorus for three months. I took a drink of wine, leaned on the speaker, and said ‘Jeremiah was a bullfrog.’ It was meaningless. It was a temporary lyric. Before I could rewrite it, they cut it and it was a hit.”

Religious interpretations rarely take into account that Axton was more of a hell-raiser than a student of the Bible: He was a heavy drinker and pot smoker with a passion for fast cars, women and motorcycles. By the time he wrote Joy to the World, he was twice divorced with hundreds of speeding tickets on his record.

Three Dog Night didn’t think much of this song when they recorded it, tacking it on to the album because they needed one more song to complete it. The song ended up being a massive hit and stayed six weeks at #1 on the US Hot 100.  It also hit #1 in Canada and #24 in the UK, which is better than most of Three Dog Night’s songs did across the pond.

And now, ladies and gentlemen, I give you … JEREMIAH!!!

Joy To The World
Three Dog Night

Jeremiah was a bullfrog
Was a good friend of mine
I never understood a single word he said
But I helped him a-drink his wine
And he always had some mighty fine wine
Singin’

Joy to the world
All the boys and girls now
Joy to the fishes in the deep blue sea
Joy to you and me

If I were the king of the world
Tell you what I’d do
I’d throw away the cars and the bars and the war
Make sweet love to you
Sing it now

Joy to the world
All the boys and girls
Joy to the fishes in the deep blue sea
Joy to you and me

You know I love the ladies
Love to have my fun
I’m a high life flyer and a rainbow rider
A straight shootin’ son-of-a-gun
I said a straight shootin’ son-of-a-gun

Joy to the world
All the boys and girls
Joy to the fishes in the deep blue sea
Joy to you and me

Joy to the world
All the boys and girls
Joy to the fishes in the deep blue sea
Joy to you and me

Joy to the world
All the boys and girls
Joy to the world
Joy to you and me

Joy to the world
All the boys and girls now
Joy to the fishes in the deep blue sea
Joy to you and me

Joy to the world
All the boys and girls
Joy to the fishes in the deep blue sea
Joy to you and me

I want to tell you
Joy to the world
All the boys and girls
Joy to the fishes in the deep blue sea
Joy to you and me

Joy to the world
All the boys and girls
Joy to the fishes in the deep blue sea
Joy to you and me

Joy to the world
All the boys and girls

Songwriters: Hoyt Axton
Joy to the World lyrics © Universal Music Publishing Group

♫ Jeremiah Was A Bullfrog … ♫ (Redux)

Now, before you tell me that the title of this song is not what I just said it was, I know that.  The actual title is Joy to the World, but … I did not wish you to glance at it and think, “Aw heck, Filosofa is starting early with the Christmas songs.”  I am not and it is not.  Anyway, a lot of people think that Jeremiah Was a Bullfrog is actually the title of the song.  (Not naming any names here … heh heh)

First off … I am not a huge Three Dog Night fan, but I always liked this song.  Why?  It stirs something, gets the feet stomping and the mouth singing, even if slightly (largely) off-key.  Why am I playing it tonight?  Because it is silly.  Because it is happy.  Because it gets the feet stomping and takes our mind, just for a few minutes, out of its dark hole.  Or maybe just because it mentions wine.

The song was written by Hoyt Axton, a folk singer from Oklahoma.  You may remember him from the movie Gremlins. He also wrote songs that were covered by the likes of Joan Baez, Arlo Guthrie, BJ Thomas, John Denver, Waylon Jennings, Jonathan Edwards, and Anne Murray.  As for Joy to the World … some have tried to give it a religious connotation, but Mr. Axton says differently …

“Jeremiah was an expedient of the time. I had the chorus for three months. I took a drink of wine, leaned on the speaker, and said ‘Jeremiah was a bullfrog.’ It was meaningless. It was a temporary lyric. Before I could rewrite it, they cut it and it was a hit.”

Religious interpretations rarely take into account that Axton was more of a hell-raiser than a student of the Bible: He was a heavy drinker and pot smoker with a passion for fast cars, women and motorcycles. By the time he wrote Joy to the World, he was twice divorced with hundreds of speeding tickets on his record.

Three Dog Night didn’t think much of this song when they recorded it, tacking it on to the album because they needed one more song to complete it. The song ended up being a massive hit and stayed six weeks at #1 on the US Hot 100.

And now, ladies and gentlemen, I give you … JEREMIAH!!!

Joy to the World
Three Dog Night

Jeremiah was a bullfrog
Was a good friend of mine
I never understood a single word he said
But I helped him a-drink his wine
And he always had some mighty fine wine
Singin’

Joy to the world
All the boys and girls now
Joy to the fishes in the deep blue sea
Joy to you and me

If I were the king of the world
Tell you what I’d do
I’d throw away the cars and the bars and the war
Make sweet love to you
Sing it now

Joy to the world
All the boys and girls
Joy to the fishes in the deep blue sea
Joy to you and me

You know I love the ladies
Love to have my fun
I’m a high life flyer and a rainbow rider
A straight shootin’ son-of-a-gun
I said a straight shootin’ son-of-a-gun

Joy to the world
All the boys and girls
Joy to the fishes in the deep blue sea
Joy to you and me

Joy to the world
All the boys and girls
Joy to the fishes in the deep blue sea
Joy to you and me

Joy to the world
All the boys and girls
Joy to the world
Joy to you and me

Joy to the world
All the boys and girls now
Joy to the fishes in the deep blue sea
Joy to you and me

Joy to the world
All the boys and girls
Joy to the fishes in the deep blue sea
Joy to you and me

I want to tell you
Joy to the world
All the boys and girls
Joy to the fishes in the deep blue sea
Joy to you and me

Joy to the world
All the boys and girls
Joy to the fishes in the deep blue sea
Joy to you and me

Joy to the world
All the boys and girls

Songwriters: Hoyt Axton
Joy to the World lyrics © Universal Music Publishing Group

♫ Jeremiah Was A Bullfrog … ♫

Now, before you tell me that the title of this song is not what I just said it was, I know that.  The actual title is Joy to the World, but … I did not wish you to glance at it and think, “Aw heck, Filosofa is starting early with the Christmas songs.”  I am not and it is not.  Anyway, a lot of people think that Jeremiah Was a Bullfrog is actually the title of the song.  (Not naming any names here … heh heh)

First off … I am not a huge Three Dog Night fan, but I always liked this song.  Why?  It stirs something, gets the feet stomping and the mouth singing, even if slightly (largely) off-key.  Why am I playing it tonight?  Because it is silly.  Because it is happy.  Because it gets the feet stomping and takes our mind, just for a few minutes, out of its dark hole.  Or maybe just because it mentions wine.

The song was written by Hoyt Axton, a folk singer from Oklahoma.  You may remember him from the movie Gremlins. He also wrote songs that were covered by the likes of Joan Baez, Arlo Guthrie, BJ Thomas, John Denver, Waylon Jennings, Jonathan Edwards, and Anne Murray.  As for Joy to the World … some have tried to give it a religious connotation, but Mr. Axton says differently …

“Jeremiah was an expedient of the time. I had the chorus for three months. I took a drink of wine, leaned on the speaker, and said ‘Jeremiah was a bullfrog.’ It was meaningless. It was a temporary lyric. Before I could rewrite it, they cut it and it was a hit.”

Religious interpretations rarely take into account that Axton was more of a hell-raiser than a student of the Bible: He was a heavy drinker and pot smoker with a passion for fast cars, women and motorcycles. By the time he wrote Joy to the World, he was twice divorced with hundreds of speeding tickets on his record.

Three Dog Night didn’t think much of this song when they recorded it, tacking it on to the album because they needed one more song to complete it. The song ended up being a massive hit and stayed six weeks at #1 on the US Hot 100.

And now, ladies and gentlemen, I give you … JEREMIAH!!!

Joy to the World
Three Dog Night

Jeremiah was a bullfrog
Was a good friend of mine
I never understood a single word he said
But I helped him a-drink his wine
And he always had some mighty fine wine
Singin’

Joy to the world
All the boys and girls now
Joy to the fishes in the deep blue sea
Joy to you and me

If I were the king of the world
Tell you what I’d do
I’d throw away the cars and the bars and the war
Make sweet love to you
Sing it now

Joy to the world
All the boys and girls
Joy to the fishes in the deep blue sea
Joy to you and me

You know I love the ladies
Love to have my fun
I’m a high life flyer and a rainbow rider
A straight shootin’ son-of-a-gun
I said a straight shootin’ son-of-a-gun

Joy to the world
All the boys and girls
Joy to the fishes in the deep blue sea
Joy to you and me

Joy to the world
All the boys and girls
Joy to the fishes in the deep blue sea
Joy to you and me

Joy to the world
All the boys and girls
Joy to the world
Joy to you and me

Joy to the world
All the boys and girls now
Joy to the fishes in the deep blue sea
Joy to you and me

Joy to the world
All the boys and girls
Joy to the fishes in the deep blue sea
Joy to you and me

I want to tell you
Joy to the world
All the boys and girls
Joy to the fishes in the deep blue sea
Joy to you and me

Joy to the world
All the boys and girls
Joy to the fishes in the deep blue sea
Joy to you and me

Joy to the world
All the boys and girls

Songwriters: Hoyt Axton
Joy to the World lyrics © Universal Music Publishing Group