The track that was chosen to promote both the movie and the album was not "Wind Beneath My Wings", but the song heard in the movie's opening scene and also the opening track on the album: Midler's cover of
The Drifters' 1960s classic "
Under the Boardwalk". That song alluded to the title of the movie and the place where the movie's main characters, rich girl Hillary Whitney (
Barbara Hershey) and child performer Cecilia Carol "CC" Bloom (Midler) first meet. Midler's version of "Under the Boardwalk", released to tie in with the premiere in December 1988, peaked outside the
Billboard Hot 100 chart and passed by mostly unnoticed, although it reached the Top 30 of the ARIA singles chart in Australia. "Wind Beneath My Wings", which had been recorded by several other artists before Midler in the early 1980s, among them
Sheena Easton,
Roger Whittaker,
Gary Morris,
Perry Como,
Gladys Knight & the Pips and
Lou Rawls, was released as the second single in February 1989, following the box office success of the movie. The song instantly became a number-one hit on the US singles chart, reached number 2 on the
Adult Contemporary chart, number 3 in the UK, number 1 in Australia and was a top 10 hit single in many other parts of the world. Midler's recording of the song was later awarded a platinum disc by the
RIAA for sales exceeding one million copies in the US alone. It also won Grammys for Record of the Year and Song of the Year at the
Grammy Awards of 1990, and remains Midler's signature tune to this day. The recording of the song appearing in the film is notably different from the one released on the soundtrack, and the movie also includes an orchestral version over the end credits. The remainder of the soundtrack musically follows C.C. Bloom's rise to fame as an artist, from doing
Cole Porter standards like "I've Still Got My Health" to moderately appreciative audiences in
dive bars, appearing in
burlesque shows singing about the supposed German inventor of the brassiere ("Otto Titsling", a song Midler herself had co-written and which had already appeared on her 1985 album
Mud Will Be Flung Tonight), joining an experimental theater group ("Oh Industry"), to becoming a successful pop star ("I Know You by Heart", a duet with
David Pack, originally recorded by
Dolly Parton and
Smokey Robinson in 1987) with the right to record material of her own choosing (
Randy Newman's "I Think It's Going to Rain Today"). A recurring theme in the movie is
Billy Hill's old swing standard "The Glory of Love", first made famous by
Benny Goodman in the mid-1930s. In
Beaches the song is first reluctantly sung as an upbeat showtune by a very young C.C. Bloom at an audition in the company of her overbearing
stage mother. In the final scene the song is performed as a ballad by the character as an adult, and then in the context of the movie taking on an entirely different meaning. The track "
Baby Mine", originally from
Walt Disney's 1941 movie
Dumbo, was released in two versions with slightly different arrangements; one on the original vinyl album and another on the CD edition. The version of "Oh Industry" on the soundtrack has a fade out ending, whereas the version in the film features an alternate cold ending. The only track on the album not to involve Midler is "The Friendship Theme" from the movie's score, composed by
Georges Delerue in his only work for a
Garry Marshall film. ==Commercial performance==