pictured in 1967|upright|alt=A black and white portrait of a man smiling with his arms crossed, staring into the lens of the camera Hartford's recording of "Gentle on my Mind" attracted
Glen Campbell's attention after he heard it on the radio and bought the single. He felt the song is "an essay on life" and was "knocked out" by the scenery it describes. At the time, Campbell worked as a studio musician with
The Wrecking Crew; he rearranged the song and with the band, he recorded a demo at
Capitol Studios. Campbell left the demo tape at the studio for producer
Al De Lory, who made slight production arrangements that
Capitol Records accepted as a master for the single. Campbell's recording of "Gentle on My Mind" was released with "Just Another Man" on the B-side in June 1967. Upon its release,
Billboard predicted the single would reach the
Billboard Hot 100 chart. It peaked at number 30 on the magazine's Hot Country Songs, and at number 62 on the Hot 100. The success of the song, which was originally intended for the country music market, helped Campbell
cross over to the
pop market. After Campbell's success with "
By the Time I Get to Phoenix", "Gentle on My Mind" was re-released in 1968. The new release of the single sold more copies than the original release, peaking at number 44 on ''Billboard's
Hot Country Singles, at number 39 on the Billboard
Hot 100, and at number 8 on the Easy Listening chart. On the RPM'' charts in Canada, it peaked at number 20 on the country chart and at number 60 on the RPM 100. That year, "Gentle on My Mind" won the categories for
Best Country & Western Song,
Best Folk Performance for Hartford's recording; and
Best Country & Western Solo Vocal Performance, Male as well as
Best Country & Western Recording for Campbell's version at the
10th Annual Grammy Awards. By May 1968, an estimated fifty singers had recorded "Gentle on my Mind", while Campbell's recording had sold 600,000 copies. The song was recorded by such singers as
Frank Sinatra (1968),
Dean Martin (1969),
Aretha Franklin (1969), and
Elvis Presley (1969).
Patti Page quickly recorded her late 1967 version which reached number 7 on ''Billboard's'' Easy Listening Chart in 1968, and number 66 on the Hot 100. Aretha Franklin's version was released as the B-side to her single "
I Can't See Myself Leaving You"; her version peaked at number 76 on the Billboard Hot 100 and at number 50 on the
Billboard Hot Rhythm & Blues Singles chart. Dean Martin's version reached number 2 on the
UK Singles chart, number 3 on the
Irish Singles chart, and number 9 on ''Billboard's'' Easy Listening chart. Hartford's producer on the original recording of "Gentle on My Mind", Felton Jarvis, co-produced Presley's album
From Elvis in Memphis (1969) with
Chips Moman. The recording of Hartford's song was the last number of Presley's January 14, 1969, session. Following its second take, Presley experienced
laryngitis and had to temporarily halt the recording. The success of the song drew some opposition to its themes. Columnist and Catholic clergyman
Jerome LeDoux said that the song's "catchy, simple melody combines with nice-sounding, immoral lyrics which no one really pays attention to, and which is therefore passed off as something decent".
Personnel According to the AFM contract sheet. •
Glen Campbell - lead vocals, guitar •
James Burton - guitar •
Douglas Dillard - banjo •
Leon Russell - piano •
Joe Osborn - bass guitar •
Jim Gordon - drums, maracas ==Legacy==