Background British singer and songwriter
Rod Stewart's version of "Reason to Believe" appeared as the first single from his 1971 album,
Every Picture Tells a Story, with "
Maggie May" as the B-side. "Reason to Believe" reached No. 62 on the
Billboard Hot 100 on its own before the more popular B-side overtook it on its way to No. 1 on the chart. The Hot 100 listed "Reason To Believe" as the flip side for the remaining 16 weeks of that run. Stewart's double-sided hit, which topped the Hot 100 during all five chart weeks of October 1971, held the Carpenters' "
Superstar" at No. 2 during the third and fourth of those weeks. Stewart's version is noted for its instrumentation, featuring a piano, which is heard playing the slow introduction, before Stewart's voice is heard singing. This is followed by an electric organ, drums, and an acoustic guitar. It also features a solo violin, which is heard during the instrumental break of the bridge. The piano, along with the organ, play the outro. There is a 2 second pause, before Stewart's vocal is heard singing the bridge in a cappella, ("Someone like you"), before the piano enters, followed by the violin, the drums and the guitar, featuring a rhythm change from 2/4 to 3/4 for a few measures, before reverting back to the 2/4 rhythm, with Stewart repeating the bridge before he stops singing, with the instruments carrying on the melody to through the song's fade. The organist was not present during the repeated bridge session. A live version was released in 1993 on the album
Unplugged...and Seated. Released as the second single from the album in August 1993 and entering the Hot 100 on August 14, 1993, twenty-two years to the date when it was last listed as the front side in 1971, it reached No. 19 on the
Billboard Hot 100 and No. 3 on the Canadian
RPM Top Singles chart. The 1993 single includes a live version of "
It's All Over Now", which was recorded during the
MTV Unplugged performance but does not appear on the album. Altogether, the two versions of "Reason to Believe" logged a total of 41 weeks on the Hot 100, just behind the 42 weeks total for "
Have I Told You Lately" for most weeks by a Rod Stewart song.
Charts Weekly charts Original version Live version Year-end charts Live version ==Certifications==