When I was trying to explain to someone what song I was trying to identify – it turned out to be Soulful Strut by Young-Holt Unlimited – more than one person took my description (soulful, horn-driven) and came to the conclusion the song I was thinking of was Grazing in the Grass.
It was a reasonable guess.
As it happens, I COULD easily recall the instrumental track Grazing in the Grass by South African performer Hugh Masekela, which was #1 for two weeks on the pop charts, and #1 for four weeks on the soul charts in 1968. It is one of the few songs for which “more cowbell” is NOT necessary.
Masekela had been briefly (1964-1966) married to his countrywoman Miriam Makeba, who I familiar with from her performing with folksinger Harry Belafonte, including on an LP my father owned. She had an unlikely hit with Pata Pata (#12 pop, #7 soul) in 1967.
Masekela and Makeba performed together on Paul Simon’s 1987 Graceland tour throughout South Africa. Miriam Makeba died in 2008, but Hugh Masekela is still with us.
Grazing in the Grass, written by Philemon Hou, was also a vocal hit for a Los Angeles group called The Friends of Distinction, made up of Harry Elston, Jessica Cleaves, Barbara Jean Love, and the late Floyd Butler (d. 1990) in 1969, #3 pop, #5 soul. I can dig it. (All chart action referenced was from the U.S. Billboard charts.)
Listen to
Pata Pata – Miriam Makeba HERE or HERE
Grazing in the Grass – Hugh Masekela HERE or HERE
Grazing in the Grass – The Friends of Distinction HERE or HERE
Hugh Masekela also appeared at the Monterey Pop Festival; Eric Burdon reported that Masekela’s music was “black as night.”
Harry Elston, lead singer for the Friends of Distinction, wrote the words to “Grazing in the Grass”; at the time, I thought this was astonishing. Still do, in fact.
And from what I’ve heard, Miriam Makeba was faintly embarrassed by the success of “Pata Pata,” which she considered a throwaway tune.