"Rise"

"Aranjuez (Mon Amor)"

July 20, 1979

March 6, 1979[1]

7:40 (album version)
3:50 (single version)

Andy Armer, Randy Alpert

Herb Alpert, Randy Alpert

Background[edit]

"Rise" was written by Herb Alpert's nephew Randy, in collaboration with Andy Armer. The A&R representative at A&M Records, Chip Cohen, knew Randy Alpert was into funk and disco music. He asked Randy to rework Tijuana Brass hits as funk tracks.[4] Herb Alpert recalls, "I think we started by playing ‘A Taste of Honey’ or ‘Tijuana Taxi'. And it just felt like the wrong approach. I didn’t feel comfortable playing that way."[5]


As Alpert and Armer were working on Cohen's assignment, they decided to write an original song for Herb as well. The result was "Rise". “Rise” was originally recorded as an uptempo dance number, however, while recording the master at A&M studios, the drummer on the session, Steve Schaeffer, strongly suggested that Herb and Randy try slowing the tempo down to 100bpm.[4]


It reached number one on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 in October of that year and remained in the top position for two weeks. Herb Alpert thus became the first artist to reach the top of the Hot 100 with a vocal performance ("This Guy's in Love with You", 1968) as well as an instrumental performance. "Rise" was also successful on other charts, peaking at number four on the R&B chart,[6] number 17 on the disco chart [7] and spending one week atop the adult contemporary chart.[8] The recording also received a Grammy Award for Best Pop Instrumental Performance.[9] Songwriters Armer and Alpert were nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Instrumental Composition.[9]


"Rise" has been frequently requested as a sample by various artists. Randy Alpert declined most of them. When he heard the tape of Notorious B.I.G. rapping over "Rise" he was wildly enthusiastic about it and immediately approved the sample. He later gave Bell Biv DeVoe permission to sample the song, because he was a fan of the group. He declined to let The Sopranos use the song during a scene where someone was being beaten. Alpert also refused to let Pfizer use "Rise" in a campaign for Viagra which would have relied on the double entendre implied by the song's title.[4]


In October 2016 the "Rise Remix EP" was released on the Herb Alpert Presents label. It has seven selections with six remixes as well as the original track.

– trumpet

Herb Alpert

Tim May & – guitars

Chris Pinnick

– bass guitar

Abe Laboriel

– acoustic piano

Mike Lang

Andy Armer – electric piano

Fender Rhodes

– marimba

Julius Wechter

– drums

Steve Schaeffer

& Don Koldon – engineers

Don Hahn

A of "Rise" is the entire musical groove of the 1997 song "Hypnotize", recorded by The Notorious B.I.G. and co-produced by Sean "Puffy" Combs.

sample

sampled "Rise" in their 2016 song "Run". The song's lyrics also quote The Notorious B.I.G.'s "Hypnotize".

Bel Biv DeVoe

"Rise" was recreated in the style of by New York City producer Jonathan Hay and Worcester, Massachusetts artist Atlas Jenkins for the album 'Wish You Were Brooklyn: The Electro Jazz House Invasion Soundtrack (Deluxe)'.[15]

nu jazz

List of Hot 100 number-one singles of 1979 (U.S.)

List of number-one adult contemporary singles of 1979 (U.S.)

Luke Spencer and Laura Webber

The Billboard Book of Top 40 Hits, Billboard Books; 9th Edition, 2010,  978-0823085545

ISBN