Try a Little Tenderness

Try a Little Tenderness

Otis Redding

Written by

James Campbell, Reginald Connelly, Harry Woods

Key:Bb major
Duration:3:19

Listen to the Song

Summary

Originally written in 1932 by Harry Woods, Jimmy Campbell, and Reg Connelly, 'Try a Little Tenderness' was reborn in 1966 when Otis Redding and the Stax house band reimagined it as a slow-burn soul anthem. The recording's legendary three-act structure — tender crooning, building tension, and explosive release — became a blueprint for dynamic soul performance and one of the most celebrated vocal recordings of the 1960s.

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Musical Analysis

The harmony of 'Try a Little Tenderness' serves the song's legendary dynamic architecture rather than pursuing complexity for its own sake. The opening diatonic progression (I-vi-IV-V) is deliberately simple and familiar, rooting the listener in warmth and ten…

Chords

verse:Bb - Gm7 - Eb - F7
chorus:Bb - Db - Gb - F

History

The song was originally composed in 1932 by Harry M. Woods (music) with lyrics by Jimmy Campbell and Reg Connelly, two British songwriters from the Tin Pan Alley era. It was first recorded on December 8, 1932, by the Ray Noble Orchestra with vocals by Val Rosi…

“Isaac Hayes, who would later become a solo star with 'Shaft', worked on the arrangement that gave the song its iconic dynamic arc”

Full Musical Analysis

The harmony of 'Try a Little Tenderness' serves the song's legendary dynamic architecture rather than pursuing complexity for its own sake. The opening diatonic progression (I-vi-IV-V) is deliberately simple and familiar, rooting the listener in warmth and tenderness. As intensity builds, borrowed chords from the parallel minor inject harmonic color and emotional urgency. The climactic outro reduces to a primal I-V vamp, letting rhythm, horns, and Redding's increasingly ecstatic vocal delivery carry the energy. The jazz influence shows in the sophisticated chord voicings and the arrangement's horn-section writing, while the blues influence permeates the vocal phrasing and the emotional directness of the harmonic language.

The song was originally composed in 1932 by Harry M. Woods (music) with lyrics by Jimmy Campbell and Reg Connelly, two British songwriters from the Tin Pan Alley era. It was first recorded on December 8, 1932, by the Ray Noble Orchestra with vocals by Val Rosing. The song became a popular standard through the 1930s-1960s, recorded by Ted Lewis, Ruth Etting, Bing Crosby (1933), and Frank Sinatra (1946 and 1960). Otis Redding's 1966 version completely reimagined the song, transforming it from a gentle ballad into a soul tour de force with a revolutionary three-part dynamic structure.

Originally written in 1932 by Harry Woods, Jimmy Campbell, and Reg Connelly, 'Try a Little Tenderness' was reborn in 1966 when Otis Redding and the Stax house band reimagined it as a slow-burn soul anthem. The recording's legendary three-act structure — tender crooning, building tension, and explosive release — became a blueprint for dynamic soul performance and one of the most celebrated vocal recordings of the 1960s.

Deep Analysis Available

Detailed analysis of this section is not yet available for this song.

Song DNA

Genre

R&B

Era

60s

Mood

Uplifting

Tempo

Slow

Key

Major

Texture

Full Band

Sound

Vocal-focused

Feel

Groovy

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Listen & Learn

Statistics

3.0M

Plays

599K

Listeners

242K

Genius Views

5

Annotations

100%

Popularity

3:19

Duration

4/4

Time

Credits

Written by

James CampbellReginald ConnellyHarry Woods

Produced by

Jim Stewart

Compilations

  • It’s Not Just Sentimental1992
  • Il Disco del Mese: Le grandi voci della musica nera1995
  • It's Not Just Sentimental2000