Song of the Day 2/27: Albert Hammond, “It Never Rains in Southern California”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment, National by on February 27, 2023

The weather in the USA has been weird lately — 50-degree temperature swings, February tornadoes and snow in Southern California. Maybe the lyrics of this song need an update — it never rains, but it snows.

Albert Hammond OBE moved from London to Los Angeles in 1970 as a singer-songwriter. By the time he released this single and his debut album in 1972, he’d been in town long enough to understand that the near-eternal sunshine dried up a lot of dreams.

Hammond scored his only US hit as a performer with this 1972 soft-rock classic, which made it to No. 5. But he’s had a much more successful career as a composer, co-writing a number of hits for other artists: “The Air That I Breathe” for the Hollies, “When I Need You” for Leo Sayer, “To All the Girls I’ve Loved Before” for Julio Iglesias, even “Don’t Turn Around” for Ace of Base. He’s also the father of Albert Hammond Jr., guitarist for the Strokes.

At 78, Hammond is still going strong. He completed a tour of Europe last spring, and his website promises new music later this year.

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  1. puck says:

    Hammond’s song Free Electric Band was a favorite of my tweenage self (and still is). Never understood why it didn’t chart higher: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PBsG2mo8l80

    I played it from this 1973 K-Tel LP: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/7ii1TNc1c4BOE2XPxEyN0O

  2. jason330 says:

    I wonder if Albert Hammond influenced the name choice of Russel Hammond for the lead in Almost Famous? Must have on some level. He even looks like him.