Top 10 Songs By The Left Banke

The Left Banke Songs

Feature Photo: KRLA/Beat Publications-page 1, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

A harpsichord line and a voice full of ache changed everything for the Left Banke in 1966. Out of New York City came a band that carved out a very specific place in pop history by blending rock instrumentation with string arrangements and classical influences, a sound that later became closely associated with the phrase baroque pop. The group was formed by keyboard player Michael Brown and bassist Tom Finn, who had previously worked together in the group the Speakers, and the original lineup also included singer Steve Martin Caro, guitarist Jeff Winfield, and drummer George Cameron. Brown’s songwriting and keyboard work became central to the band’s identity from the beginning.

Their first and biggest breakthrough came with “Walk Away Renée,” released in 1966. The single became a major hit, reaching number 5 on the Billboard Hot 100 in the United States and turning the group into one of the most distinctive new acts of the period. That same year, they followed it with “Pretty Ballerina,” another strong chart record that reached number 15. Both songs were built around Brown’s writing and arrangements, and both helped define the Left Banke’s reputation for combining chamber pop textures with emotional, radio-ready songwriting. Those records remain the songs most strongly associated with the band’s name.

The group released its debut album, Walk Away Renée/Pretty Ballerina, in 1967. A second album, The Left Banke Too, followed in 1968. Those 2 studio albums make up the core of the band’s original discography, and they capture both the promise and instability of a group that never had much time to settle into a lasting lineup. Even during their early success, personnel problems kept interrupting their momentum. Steve Martin Caro left the group, George Cameron moved into the role of lead singer, and other members came and went as the band tried to hold itself together long enough to continue recording.

A third significant single, “She May Call You Up Tonight,” kept the band visible, though it did not match the commercial impact of the first two hits. By 1968, internal tensions had become severe enough that the original version of the group effectively came apart. Michael Brown, who had been the key songwriter and musical architect, left after conflict with the other members. The band’s history from that point forward became a story of short reunions, shifting personnel, and unfinished attempts to recapture the original spark that had produced those first recordings.

The Left Banke’s later history included several brief revivals. Brown, Finn, and Steve Martin reunited in 1971, though that version did not last. There were additional reunion efforts over the years, including a more substantial return in 2006, when surviving members Tom Finn, George Cameron, and Steve Martin performed again under the Left Banke name with new musicians. That revival led to live appearances and renewed attention from listeners who had never forgotten the band’s mid 1960s records. Even so, the group’s identity always rested most heavily on the original recordings that had established its sound.

No major award history defines the Left Banke’s legacy; the records themselves do that work. What made the band endure was not a long run of albums or a large stack of honors, but the unusual beauty of the music and the way those songs stood apart from most of what surrounded them on 1960s radio. “Walk Away Renée” and “Pretty Ballerina” carried a sense of sophistication without losing their pop immediacy, and that combination has kept the group relevant in retrospectives of 1960s rock and pop for decades.

Outside the band’s core life, the most important activity tied to the Left Banke story came through the later reunion performances and the continued musical work of individual members. Michael Brown went on to form Montage and later stories connected to the Beckies, while the surviving members, Tom Finn, George Cameron, and Steve Martin, took part in a reunion that brought the Left Banke music back to the stage decades after the original band had fractured. The reason the Left Banke are still loved is easy to hear in the records. They made music that felt elegant, intimate, and deeply melodic, and they did it with a sound that very few American bands of their time could match.

# 10 – Bryant Hotel

“Bryant Hotel” was released in February 1969 as a Smash single, backed with “Give the Man a Hand.” The song did not chart, and it arrived during the final stretch of the band’s original run.

# 9 – Nice to See You

“Nice to See You” followed in May 1969 as another Smash single, with “There’s Gonna Be a Storm” on the B side. Like several of the group’s late-period releases, it did not chart.

# 8 – Goodbye Holly

“Goodbye Holly” was issued in November 1968 on Smash, backed with “Sing Little Bird Sing.” It was released during the same late phase that produced the material associated with the band’s second-album era.

# 7 – Love Songs in the Night

“Love Songs in the Night” was released in March 1971, backed with “Two by Two,” and the record was credited to Steve Martin rather than the Left Banke name. Even so, it featured contributions from four founding members of the group and emerged from a brief reunion tied to the movie Hot Parts.

# 6 – Dark Is the Bark

“Dark Is the Bark” came out in June 1968 as a Smash single with “My Friend Today” as the B side. The song later became notable for featuring backing vocals by a young Steven Tyler on The Left Banke Too.

# 5 – She May Call You Up Tonight

“She May Call You Up Tonight” was released in May 1967 on Smash, backed with “Barterers and Their Wives.” It reached number 120 on Billboard and number 118 on Cash Box, and it was tied to the Walk Away Renée/Pretty Ballerina album.

# 4 – Ivy Ivy

“Ivy Ivy” was issued in March 1967 with “And Suddenly” on the B side and was released as a non-album single. Michael Brown recorded it under the Left Banke name with Bert Sommer and session musicians, but the remaining band members fought the release, radio support faded, and the record failed to break through.

# 3 – Desiree

“Desiree” was released in June 1967, backed with “I’ve Got Something on My Mind,” which had already appeared on Walk Away Renée/Pretty Ballerina. The single reached number 98 on Billboard and number 127 on Cash Box, and it was later associated with The Left Banke Too.

# 2 – Pretty Ballerina

Issued in December 1966 as the follow-up to “Walk Away Renée,” “Pretty Ballerina” showed how quickly the Left Banke had developed a sound all their own, built around Michael Brown’s songwriting and the group’s chamber pop instincts. Brown wrote the song himself; the track was recorded in November 1966 at World United in New York City, and the production was credited to Harry Lookofsky, Steve Jerome, and Bill Jerome. Steve Martin Caro handled the lead vocal, while the musicians on the recording included Brown on piano, John Abbott on bass guitar and as arranger, Seymour Barab on bass guitar and cello, Buddy Saltzman on drums, Lookofsky on violin, and George Marge on oboe.

The arrangement is one of the record’s defining strengths, with the oboe and string quartet giving the single a refined texture that matched the song’s melodic sophistication, including its notable use of the Lydian mode. Commercially, the record reached number 15 on the Billboard Hot 100, number 12 on the Cash Box Top 100, number 4 in Canada, and number 13 in New Zealand, confirming that the Left Banke’s breakthrough was not a one song event but the start of a brief and remarkable run.

# 1 – Walk Away Renee

Released in July 1966, “Walk Away Renée” became the Left Banke’s defining record and one of the clearest expressions of baroque pop from the decade. Written by Michael Brown, Bob Calilli, and Tony Sansone, the song was recorded in March 1966 at World United in New York City and issued on Smash Records. Steve Martin Caro sang the lead vocal, while the session lineup included Al Rogers on drums, John Abbott on bass and as arranger, George Hirsh on guitar, Michael Brown on harpsichord, George Cameron and Tom Finn on backing vocals, uncredited flute by Jackie Kelso, and a string section led by Lookofsky.

The arrangement is what gives the record its lasting identity, combining harpsichord, lush strings, alto flute, and a descending chromatic bass line into a sound that felt sophisticated without losing its pop immediacy. Commercially, the single spent 13 weeks on the United States charts, reached number 5 on the Billboard Hot 100, number 2 on the Cash Box Top 100, number 3 in Canada, and number 5 in New Zealand.

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