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reprinted from the San Bernardino Sun's website, www.sbsun.com
Top 10 reasons to adopt 'San Bernardino' as the city's song
San Bernardino City Councilwoman Susan Lien Longville's Top 10 list of reasons why the city should adopt "San Bernardino"
as its official song:
1. The tune is catchy, and easy for even those of us with modest vocal ranges to handle.
2. The song has a country-rock style, which matches our community well.
3. The lyrics are so favorable in their treatment of our city that one might easily believe it was specifically written to serve as
our anthem.
4. The lyrics have specific emotional appeal to those born and raised in San Bernardino.
5. The lyrics also appeal to potential visitors to our city, including residents of foreign lands.
6. The song is a proven hit all over the world, having achieved No.1 on the charts In Germany and reached the Top 10 in many
nations when it was originally released.
7. A Spanish-language recording of the song (by Los Mismos, a Mexican pop group) already exists, so we don't have to
translate it to sing it in Spanish.
8. There are numerous other cover versions of the song already available in many languages, which could be used in
worldwide promotional campaigns If our Convention and Visitors Bureau were to obtain the rights to use some of those
foreign versions.
9. Jeff Christie, the British musician who wrote the song, has already given us permission to use his original version for city
purposes.
10. Nowhere in the lyrics does it mention smog, crime or any ofthe other negative images emphasized in Frank Zappa's song
"San Ber'dino."
More about 'San Bernardino'
onllneEXTRn
. John Weeks' column: Tune in to the spirit of the city
. Audio clip: 50-second MP3 of 'San Bernardino'
. 'San Bernardino' lyrics
SAN BERNARDINO SONG POLL (results from San Bernardino Sun website as of 7:00 a.m. Monday, Nov. 7, 2005)
Is 'San Bernardino' a good candidate for an official city song?
Total Votes = 207
yes
1111111111111111111111111111111111 168 Votes, or81.15 %
no
11111111 39 Votes, or 18.84 %
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City of San Bernardino
Tune in to the spirit of the city
John Weeks, Staff Writer, San Bernardino County Sun Nov. 2, 2002
A new favorite has emerged in the search for an official city song for San Bernardino.
Actually, it's an old favorite.
The song is "San Bernardino,' by Christie, and It was a major pop hit in 1970. It tells the story of a wanderer who searches the worid
but finds no inner peace until deciding to return home to San Bernardino.
Sample lyrics:
"But there's one place where I know
"The sun is shining endlessly
"And it's calling me aCross the sea
"So I must get back to San Bernardino."
Leading an effort to adopt the song as San Bernardino's official anthem is City Councilwoman Susan Lien Longville. She is working to
muster consensus support for the song among several city agencies, including the Convention and Visitors Bureau, the Chamber of
Commerce, the Mayor's Office and the City Administrator's Office. Ultimately, she hopes to persuade the City Council to make it official.
"It's going to come before the City Council in the near future,' she said. "Once it's approved, we can use the song at events like the
Stater Bros. Route 66 Rendezvous, and we can feature it on the city's Web site. We can use the song to promote the city's identity.
Anyone who listens to it can immediately understand what an incredible asset it could be for our city.'
Lien Longville already has gained the support of one important backer, the English pop star who wrote and first recorded the song.
Jeff Christie, whose self-named group had several pop hits In the 70s, has granted permission for the city to use his song and has
promised to make personal appearances at city events where the song is featured.
"Of course you have my permission to use 'San Bernardino' as your official city song. It's the city I was writing about, . he said.
Christie said the song came about in 1970 when he searched for a prototypical California city to symbolize the lure of the Golden State.
He chose San Bernardino because he liked the sound of the name. Also, he was familiar with the city because of its proximity to Los
Angeles, where he was doing a lot of work at the time.
"San Bernardino' became a NO.1 hit throughout Europe and won multiple music-industry awards. Almost 20 cover versions of the song
have been recorded by other artists throughout the world.
Interestingly, the song was only a minor hit in the United States, climbing to No. 92 on the Billboard chart. In fact, the American
version appeared with a typographical error in the title, with the city's name misspelled as "San Bernadino.'
"I don't know how the 'r' was omitted on the record label,' Christie said, "but once CBS (Sony) had pressed so many records they
would not entertain destroying them to re-Iabel with the correct spelling.'
A lot of us with deep roots In the Inland Empire remember the song when it was new. I recall having conversations about it with
friends. It was flattering, we thought, that an English group would wax rhapsodiC about San Bernardino, even if they didn't get the name
quite right.
One friend, Lynn Brokaw, has a particularly vivid memory of the song. Brokaw, a San Bernardino native, is now the Eastern Region
Home Delivery Manager of the Los Angeles Newspaper Group, which includes The Sun, but in the early '70s was a young soldier
stationed in Germany.
"I was a draftee assigned to a U.S. Army training area in Hoenfeld, Germany. One night, while hoisting beers at a local gasthaus,
someone dropped a dime (actually a mark) and played 'San Bernardino' on the jukebox. It was amazing!" he said.
Lien Longville, a California resident since 1973, first learned of the song from her husband, John Longville, the former Rialto mayor and
California assemblyman, who is an avid music collector.
"We listened to it together, and I immediately knew this would be a great song for the city,' she said.
In fact, the councilwoman has compiled a "Top 10' list of reasons why the city should adopt "San Bernardino' as its official song.
Among them:
"The tune is catchy and easy for even those of us with modest vocal ranges to handle.'
"The song has a countrY-rock'style, which matches our community wel!."
"The lyrics are so favorable in their treatment of our city that one might easily believe it was speCifically written to serve as our
anthem. .
To view Lien Longville's complete Top 10 list, plus the entire lyric sheet of "San Bernardino,' visit The Sun's web site at
www.sbsun.com. You'll also be able to hear a 50-second excerpt from the song, and you'll have an opportunity to vote on whether you
think the song is a good candidate to become the city's anthem.