Released as a single by
Private Stock Records in 1976, the song debuted at number 80 on the
Billboard Hot 100 chart and climbed to number 1 within 19 weeks, remaining there for one week. In 1977, it was licensed to
RSO Records for inclusion on the best-selling Saturday Night Feversoundtrack. The song is one of Murphy's few Top 40 hits.
Background and recording
In college, Murphy's interests included
rock music, particularly that which was adapted from
classical music, such as "Joy" by
Apollo 100 and "
A Lover's Concerto" by
The Toys. Later, in 1976, while writing a disco song for a commercial, a producer suggested the idea of "updating classical music", which "nobody [has] done lately".[5] He then recorded a demo tape of five songs—three were ordinary pop songs, while the fourth was a
disco rendition of
Beethoven's
Fifth Symphony titled "A Fifth of Beethoven"[6]—mailing it to various record labels in New York City.
The response was underwhelming, but "Fifth" caught the interest of
Private Stock Records owner
Larry Uttal. Murphy signed on to Private Stock and recorded the album A Fifth of Beethoven, containing the title track and first single of the same name. The single was credited to "Walter Murphy & The Big Apple Band" upon encouragement from Private Stock, which believed it would be more successful if credited to a group rather than an individual. However, two days following the record's release, Private Stock discovered the existence of another Big Apple Band (which promptly changed its name to
Chic). The record was later re-released and credited to "The Walter Murphy Band", then simply to "Walter Murphy".[7]
"A Fifth of Beethoven" started at number 80 on the
Billboard Hot 100 and eventually reached number 1 within 19 weeks, where it stayed for one week. The single sold two million copies, while the album sold about 750,000 copies. The second single, a rendition of
Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov's "
Flight of the Bumblebee", titled "Flight '76", reached number 44 on the Hot 100.[7]
In addition to Saturday Night Fever, it appears in a heavily edited form in the movie House of Gucci. It is used as the theme of the television miniseries Mrs. America.
In popular culture
The music was used in a recruitment campaign by the
Irish Defence Forces in the early 1980s.[8]