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"Have You Ever Seen the Rain?

" is a song written by John Fogerty and released as a single in 1971


from the album Pendulum (1970) by roots rock group Creedence Clearwater Revival. The song charted
highest in Canada, reaching number 1 on the RPM 100 national singles chart in March 1971.[1] In the
U.S., in the same year it peaked at number 8 on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart (where it was
listed as "Have You Ever Seen the Rain / Hey Tonight", together with the B-side).[2] On Cash Box pop
chart, it peaked at number 3. In the UK, it reached number 36. It was the group's eighth gold-selling
single.[3]
Some have speculated that the song's lyrics are referencing the Vietnam War, with the "rain" being a
metaphor for bombs falling from the sky.[4] In his review for Allmusic website, Mark Deming suggests
that the song is about the idealism of the 1960s and about how it faded in the wake of events such as
the Altamont Free Concert and the Kent State shootings, and that Fogerty is saying that the same
issues of the 1960s still existed in the 1970s but that people were no longer fighting for them.
[5] However, Fogerty himself has said in interviews and prior to playing the song in concert that it is
about rising tension within CCR and the imminent departure of his brother Tom from the band. In an
interview, Fogerty stated that the song was written about the fact that they were on the top of the
charts, and had surpassed all of their wildest expectations of fame and fortune. They were rich and
famous, but somehow all of the members of the band at the time were depressed and unhappy; thus
the line "Have you ever seen the rain, coming down on a sunny day?". The band split up in October the
following year after the release of the album Mardi Gras.
In a literal sense the song describes a sunshower such in the lyric "It'll rain a sunny day" and the
chorus "have you ever seen the rain Comin' down on a sunny day?". [6] These events are particularly
common in Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama, but less common in other parts of the country, due to
localized atmospheric wind shear effects.[6] In Southern regional dialect, there is even a term for it:
"the devil beating his wife". [6]
John Fogerty released a live version of the song on his The Long Road Home - In Concert DVD which
was recorded at the Wiltern Theatre in Los Angeles, California, on September 15, 2005.

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