The song was one of the few non-disco No. 1 hits on the Billboard Hot 100 during the first eight months of 1979.
Composition
Michael McDonald and Kenny Loggins, who had wanted to collaborate for some time, wrote the song together in Los Angeles. Loggins went to McDonald's house and heard him playing a tune on piano, and suggested they work on that as he already had a hook line, "She had a place in his life" in mind. The song they wrote was influenced by songs they grew up listening to such as the Four Seasons' "Sherry" and "Walk Like a Man". They finished the song by the following day.[9]
Kenny Loggins version
Both Loggins and McDonald recorded the song around the same time. Loggins' version was a creative arrangement with producer Bob James.[9] Loggins released his version of "What a Fool Believes" five months prior to the Doobie Brothers version on his second album Nightwatch, released on July 12, 1978.
The Doobie Brothers version
The Doobie Brothers with McDonald on vocals recorded a version with producer Ted Templeman. They recorded numerous takes of its rhythm track over five or six days, but had a problem finding a version that they liked, and Templeman ended up playing drums with Keith Knudsen to try to achieve a "floppy feel" with the song.[10] Templeman eventually decided, to the band's horror, to cut up the master tape of a recording into sections, and put together a usable version. McDonald came up with the rest of the arrangement, adding the keyboard, vocals and strings to the song. The resulting song was stylistically unlike any song the Doobie Brothers had done before.[9] Templeman was still not satisfied with the result; when he played the song to the executives of Warner Bros., he suggested discarding the song, but they said: "Are you crazy? That's great!"[9]
In December 1978, five months after Loggins' original recording was released, the Doobie Brothers included their version on their album Minute by Minute, with their version being released as a single the following month. This is the best-known version of the song, debuting at number 73 on the Billboard Hot 100 on January 20, 1979, and then reaching number one on April 14, 1979, for one week.[7]
Apparently as a joke, Michael Jackson claimed in a videotaped phone conversation with Elizabeth Taylor in 2003 that he contributed at least one backing track to the original Doobie Brothers recording, but was not credited for having done so. Entertainment Tonight broadcast this claim with viewers being unaware that Jackson was joking. The band later denied his participation.[11]
This version of the song appeared Grand Theft Auto V on the fictional radio station Los Santos Rock Radio, which also featured Loggins as the radio host.[12]
Reception
Billboard praised the vocal performance, synthesizers and production.[13] The reviewer described the song as building from a melodic first verse "to a heart warming hook chorus".[13]Cash Box said it has an "easy funk backing, strings overhead and characteristically unique vocals which soar upwards."[14]Record World said that in the song the Doobie Brothers go to "an easy going beat with distinctive lead and high harmony hook."[15]
Ultimate Classic Rock critic Michael Gallucci rated "What a Fool Believes" as the Doobie Brothers all-time greatest song, particularly praising "McDonald's soulful vocals and soft and warm keyboard riffs."[16] In 2021, it was listed at No. 343 on Rolling Stone's list of the " 500 Greatest Songs of All Time".[17]
The song is considered one of the pinnacle examples of the Yacht Rock musical genre, which spawned from the 2005 2005 web series by comedians J. D. Ryznar, Hunter Stair, David B. Lyons and Steve Huey. On their "Yachtski Scale", created on their podcast Beyond Yacht Rock, songs are rated from 0 to 100 based on how "Yacht" they are, "What A Fool Believes" has a score of 100 from all four co-hosts and is the song that all other songs are compared to.
^ Shipments figures based on certification alone. ‡ Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.
Other versions by Loggins and McDonald/the Doobie Brothers
In 1978, Warner Brothers released a 12-inch singledisco version by the Doobie Brothers (backed with "Don't Stop to Watch the Wheels"), which peaked at number 40 on Billboard's Disco Action Chart in April 1979. Mixed by disco producer Jim Burgess, at 5:31 the song is considerably longer than the 3:41 versions on the 7-inch single and the Minute by Minute LP. The 12-inch version also has a more pronounced bass-driven drumbeat.[41]
A live version appears on Loggins' 1980 album Kenny Loggins Alive. Loggins' original version switches several of the gender pronouns, so that it is sung largely from the perspective of the woman in the encounter.[citation needed]
A reissue of the single was released in 1987 credited to the Doobie Brothers featuring Michael McDonald. It was included on McDonald's 1986 compilation album Sweet Freedom and was credited here as Michael McDonald with the Doobie Brothers. It reached No. 57 on the UK Singles Chart in January 1987.[42]
British band Matt Bianco released a cover of "What a Fool Believes" on their fourth studio album Samba in Your Casa in 1991. The song served as the album's final single, and reached number 23 on the Irish Singles Chart in early 1992.[43]
^Billboard Staff (October 19, 2023). "The 500 Best Pop Songs: Staff List". Billboard. Retrieved February 19, 2024. The defining hit of the Michael McDonald-era Doobie Brothers, a soaring yacht-rock track that defies singalong attempts.
^"What A Fool Believes (12")". Discomusic.com. Archived from the original on 4 Mar 2016. They comment: Disco from an unlikely artist ... "What A Fool Believes" was remixed by the late Jim Burgess to enhance its dance floor appeal. Another good Doobie Brothers 12 inch release was "Real Love"
Templeman, Ted; Renoff, Greg (2020). Ted Templeman: A Platinum Producer's Life In Music. Toronto: ECW Press. pp. 280–5. ISBN9781770414839. OCLC1121143123.