Procol Harum – A Whiter Shade Of Pale
The Man Who Played The Most Famous Organ Riff In History — And Waited 38 Years For Credit
When Procol Harum released “A Whiter Shade of Pale” on May 12, 1967, it was their debut single — and they’d only played their first live gig the same day. Within weeks, it sat at number one in the UK for six straight weeks, reached number five in the US, and became the defining sound of the Summer of Love. It would go on to sell over 10 million copies worldwide. Not bad for a band that had barely rehearsed.
The single entered the UK chart at number 11 and reached the top within seven days, knocking out the competition at a time when The Beatles’ Sgt. Pepper’s was rewriting every rule in music. In the US, it spent two weeks at its peak and charted for twelve weeks total. It later became the most-played record by British broadcasters over the past seventy years — a statistic that still staggers.
The title came from an overheard remark at a late-night gathering — specifically at the flat of music entrepreneur Guy Stevens. At 4:30 in the morning, someone looked at Stevens’ wife Diane and said “you’ve gone a whiter shade of pale,” her pallor apparently a side effect of the evening’s pharmaceutical adventures. Lyricist Keith Reid filed the phrase away and built a surreal, allusive lyric around it — one that referenced Chaucer’s “The Miller’s Tale” entirely by accident. “I’d never read The Miller’s Tale in my life,” Reid later admitted.
Brooker had been developing a Bach-inspired piano figure, drawing on his study of the Jacques Loussier Trio. “Air on a G String was the starting point, but the rest was invention,” he said. When organist Matthew Fisher joined the sessions at Olympic Sound Studios in Barnes, he transformed that figure into something extraordinary — a countermelody built on Bach’s Orchestral Suite No. 3 that would become one of the most recognisable instrumental passages in rock. The entire recording was captured in just two takes. The song originally had four verses; only two made the final cut.
Remarkably, “A Whiter Shade of Pale” was left off the UK edition of their debut album, Procol Harum — a decision so bizarre it defies logic. The US release included it, but at home, the biggest debut single of the year was an afterthought. The band was so associated with it that they eventually pulled it from their live set entirely, fearing overexposure.
Then came the lawsuit. For nearly four decades, Matthew Fisher received no songwriting credit — despite his organ line being the hook that made the whole record breathe. He filed suit in 2005, lost an appeal, and ultimately took his case to the House of Lords, who unanimously ruled in his favour in July 2009, awarding him 40% of music royalties. It remains one of the most remarkable copyright reversals in British music history. Over 1,000 cover versions exist, including memorable takes from Annie Lennox and Joe Cocker. It entered the Grammy Hall of Fame in 1998 and the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2018.
Gary Brooker, who died in February 2022, once said of its staying power: “It came along at just the right moment, and meant so much to so many people at a formative time.” Even John Lennon — not a man easily impressed — reportedly played it on repeat in his psychedelic Rolls-Royce. Some debut singles introduce a band. This one introduced an era.







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