Anticipation

Album: Anticipation (1971)
Charted: 13
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • Carly Simon wrote "Anticipation" while waiting for Cat Stevens to come over for their first date (she was making chicken with a béarnaise sauce). She was his opening act for a concert at the Troubadour in Los Angeles on April 6, 1971, and they were set to play again at Carnegie Hall in New York City on June 5. Simon lived in the City, so she invited Stevens over for the date a few days before that show.

    He was late, so Simon burned off some nervous energy by sitting down with her guitar. She imitated Stevens' style (he was her favorite artist) from his song "Hard Headed Woman," where he keeps it mellow but then ramps it up for a section when he sings, "I know many fine feathered friends." Simon played loud, singing the word that came into her mind because she was waiting for Stevens: "Anticipation."

    "I was anticipating his arrival," she said in the book Anthems We Love. "So I just started the song and I wrote the whole song, words and music, before he got there that night. So in about 15 minutes I wrote the whole song. Three verses and the choruses and the outro. That's only one of three times that that's ever happened to me. That I just sat down and wrote the whole song in just one stretch. It was only about 20 minutes that he was late."
  • This song is very much about living in the moment. Simon isn't sure this relationship is going to last, but she decides to just enjoy it while they're together. "These are the good old days," goes the refrain at the end.
  • Simon performed "Anticipation" for the first time when she opened for Cat Stevens at Carnegie Hall on June 5, 1971. The song got a great response, so she knew it was a winner. She added it to her repertoire and performed it a handful of times before recording it.
  • The romance between Cat Stevens and Carly Simon was short-lived, but they forged an enduring friendship Simon spoke of fondly many years later. She ended up marrying James Taylor in 1972 (they divorced in 1983).
  • This song was revived in a series of Heinz ketchup commercials that started airing in 1974, including one starring a young Corey Feldman. Heinz ketchup is thick and pours very slowly. In the commercials, a person would be shown waiting for the ketchup to come out of the bottle as the chorus of "Anticipation" plays in the background. For this reason, many people think of this song as "The Ketchup Song."
  • Simon had some concerns about licensing her song for a ketchup commercial, which seemed a little gauche. But she and James Taylor had just had their first child, Sally. Simon wasn't sure where her life and career would take her, but she knew she didn't want to be dependent on James. Her manager talked her into taking the deal, which provided a nice payoff. The commercial was pretty funny, so it didn't seem to cheapen the song. It remains one of the most memorable commercial uses of a popular song.
  • This was Simon's second single, following "That's The Way I've Always Heard It Should Be," the only single released from her self-titled debut album. "Anticipation" was released ahead of her second album, and did indeed create some anticipation for it - it ended up being her first Gold album. She took it to a new level with her third album, No Secrets, the one with "You're So Vain."
  • Simon's musical director Jimmy Ryan played bass on this track, but on the last verse he played guitar-style riffs on the instrument. The other personnel were Andy Newmark on drums, Paul Glanz on piano, and Simon on acoustic guitar and vocals.
  • Simon earned a Grammy nomination for Best Female Pop Vocal Performance, but she lost to Helen Reddy for "I Am Woman."
  • Simon recorded an acoustic version with her son, Ben Taylor, for her 2009 album, Never Been Gone.
  • ABC used this song in a promotional campaign for The Connors, the show they launched with the cast of Roseanne after cutting ties with it star, Roseanne Barr.

Comments: 8

  • Susan from IllinoisWhen I hear the song Anticipation I don’t think of someone waiting on their date. I think of waiting for that thick ketchup to finally starting pouring out of the little opening on the glass bottle!
  • Rob Godfrey from HeavenThe good old days were 20 - 30 years ago, we just didn't know it yet...Carly did.
  • Arthur from New JerseyFor ketchup lovers, the "Anticipation" ended in 2002 when Heinz invented the upside down ketchup bottle. In the commercial, a new version of the song, by Carly's daughter Ben and Sally Taylor and niece Julie Levine, is interrupted by the sound of ketchup easily pouring out after a simple squeeze. The announcer says, "Tired of waiting? No wait, no mess, no fuss, no Anticipation."
  • Randy from Houghton Lake, MiI didn't fully realize it when this song came out in 1971 but those really were the good old days.
  • Martin from Fresno, CaI agree with you Guy.
  • Doug from Kansas City, Moa truly great song- Carly had a great voice- and was quite a babe back in the day.....
  • Joe from Radcliff, KyI hear this song and it takes me back to the 70's when I was roller skating in Champs Roller ring.
  • Guy from Woodinville, WaWonderful song! One of my favorites from a very intelligent and insightful songwriter.
see more comments

Editor's Picks

Stand By Me: The Perfect Song-Movie Combination

Stand By Me: The Perfect Song-Movie CombinationSong Writing

In 1986, a Stephen King novella was made into a movie, with a classic song serving as title, soundtrack and tone.

Modern A Cappella with Peder Karlsson of The Real Group

Modern A Cappella with Peder Karlsson of The Real GroupSong Writing

The leader of the Modern A Cappella movement talks about the genre.

Jeff Trott

Jeff TrottSongwriter Interviews

Sheryl Crow's longtime songwriting partner/guitarist Jeff Trott reveals the stories behind many of the singer's hits, and what its like to be a producer for Leighton Meester and Max Gomez.

Michael Schenker

Michael SchenkerSongwriter Interviews

The Scorpions and UFO guitarist is also a very prolific songwriter - he explains how he writes with his various groups, and why he was so keen to get out of Germany and into England.

Loudon Wainwright III

Loudon Wainwright IIISongwriter Interviews

"Dead Skunk" became a stinker for Loudon when he felt pressure to make another hit - his latest songs deal with mortality, his son Rufus, and picking up poop.

Little Big Town

Little Big TownSongwriter Interviews

"When seeds that you sow grow by the wicked moon/Be sure your sins will find you out/Your past will hunt you down and turn to tell on you."