When I'm With You

Album: Sheriff (1982)
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • "When I'm With You" is certainly the most unlikely US #1 hit of the '80s. The song was seven years old, the band had long since broken up, it had no music video, and the album was long out of print and not available on CD. Still, for one magical week in 1989 (February 4), the song reached the top spot.

    Sheriff, a five-member Canadian band, formed in 1979 and released their only album, Sheriff, in 1982. Their first two singles were rockers that went nowhere; the third single was the ballad "When I'm With You," which went all the way to #61 in America in the summer of 1983. It wasn't enough to move the needle, and in 1985 band split up amid some degree of acrimony.

    In the '80s, radio stations would sometimes re-introduce a long-forgotten song in the hopes that it would connect with listeners if given a second chance; it happened with "Into The Night" by Benny Mardones and with "Red Red Wine" by UB40. And it happened again with "When I'm With You."

    According to the Billboard Book Of One-Hit Wonders, it was Jay Taylor, music director at KLUC in Phoenix, that put the song back on the air in 1988. As he hoped, it got a great response from listeners, so they kept it in rotation as if it were a new song. Other stations around the country got wind of it and added it to their playlists, leading Sheriff's old record company, Capitol, to re-release the single.

    This would have been a great time for the band to re-form, but two of the five members wanted nothing to do with it, and that was enough to quash the reunion. Sheriff never got back together, but those two holdouts - lead singer Freddy Curci and guitarist Steve DeMarchi - formed Alias and had a hit in 1990 with "(I Need You Now) More Than Words Can Say."
  • Sheriff's guitarist, Arnold Lanni, wrote this heartfelt ballad as a Valentine's Day gift for a girl he was dating. It worked: She loved the song and they got married two years later. He worked up the song with the band, but they didn't think it would end up on the album. When their producer, Stacy Haydon, asked near the end of the sessions if they had anything else, they played him the song and he decided it should go on the tracklist.
  • When the song went to #1, two members of the group, Arnold Lanni and Wolf Hassel, were in a new band called Frozen Ghost, which had a minor hit in 1987 with "Should I See." Lead singer Freddy Curci was working as a courier, he recalled delivering packages to an office when the song came on. He told the receptionist it was him singing the song, but she didn't believe him.
  • When this hit #1 in America, Sheriff became the first Canadian band since Bachman-Turner Overdrive with "You Ain't Seen Nothing Yet" in 1974 to reach the top spot.

Comments: 4

  • Ricky Johnson from Ohsweken, Ontario CanadaFunny how the LONG (20 seconds) vocal note at the end isn't mentioned in the above songfacts text.
  • Anonymous from TorontoHi Serena. Freddy Curci and the rest of the band is from Toronto where the song was recorded in the Capitol Records Studio in Toronto in 1982. I am not sure who you met that faked a recording session, but it was not Freddy Curci of Sherriff. I am sorry to ruin an old pleasant .memory for you.
  • Old Friend from LaHey Serina,, his name is Freddy Curci not Wolfgang. Are you on Facebook?
  • Serina from L.a. Improv CafeI was the one Wolfgang sang to when recording it live at the improv cafe in LA. I was staying at the Tropicana Hotel in Hollywood and so was the band. I was doing a test shoot for playboy magazine and they were recording and we net by the pool and Wolfgang invited me out for dinner we then went by limo for dinner then to the improv cafe and I was placed at a table so that wolf could sing to me. It was set up in the back of this cafe with bleacher seating then some bar tables set up around the stage to look like a bar. Yes it was recorded live that night and there was video taken but can’t find any. Wolf was the one singing when I’m with you. They played two songs and I didn’t think the first song was that good but when I’m with you I thought would be a hit. Heard Wolfgang became a courier and the bank broke up. I get very sentimental when I hear that song and it’s unfortunate they bridge up. Wolfgang had the blonde hair in the white suit blue shirt as pictured on the album. I was 21 a beauty queen with 26 titles and I’m 60 now lol Saying Hi to Wolfgang never forgot you.
see more comments

Editor's Picks

Does Jimmy Page Worship The Devil? A Look at Satanism in Rock

Does Jimmy Page Worship The Devil? A Look at Satanism in RockSong Writing

We ring the Hell's Bells to see what songs and rockers are sincere in their Satanism, and how much of it is an act.

Bryan Adams

Bryan AdamsSongwriter Interviews

What's the deal with "Summer of '69"? Bryan explains what the song is really about, and shares more of his songwriting insights.

Rush: Album by Album - A Conversation With Martin Popoff

Rush: Album by Album - A Conversation With Martin PopoffSong Writing

A talk with Martin Popoff about his latest book on Rush and how he assessed the thousands of albums he reviewed.

Spooner Oldham

Spooner OldhamSongwriter Interviews

His keyboard work helped define the Muscle Shoals sound and make him an integral part of many Neil Young recordings. Spooner is also an accomplished songwriter, whose hits include "I'm Your Puppet" and "Cry Like A Baby."

Gary Brooker of Procol Harum

Gary Brooker of Procol HarumSongwriter Interviews

The lead singer and pianist for Procol Harum, Gary talks about finding the musical ideas to match the words.

Who's Johnny, And Why Does He Show Up In So Many Songs

Who's Johnny, And Why Does He Show Up In So Many SongsSong Writing

For songwriters, Johnny represents the American man. He has been angry, cool, magic, a rebel and, of course, marching home.