You're the One (Petula Clark song)

"You're the One"
Single by Petula Clark
from the album I Know a Place
A-side "You're the One"
B-side "Gotta Tell The World"
Released 1965
Format 45 RPM single
Recorded 1965
Genre British Invasion, Pop, Vocal
Length 2:26
Label
Writer(s) Petula Clark, Tony Hatch
Producer(s) Tony Hatch
Petula Clark singles chronology
"Round Every Corner"
(1965)
"You're the One"
(1965)
"My Love"
(1965)
"You're the One"
Single by The Vogues
from the album Meet the Vogues
A-side "You're the One"
B-side "Some Words"
Released 1965
Format 45 RPM single
Recorded 1965
Genre Pop rock
Length 2:17
Label Co&Ce1
Writer(s) Petula Clark, Tony Hatch
The Vogues singles chronology
"You're the One"
(1965)
"Five O'Clock World"
(1966)

"You're the One" is a song by Petula Clark. It was later also included on the 1965 album I Know a Place. Written by Clark with her regular songwriter and record producer Tony Hatch, "You're the One" was a Top 30 hit in the UK Singles chart for Clark, but was more successful as a Top Ten US single release by The Vogues.

History

Petula Clark thus describes the genesis of "You're the One": "we [Clark and Tony Hatch] were making yet another LP, and that's like twelve [or] thirteen songs. He'd written twelve, and he said, 'Listen, I haven't got a number thirteen in me at all. Write something.' And I said, 'Okay. I'll try.' And I wrote the melody of 'You're the One.' And he wrote the lyric."[1] As was standard with Clark's tracks produced by Hatch, "You're the One" was recorded at Pye Studios in Marble Arch. Hatch also conducted for the session whose personnel featured Bobby Graham on drums, Big Jim Sullivan on guitar and The Breakaways vocal group.

Originally there were no plans to issue a follow-up to the "I Know a Place" single off its parent album; instead two newly recorded Petula Clark singles were consecutively released: "You'd Better Come Home" and "Round Every Corner" both of which barely made the UK Top 50. Both singles were substantially more successful in the US where each neared the Top 20 in respectively the summer and autumn of 1965. However the US chart impact of Clark's own singles in the latter half of 1965 paled next to that of a recording of Clark's composition "You're the One" by the Vogues which reached #4 US that autumn.[2]

Recorded at Gate Way Studios in Pittsburgh, "You're the One" was the first track to be credited to the Vogues although the group had previously recorded as the Val-Aires. Pittsburgh-based record producer Nick Cenci had already cut "You're the One" with a local band called the Racket Squad; after hearing the Val-Aires audition tape, Cenci decided that that group's lead singer Bill Burkette could sing "You're the One" more effectively than Racket Squad vocalist Sonny DiNunzio. Accordingly, DiNunzio's vocals were erased from the master, so that Burkette could record a fresh vocal over the instrumentation played by the Racket Squad's members.[3]

Cenci approached Jim Rook, program director of KQV, with the Vogues' "You're the One" and KQV became the first radio station to play the record,[4] which entered the KQV "Finest Forty" chart in July 1965, and that August broke in Detroit and San Diego. prior to breaking nationally that September.[5][6]

The burgeoning success of the Vogues' "You're the One" had alerted Petula Clark's UK label: Pye Records, to the track's hit potential with Pye rush releasing Clark's own version as a single which entered the UK chart in November 1965 and peaked at #23. According to Chuck Blasco of the Vogues, Clark's US label: Warner Bros., had also intended to issue Clark's version as a single to vie with the Vogues' version in the US, but Clark vetoed the idea saying: "Let the boys have the hit".[7] The Vogues' version did have a UK release on London Records but did not garner enough interest to share the UK charts with Clark's version.

In the autumn of 1965 four versions of "You're the One" charted in Australia with that by Petula Clark becoming the major hit at #4. Besides the Vogues version, which reached #55, two local covers of "You're the One" charted with that by Col Joye reaching #41 while that by Yvonne Barrett - charting in tandem with its B-side "Little People" - reached #58.

A #30 hit for Petula Clark in the Netherlands, "You're the One" also afforded the Vogues a Top Ten hit in Canada (#4) and New Zealand.

Unique among Clark's hit singles as the only English language hit in which she had a hand in writing, "You're the One" was rendered by Clark in French, German and Italian; the French version was entitled "Un Mal Pour Un Bien" (French #6), the German "Deine Liebe ist wunderbar".[8]

Clark performed the song live in the 1965 concert film The Big TNT Show.

The 1967 album release Pet Project by the Bob Florence Big Band features an instrumental version of "You're the One", the album being devoted to songs associated with Petula Clark.

Rocky Sharpe and the Replays remade "You're the One" on their 1981 album release Come On Let's Go.

A Finnish rendering of "You're the One": "Sinä Vain", was a 1966 single release for Eero.

References

  1. "Petula Clark". Songfacts.com. Retrieved July 4, 2013.
  2. Allmusic Vogues chart history
  3. Friends of Spectropop. "Spectropop Group Discussion Archives: #0288 - 03 Jul 1999". Spectropop.com. Retrieved 2012-01-13.
  4. "The Vogues - Inductees - The Vocal Group Hall of Fame Foundation". Vghf.com. 1968-10-12. Retrieved 2012-01-13.
  5. tim warden. "ARSA | The Vogues You're The One". Las-solanas.com. Retrieved 2012-01-13.
  6. "You're the One" was originally released on Cenci's Blue Star label; when a copyright dispute with another Blue Star label arose, the label name was changed to Co&Ce
  7. news.google.com
  8. Billboard vol 78 #5 (29 January 1966) p.28
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/9/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.