Candy Man (Roy Orbison song)

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ReleasedJuly 1961 (1961-07)
RecordedJune 27, 1961[1]
StudioRCA Victor Studio B, Nashville, Tennessee[1]
"Candy Man"
Single by Roy Orbison
A-side"Crying"
ReleasedJuly 1961 (1961-07)
RecordedJune 27, 1961[1]
StudioRCA Victor Studio B, Nashville, Tennessee[1]
Genre
Length2:43
LabelMonument
Songwriters
ProducerFred Foster
Roy Orbison singles chronology
"Running Scared (Roy Orbison song)" / "Love Hurts"
(1961)
"Crying" / "Candy Man"
(1961)
"Dream Baby (How Long Must I Dream)" / "The Actress"
(1961)

"Candy Man" is a song by Roy Orbison, released as the B-side to his international hit "Crying" in July 1961.[2] It was later covered by British beat group Brian Poole and the Tremeloes, becoming a top-ten hit in the UK.[3]

"Candy Man" was written by Beverly Ross and Fred Neil. Ross was introduced to Neil at Cafe Wha? in Greenwich Village after being suggested by publishing company Hell and Rage that they co-write. Ross had had success as a co-writer of "Dim, Dim the Lights" for Bill Haley & His Comets and "Lollipop", which became an international hit for the Chordettes. Neil, on the other hand, was yet to have such success having been writing, and also recording, for the past few years. Knowing that Ross had written "Lollipop", Neil wanted to write a "candy song" with her. Determined to have another hit, Ross agreed and Neil proposed the title "Candy Man", saying that in New Orleans, where he was from, "the prostitutes, y’know, the hookers all have a pimp, and they call him their Candy Man". While Ross wasn't particularly pleased with this, she liked the title, so they wrote the song, "giving the title an affectionate, cute definition lyrically rather than the sleazy actual meaning it derived from".[4]

After ending her contract with Hell and Rage, Ross went to friend Aaron Schroeder, who had recently started his own publishing company, January Music. After being played the song, Schroeder loved it and sent Ross and Neil into the studio to cut a demo. Schroeder then gave the recording to producer Fred Foster who then cut the song with country artist Roy Orbison.[4] "Candy Man" was recorded at Nashville's RCA Victor Studio B on June 27, 1961, the day after the recording of "Crying".[1] The song prominently features a harmonica, performed by the then-relatively unknown Charlie McCoy. The success of "Candy Man" helped boost McCoy's career.[5]

Release

"Candy Man" was released as the flip side to "Crying" in mid-July 1961, whilst Orbison's previous single, "Running Scared", was still in the charts.[5] It was well-received, becoming Orbison's first B-side to make the US charts. It entered the Billboard Hot 100 in the first week of August, a week before the appearance of "Crying", and spent a total of fourteen weeks on the chart, reaching its peak at number 25 in the first week of November.[6] It entered the Cash Box Top 100 in the third week of August, spent a total of sixteen weeks on the chart and achieved its peak at number 34 in the second week of September.[7] "Candy Man" was not included on any of Orbison's studio albums, though it was included as a bonus track on subsequent reissues of Crying, and its first release on album was the compilation Roy Orbison's Greatest Hits in August 1962.

Personnel

Charts

Chart (1961) Peak
position
US Billboard Hot 100[6]25
US Cash Box Top 100[7] 34

Brian Poole and the Tremeloes version

Other cover versions

References

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