Charmaine (song)
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| "Charmaine" | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Single by The Bachelors | ||||
| Released | January 26, 1963 | |||
| Recorded | October 10, 1962 | |||
| Label | Decca F11559 | |||
| Songwriter(s) | Ernö Rapée, Lew Pollack | |||
| Producer(s) | Shel Talmy | |||
| The Bachelors singles chronology | ||||
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| External audio | |
|---|---|
"Charmaine" is a popular song written by Ernö Rapée and Lew Pollack. The song was written in 1926 and published in 1927. However, Desmond Carrington on his BBC Radio 2 programme marked the song as having been written in 1913.
The song was originally in waltz time, but later versions were in common time. "Charmaine" is one of many popular songs whose lyrics use a "bluebird of happiness" as a symbol of cheer: "I wonder, when bluebirds are mating, will you come back again?" The song was originally composed for the 1926 silent film What Price Glory?
Recordings
- The best-selling version, recorded by Guy Lombardo & his Orchestra, spent seven weeks at the #1 position in 1927.[1]
- A version recorded by the Harry James orchestra in 1944 featured in the movie Two Girls and a Sailor.
- The 1951 instrumental arrangement by Ronald Binge, performed by the Mantovani orchestra with Max Jaffa as its leader and soloist, was Mantovani's first hit in the United States. Binge's "cascading strings" arrangement, using closely overlapping string parts that create an echo effect, became a trademark sound for future Mantovani arrangements.[2] The recording was released by London Records as catalog number 1020. It first reached the Billboard chart on November 9, 1951, where it remained for 19 weeks, peaking at #10.[3]
- Another recording, by Gordon Jenkins' orchestra, with a vocal by Bob Carroll, also charted in 1951. This recording was released by Decca Records as catalog number 27859.[4] It first reached the Billboard magazine charts on December 7, 1951 and lasted 1 week on the chart, at #26.[3]
- Lucienne Delyle recorded a version in 1952 with French lyrics.
- A 1952 arrangement of "Charmaine" by Billy May and His Orchestra reached # 17 on the Billboard charts. The single was May's biggest hit under his own name.[5]
- Shel Talmy produced the Bachelors' 1963 version with Big Jim Sullivan on lead guitar and Jimmy Page on guitar. It was their first big hit in the UK, reaching #6 on the charts.[6]