Little Bitty Pretty One

1957 song written by Bobby Day From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"Little Bitty Pretty One" is a 1957 song written and originally recorded by Bobby Day. That same year, the song was popularized by Thurston Harris.[2] Produced by Aladdin Records (located in Los Angeles, Calif.), and featuring the Sharps on backing vocals,[3] Harris' version reached No. 6 on the U.S. Billboard Best-Sellers chart and No. 2 on the R&B chart.[4] The Bobby Day version reached No. 11 in the Canadian CHUM Chart.[5]

B-side"I Hope You Won't Hold It Against Me"
ReleasedSeptember 1957
Length2:22
Quick facts Single by Thurston Harris and the Sharps, B-side ...
"Little Bitty Pretty One"
Single by Thurston Harris and the Sharps
B-side"I Hope You Won't Hold It Against Me"
ReleasedSeptember 1957
GenreDoo-wop[1]
Length2:22
LabelAladdin
SongwriterBobby Day
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In 1991, Jacqueline Byrd, the widow of songwriter Bobby Day, told lawmakers that she had intercepted a letter addressed to her husband. The letter stated that the copyright to "Little Bitty Pretty One" was not renewed, thus ending royalty payments to Day and the song's publisher. Byrd never told her husband, who was dying of cancer, about the letter. If the song's copyright were renewed, Byrd and her four children would have received royalty payments until 2037.[6]

B-side"If I Have to Move a Mountain"
ReleasedApril 4, 1972
Recorded1972
Quick facts Single by The Jackson 5, from the album Lookin' Through the Windows ...
"Little Bitty Pretty One"
Single by The Jackson 5
from the album Lookin' Through the Windows
B-side"If I Have to Move a Mountain"
ReleasedApril 4, 1972
Recorded1972
StudioMotown
GenreR&B
Length2:22
LabelMotown
SongwriterBobby Day
ProducersMel Larson, Jerry Marcellino
The Jackson 5 singles chronology
"Sugar Daddy"
(1971)
"Little Bitty Pretty One"
(1972)
"Lookin' Through the Windows"
(1972)
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Reception

Bryan Thomas writes that the song "has gone on to become one of the best loved oldies of the late '50s".[7]

The song is famous for its hummed opening.[8][9] It was used in the 1983 horror film Christine, the 1989 comedy/fantasy film Little Monsters, and the 1996 comedy/fantasy film Matilda.

Cover versions

"Wiggle, Wiggle"

"Little Bitty Pretty One" was the inspiration for the Accents' sole hit "Wiggle Wiggle" in 1958, and though the similarities were evidently not sufficient to warrant a lawsuit, Aladdin Records took the expedient step of covering the song with a group called the Chestnuts.

References

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