A White Sport Coat

"A White Sport Coat" is a 1957 country and western song with words and music both written by Marty Robbins. It was recorded on January 25, 1957, and released on the Columbia Records label, over a month later, on March 4.[1] The arranger and recording session conductor was Ray Conniff, an in-house conductor/arranger at Columbia. Robbins had demanded to have Conniff oversee the recording after his earlier hit, "Singing the Blues", had been quickly eclipsed on the charts by Guy Mitchell's cover version scored and conducted by Conniff in October, 1956.

"A White Sport Coat"
Single by Marty Robbins
B-side"Grown-Up Tears"
ReleasedApril 20, 1957
GenreCountry
LabelColumbia 40864
Songwriter(s)Marty Robbins
Producer(s)Mitch Miller
Marty Robbins singles chronology
"Knee Deep in the Blues"
(1957)
"A White Sport Coat"
(1957)
"Please Don't Blame Me"
(1957)

Robbins recalled writing the song in approximately twenty minutes while being transported in a standard automobile.[2] He is said to have had the inspiration for the song while driving from a motel to a venue in Ohio where he was due to perform that evening. During the course of the journey, he passed a local high school, where its students were dressed ready for their prom.

The song reached No. 1 on the U.S. country chart becoming Marty Robbins' third No. 1 record,[3] the song reached No. 2 on the Billboard pop chart in the U.S.[4] and No. 1 in the Australian music charts in 1957.

Cover versions

  • A version by Johnny Desmond received some play also, peaking at No. 62 on the U.S. pop charts.
  • In UK the song was a notable hit for the English Rock'n'Roll singer Terry Dene, which reached #18 in the UK Charts. A recording by The King Brothers peaked at #6. Both of these versions hit in early summer 1957.
gollark: It's saddening. The young miss out on the excitement of my ridiculously hyperultranested™ file structures, and useful names like `untitled`.
gollark: They mostly just list various kinds of media, have search, and let you share files between apps.
gollark: They have files *internally*, obviously, but you can't do much with them.
gollark: Except phones and such basically do not files.
gollark: There are many arbitrary university rankings™.

References

  1. Thoenicke, Manfred. The Ray Conniff Recordings: The Columbia Years, Part 1: The Backings and New York* Recordings. p. 18.
  2. Marty Robbins interviewed on the Pop Chronicles (1969)
  3. Whitburn, Joel (2004). The Billboard Book Of Top 40 Country Hits: 1944-2006, Second edition. Record Research. p. 293.
  4. Whitburn, Joel (2004). The Billboard Book of Top 40 Hits, 8th Edition (Billboard Publications), page 532.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.