A Summer Song

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"A Summer Song"
Dutch release
Single by Chad & Jeremy
from the album Yesterday's Gone
B-side "No Tears For Johnnie"
Released July 1964
Format 7" single
Recorded June 1964
CTS Studios
Genre Pop
Length 2:38
Label World Artists Records
Writer(s) Chad Stuart, Clive Metcalfe, Keith Noble
Producer(s) Shel Talmy
Chad & Jeremy singles chronology
"Yesterday's Gone"
(1963)
"A Summer Song"
(1964)
"Willow Weep for Me"
(1964)

"A Summer Song" is a 1964 Top Ten hit by Chad & Jeremy; the song was written by group member Chad Stuart with Clive Metcalfe and Keith Noble.

Background

Like the breakthrough hit by Chad & Jeremy: "Yesterday's Gone", "A Summer Song" is a reminiscence of a summer romance; "A Summer Song" eschews the "Merseybeat" sound of "Yesterday's Gone" in favor of a gentle folk-influenced arrangement with the lyrics also being wistful in tone.

Chad Stuart would recall that his "A Summer Song" collaborators Clive Metcalfe and Keith Noble were themselves a musical duo with whom Chad & Jeremy became friendly, and that "A Summer Song" was written at Stuart's flat in London: "We were sitting around jamming on four chords and we came up with 'A Summer Song'".[1] "We never thought 'Summer Song' could possibly be a single," he recalled another time. "It was just a pretty, romantic song. Or so we thought... you never can tell, can you?"[2]

The track was one of a number of tracks for the Yesterday's Gone album recorded at CTS Studios Bayswater in June 1964 under the production auspices of Shel Talmy with Johnnie Spence conducting the orchestra.[3]

"A Summer Song" was issued in both the UK and the US in July 1964; the UK single version opens with Chad and Jeremy trading vocals while the US single features unisonant singing throughout.[4]

Impact

"A Summer Song" was played on Juke Box Jury drawing from guest Ringo Starr the assessment of the track as a "miss" (i.e., flop) with US hit potential. Indeed in the UK - where Chad & Jeremy's "Yesterday's Gone" had been a rather mild hit since followed by the unsuccessful "Like I Love You Today" - "A Summer Song" did not reach the charts while in the US following the near Top 20 success of "Yesterday's Gone" the track would afford the duo their career record reaching #7 on 17–24 October 1964. "A Summer Song" also went to number two for six weeks on the Adult Contemporary chart.[5] Chad Stuart would suggest: "You'd never hear something that sweet in the British charts...For some reason in America it worked. I don't honestly know why" -"[perhaps] because the American market is bigger."[6]

"A Summer Song" also reached #7 in Canada and #49 in Australia. The track is featured on the soundtrack of the film Rushmore, and was used in the "ESPN's Sports Heaven" commercial that aired during Super Bowl XL.

Remakes

The Lettermen covered "A Summer Song" for their August 1965 Capitol Records album release The Hit Sounds of the Lettermen produced by Steve Douglas: the Lettermen made a second recording of the song for "Alive" Again...Naturally a 1973 Capitol Records release which the group self-produced with Ed Cobb. Both versions of "A Summer Song" by the Lettermen abridged the original three word title to "Summer Song".[7]

The Skeeter Davis RCA Victor album release Singin' In The Summer Sun - produced by Chet Atkins and Felton Jarvis - included Davis' version of "A Summer Song": the album was recorded January 1966 at RCA Victor Studio Nashville for release that June.[8]

In the summer of 1967 the Doodletown Pipers had an Easy Listening hit with their remake "A Summer Song"; produced by Stu Phillips, this Epic Records release reached #29 Easy Listening affording the group their only chart appearance[9] Also in 1967 the Memories, an Irish group who would subsequently become a top showband attraction and score eight domestic chart hits, remade "A Summer Song" as their debut single whose release - on Rex Records - in both Ireland and Great Britain was overlooked.[10]

A version of "A Summer Song"1 by Laila Kinnunen was issued by Mediamusiikki in 2000 on the compilation CD Muistojen Kyyneleet which featured tracks Kinnunen had recorded with the Erkki Melakoski (fi) orchestra for the Yleisradio TV series Kuukauden Suositut, Kinnunen's performance of "A Summer Song" having been prepped to air in that series' 1966 season.[11]

The 1998 Narada album Songs From an English Garden by David Lanz features an instrumental version of A Summer Song.[12]

The cast album of the upcoming jukebox musical ModRock: the Stage Musical, which will premiere at the El Portal Theatre (North Hollywood CA) on June 19, 2013, features "A Summer Song" - as "Summer Song" - sung by Shannon Warne in medley with an abbreviated version of "There's Always Something There to Remind Me" which features Warne and Steven Good.

New York based folkie Christine Lavin included the song on her 1986 LP Beau Woes and Other Problems of Modern Life.

A French rendering of "A Summer Song" entitled "Souviens-toi des nuits d'été" was introduced in 1965 by Frank Alamo on the Rivièra label: the B-side of Alamo's single "Qu'est-ce Que Peut Bien Faire Un Garçon", "Souviens-toi des nuits d'été" was also included on a four track EP and was subsequently included on the singer's 1966 self-titled album release.[13] "Souviens-toi des nuits d'été" was also recorded by Line Renaud, her rendition being included on a four track 1966 EP release by Disques Line.[14]

A Finnish rendering of "A Summer Song" entitled "Kesämuisto"1 was recorded by Eero ja Jussi & the Boys (fi) for their 1991 Audiovox Records album release 3 Kitaraa (fi), the track being one of several on the album recorded at Ogeli Recording Studio January–February 1991.[15]

  • 1The Laila Kinnunen recording of "A Summer Song" is subtitled "Kesämuisto": however the track is sung in its original English format.

References