Yesterday's Gone (song)

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"Yesterday's Gone"
A-side label variant of UK vinyl release
Single by Chad & Jeremy
from the album Yesterday's Gone
B-side"Lemon Tree"
Released27 September 1963 (UK)
March 1964 (US)
Recorded31 July 1963
StudioAbbey Road Studios
GenrePop
Length2:31
LabelEmber Records
World Artists 1021
Songwriter(s)Chad Stuart, Wendy Kidd
Producer(s)John Barry
Chad & Jeremy singles chronology
"Yesterday's Gone"
(1963)
"A Summer Song"
(1964)

"Yesterday's Gone" is the title of a 1963 hit single by Chad & Jeremy. Although the English duo would have a string of successful records in the United States through the mid-1960s, this song was their only hit in their native land.

History[edit]

The song was written in 1962 by Chad Stuart, who comprised Chad & Jeremy with Jeremy Clyde; it is the first song Stuart wrote. Stuart shares the song's writing credit with Wendy Kidd, the manager of a band Stuart belonged to at the time of the song's writing. According to Stuart, Kidd was given the songwriting credit in return for allowing him to compose "Yesterday's Gone" on her piano.[1]

Kidd also facilitated the hiring of Stuart as a staff writer at Rogers Music, which published "Yesterday's Gone", although the song remained unrecorded until Stuart and Clyde began performing as a duo, eventually recording "Yesterday's Gone" in July 1963 in a session at Abbey Road Studios produced and arranged by John Barry, who had discovered Chad & Jeremy at a London club and signed them to Ember Records, a newly formed independent label in which Barry was a partner.[1]

According to Chad Stuart, John Barry was unhappy with the duo's first attempts to record their vocal for "Yesterday's Gone": "he told us...we sounded like a locker room full of football players...in the end in desperation he said: 'Whisper it', so we kind of backed off a bit and so that sort of slightly sotto voce sound came about".[2]

Chart performance[edit]

"Yesterday's Gone" was the British duo's only UK hit.[3] Released 27 September 1963, "Yesterday's Gone" entered the UK top 50 on the chart dated 30 November 1963 and remained on the chart for seven weeks and peaked at No. 37. The follow-up single "Like I Love You Today" was released in January 1964 with no evident reaction. Chad Stuart would recall: "There was just no way a little independent label could compete in those days...John Barry bought himself out of his contract and we were stuck. I think we would've broken up then and there except for the fact that Noel Rogers, who published 'Yesterday's Gone' fenced it off to this other company in America called World Artists".[4] Stuart is referring to the Pittsburgh-based World Artists Records which released "Yesterday's Gone" in the US in March 1964 after label president Lou Guarino heard the single while visiting Great Britain in search of local tracks which World Artists might profitably release, the "British Invasion" of the US music scene then being in full swing.[5]

It rose to No. 21 on the Billboard Hot 100 in July 1964, the first of eleven singles to chart in America.[6] Chad & Jeremy would subsequently place three singles in the US top 20, but only their one top ten hit, "A Summer Song", rivals "Yesterday's Gone" as the duo's signature song.[7]

The American success of "Yesterday's Gone" occasioned a re-release of the track in Australia,[8] where it charted over the summer of 1964 with a No. 26 peak, and a major label cover in the UK, where in March 1964 Pye Records released a version of "Yesterday's Gone" recorded by the Overlanders with Tony Hatch producing; the Overlanders' version did not chart in the UK but was picked up by Hickory Records for US release in May 1964 and became a regional hit reaching No. 75 that July, marking the only Billboard Hot 100 appearance of the Overlanders which preceded that group's sole charting in their native UK (with the No. 1 "Michelle") by almost two years.[9]

Chart history[edit]

Chart (1963-64) Peak
position
Australia 26
Canada (CHUM Hit Parade)[10] 23
Canada RPM Adult Contemporary[11] 19
UK Singles (OCC)[12] 37
U.S. Billboard Hot 100[13] 21
U.S. Record World 27
U.S. Cash Box Top 100 28

Cover version[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b "Chad & Jeremy Official Site". Retrieved 7 April 2010.
  2. ^ Stuart, Chad (October 18, 2010). "Steel Pier Radio Show" (Interview). Interviewed by Ed Hurst. WBIG (AM).
  3. ^ "UK Official Charts". Official Charts Company. 2019. Retrieved 31 January 2019.
  4. ^ "Interview with Chad Stuart". Classicbands.com. Retrieved 6 June 2014.
  5. ^ The Pittsburgh Press 21 November 1972 Record Businesses Spinning Here p. 38
  6. ^ "Hot 100: Chad & Jeremy". Billboard. 2018. Retrieved 6 December 2018.
  7. ^ Perrone, James E. (2009). Mods, Rockers & the Music of the British Invasion. Westport CT: Praeger Publishers. pp. 152, 153. ISBN 978-0-275-99860-8.
  8. ^ Billboard: 6 June 1964 (vol. 76, No. 23), p.29
  9. ^ "Pye Records Discography". Globaldogproductions.info. Retrieved 7 April 2010.
  10. ^ CHUM Hit Parade, July 6, 1964
  11. ^ "Item Display - RPM - Library and Archives Canada". Collectionscanada.gc.ca. 1965-01-11. Retrieved 2021-01-18.
  12. ^ "Official Charts Company". Officialcharts.com. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |url= (help)
  13. ^ Joel Whitburn's Top Pop Singles 1955–1990 - ISBN 0-89820-089-X

External links[edit]