"Claudette" | ||||
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Single by the Everly Brothers | ||||
B-side | " All I Have to Do is Dream" | |||
Published | March 7, 1958 | |||
Released | April 1958 | |||
Recorded | March 6, 1958 | |||
Studio | RCA Studios, Nashville | |||
Genre | Rock and roll, rockabilly | |||
Length | 2:12 | |||
Label | Cadence | |||
Songwriter(s) | Roy Orbison | |||
Producer(s) | Archie Bleyer | |||
The Everly Brothers singles chronology | ||||
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"Claudette" is a 1958 song which reached number 1 in the UK Singles Chart that year in a recording by the Everly Brothers. [1] It was the first notable success as a songwriter for Roy Orbison, who named it after his first wife. Orbison also recorded his own version of the song. [2] [3] Although originally released as the B-side to the Everly Brothers' number 1 hit " All I Have to Do is Dream", their recording of "Claudette" reached number 30 in its own right, and the two songs were jointly listed at number 1 in the UK. [1] [4]
The song "Claudette" was written by Roy Orbison in the early days of his career, prior to him achieving fame as a singer. Written about his wife of the same name, whom he had married the previous year, the song was recorded by Orbison but unreleased. [5] He cut a demo version at the Sun Studio in Memphis on January 10, 1958, accompanying himself on guitar, in addition to another unreleased version with drums. [6]
Orbison would later record two versions of the song for commercial release: firstly, in a version included on his 1965 MGM album There is Only One Roy Orbison, and then in 1986 for In Dreams: The Greatest Hits, an album composed mostly of re-recordings of his hit songs. [5] [6] "Claudette" was also included as part of his set for Roy Orbison and Friends: A Black and White Night, a Cinemax television special filmed on September 30, 1987, at the Cocoanut Grove in Los Angeles and first broadcast on January 3, 1988. [7] The song was not included in the broadcast due to time constraints, but was on a 1999 re-issue of A Black & White Night Live, an album version of the show. [6]
According to Phil Everly, when the brothers were in Chicago, they asked Orbison if he had a song for them, and he gave them "Claudette". [8] It was recorded by the Everly Brothers on March 6, 1958, at RCA Studios in Nashville, with the backing conducted by Archie Bleyer. [8] [9] [10] The song was originally published by Orbison himself on March 7, 1958, and then by Acuff Rose Music on April 29 that year. [7] Orbison used the royalties from the song to buy himself out of his contract with Sun Records. [11]
The Everly Brothers' manager, Wesley Rose, signed Orbison to Acuff Rose, and became his manager. [3] The song was later performed by the Everly Brothers at their September 23, 1983 concert at the Royal Albert Hall in London, a recording of which was issued on The Everly Brothers Reunion Concert album. [10] [12]
Cadence Records released the Everly Brothers' version of "Claudette" as the B-side to "All I Have to Do is Dream", a song which reached number 1 on the US Billboard chart. "Claudette" reached number 30 in its own right, however, in May 1958, and the two songs were jointly listed at number 1 in the UK's New Musical Express chart, a position the record held for seven weeks, starting in July that year. [1] [4] [13] The Record Mirror also listed both titles at number 1 together, although Melody Maker listed "All I Have to Do is Dream" on its own; [12] [14] Disc magazine did not list "Claudette" at number 1 in its Top Twenty, but did show both sides together at number 1 in the Juke Box Top Ten. [15]
"Claudette" was one of the few UK number 1 singles chart hits from the 1950s not to appear on the sheet music charts, which were broadcast at the time on Radio Luxembourg (the others being the " Let's Have Another Party" medley, " Rose Marie", and " Gamblin' Man"). [14]
In 1997, "Claudette" was released as the lead single from Dwight Yoakam's Under the Covers album, and it made the Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart. [16] Other cover versions include: