The song was written in a bathtub in a suite at the Hotel Earle in
Greenwich Village. Fricker wrote it—her first composition—in the bathroom because "it was the only place ... the cockroaches would not go".
It was originally performed by Fricker and her future husband
Ian Tyson as the duo
Ian & Sylvia, and they recorded it in 1963 for their 1964 album on the Vanguard label, Northern Journey. It reached No.33 on the Canadian
CHUM Charts.[3] Ian and Sylvia re-recorded the song in 1972 with their band
Great Speckled Bird, reaching No. 4 on the Canadian easy listening chart.
In 1965, the song was
covered in an up-tempo version, with slightly altered lyrics and melody, by the California pop quintet
We Five. Their recording reached No. 3 on the
Billboard Hot 100 chart in September 1965 and topped the Billboardeasy listening chart for five weeks.[4]Billboard ranked the record as the No. 4 song of 1965.[5] In Canada, this version reached No. 4.[6] The performance by We Five is noteworthy for the gradual buildup in intensity, starting off somewhat flowing and gentle, increasing in intensity in the third stanza and remaining so through the fourth stanza. The fifth and final stanza starts off gently and concludes very intensely, ending with a series of guitar chords.
There was also a version by The Mike Curb Congregation in 1975.
In the United Kingdom,
Crispian St. Peters recorded the song in late 1965, and scored a No. 2 hit with it in 1966.[7] His version was also released in the United States in 1967 and went to No. 36 on the Billboard Hot 100[8] and No. 29 in Canada.[9] It was featured on his album, Follow Me...