One Fine Day When This Life Is Over I Will Seen Hime Again

"One Fine Day"
One Fine Day by the Chiffons (US vinyl, side A).png

Side A of the U.s. single

Single by The Chiffons
from the album One Fine Day
B-side "Why Am I Then Shy"
Released May 1963
Recorded 1963
Genre Pop
Length 2:07
Characterization Laurie Records
Songwriter(s) Carole King, Gerry Goffin
Producer(due south) The Tokens
The Chiffons singles chronology
"Lucky Me"
(1963)
"I Fine Day"
(1963)
"A Love So Fine"
(1963)

"One Fine Mean solar day" is a song written by Gerry Goffin and Carole King. It showtime became a popular hit in the summertime of 1963 for the American girl group The Chiffons, who reached the top five on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. In 1980, Male monarch covered information technology herself and charted at #12 on the Hot 100 with her version, becoming her last Top 40 striking. The song has subsequently been covered by numerous artists over the years.

The Chiffons version [edit]

Groundwork [edit]

Goffin and King were inspired past the title of the aria "Un bel di vedremo" from the Puccini opera Madama Butterfly. Intended for Fiddling Eva, "One Fine Twenty-four hour period" was prepped as a demo by Goffin and King with King providing a guide vocal merely – despite a propulsive piano riff courtesy of Male monarch – Goffin and Male monarch were unable to construct a viable arrangement and eventually gave upwards, passing the vocal to The Tokens who had recently produced the #one hit "He's So Fine" past The Chiffons for whom it was thought another "fine" song had hitting potential. The piano work by King (whose vocal was erased) was retained for The Chiffons' recording and King attended the session at which The Chiffons recorded their vocals. Still the Tokens radically re-worked the Goffin/King demo of "One Fine Solar day" for The Chiffons' version; Gerry Goffin commented that the Tokens "actually earned their production credit". The personnel on the original recording included Carl Lynch and Charles Marcy on guitar, Dick Romoff on bass, Artie Kaplan, Sid Jekowsky, and Joe Grimaldi on sax, and Gary Chester and Buddy Saltzman on drums.[ane] [2]

Reception [edit]

"One Fine Day" past The Chiffons reached #5 on the Billboard Hot 100: its R&B chart peak was #half dozen. The single was an international hit charting in the UK (#29),[3] France (#eighteen),[iv] and New Zealand (#vi).[v] The Chiffons' "Ane Fine Twenty-four hour period" was ranked #460 on Rolling Stone Mag 's list of The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.[6]

Cash Box described it every bit "a sizzling, rock-a-twist'er...that the femmes and their ork support belt in ultra-commercial style" with "infectious keyboard work."[7]

The Chiffons' placing two "fine" songs in the Peak Ten motivated The Tokens to particularly prep the group'south side by side unmarried "A Dear And then Fine" which only managed a #40 peak.

Billboard named the vocal #27 on their list of 100 Greatest Girl Grouping Songs of All Time.[8]

Soundtracks [edit]

The Chiffons' version has fabricated numerous soundtrack appearances including: Fingers (1978), The Hollywood Knights (1980), The Flamingo Kid (1984), Desperately Seeking Susan (the track's archetype piano riff opens the moving picture) (1985), A Night in the Life of Jimmy Reardon (1988), The Joy Luck Society (1993), the 1996 film 1 Fine Mean solar day, Riding in Cars with Boys (2001), The Wedding Engagement (2005), And When Did You Terminal See Your Begetter? (2007) and Flipped (2010). The vocal is also featured in The Simpsons episode "Bart the Murderer" [ix] and at the conclusion of the Pen15 episode "Opening Night" (2020).[10]

Carole King version [edit]

"Ane Fine 24-hour interval"
Single by Carole King
from the album Pearls: Songs of Goffin and King
B-side "The Rulers of the World"
Released May 19, 1980
Genre Pop
Length 2:thirty
Label Capitol
Songwriter(due south) Carole King, Gerry Goffin
Producer(due south) Carole Rex, Marker Hallman
Carole King singles chronology
"Time Gone By"
(1979)
"Ane Fine 24-hour interval"
(1980)
"Oh No Not My Infant"
(1980)

Background [edit]

Carole King had the only major hit remake of her own composition when she recorded "1 Fine Day" for her studio anthology Pearls: Songs of Goffin and Male monarch which mostly comprised King's renditions of pop music she had co-written with Gerry Goffin.

Reception [edit]

Prior to the song's official release, Billboard described the backing instruments equally "hot and tight" just said that King's phonation was besides mature to be "conceivable" in expressing the youthful sentiment of the song.[11] King'due south version of "I Fine Day" reached #12 on the Billboard Hot 100 in the summer of 1980. Her cover of "I Fine Day" was ranked at #73 on Billboard's list of the top 100 hits of 1980;.[12] The single besides reached #nineteen on the Cashbox nautical chart. Despite the single'due south success, it has not been included on King's "best of" compilations.

Other versions [edit]

  • The French-language rendering of "1 Fine Day", "Un beau jour" was a 1963 single release for Jacky Moulière (fr) condign his most successful unmarried with a superlative of #20 on the striking parade for French republic. The rail was also included on Moulière's 1964 cocky-titled album release.
  • Jimmy Fontana ("Una Sola" Italian: anthology Jimmy Fontana 1963).
  • The Fouryo's (nl) ("Op Een Dag" Dutch 1963).
  • The Mindbenders cut a version of "I Fine Twenty-four hour period" which served as the B-side of their #28 U.k. hit "Can't Live with You (Can't Alive Without You)" (1966).
  • Cliff Richard on album Don't Stop Me Now! (1967).
  • In 1967 Ken Sparkes, and then a dee jay at 3AK Radio in Melbourne, recorded a version of "One Fine Twenty-four hours" which that March reached the Melbourne hitting parade at #49, ranking at #86 on the chart for Australia.
  • Doris on anthology Svenssons Doris! (1969).
  • Helena Vondráčková ("První krásný den" Czech 1970).
  • Bo Donaldson and the Heywoods on album Special Someone (1972).
  • David Lasley in 1973.[13]
  • The Carpenters on album Now and Then (1973).
  • The first remake of "One Fine Day" to nautical chart in the US was that by veteran cabaret singer Julie Budd whose disco version – credited to Julie – reached #93 in 1976; Budd's only charting track, "Ane Fine Day" was produced by top '60s producer Herb Bernstein. The version of "One Fine 24-hour interval" by Julie Budd is featured in the film The Commuter (1978).
  • "One Fine 24-hour interval" next charted in the fall of 1979 for Rita Coolidge whose version, prominently featuring Michael McDonald, reached #66 on the Billboard Hot 100 and #15 on Billboard'due south Easy Listening nautical chart. Coolidge's version of "One Fine Twenty-four hour period" also reached #68 in Australia.
  • Susie Allanson on album Heart to Heart (1979).
  • Kids Incorporated covered the song in 1985 in the Season 2 episode "No Rhyme or Reason".[xiv] Kids Incorporated covered "Ane Fine Day" again in 1987 in the Flavor 4 episode "Win A Date With Renee".[15]
  • The Nylons on anthology 4 On the Floor - Alive in Concert (1991).
  • Even in Blackouts on album Zeitgeit's Echo (2005).
  • "One Fine 24-hour interval" served as title cut for a 2005 release by Sandy Posey on which she returned to the countrypolitan sound of her own 1960s successes via covers of archetype popular hits.
  • Natalie Merchant did an acoustic-way remake of the Chiffons' hit for the 1996 film One Fine 24-hour interval. The romcom featured her song as its theme.
  • S Club Juniors on album Together (2002).
  • Liane Carroll on album Boring Downwards (2007).
  • Rachael MacFarlane on album Hayley Sings (2012).
  • Bette Midler on album Information technology'due south the Girls! (2014).
  • The Mountain Goats.
  • Aaron Neville.[16]
  • Darren Criss recorded a version of the song to gloat the 4th production of Elsie Fest (2018).

References [edit]

  1. ^ 024363 - Ane FINE Mean solar day - CHIFFONS THE. AFM SAG-AFTRA Fund. Intellectual Propterty Rights Distribution Fund. Sound Recording Division, Performing Artists
  2. ^ Emerson, Ken (2005). Always Magic in the Air: The Bomp and Brilliance of the Brill Building Era . New York, New York: Viking. p. 190. ISBN0-670-03456-8.
  3. ^ https://www.officialcharts.com/search/singles/Tell%20Me%20When
  4. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2014-02-17. Retrieved 2015-x-22 . {{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived re-create as title (link)
  5. ^ "flavour of new zealand - search lever". Flavourofnz.co.nz . Retrieved 2016-08-nineteen .
  6. ^ "The RS 500 Greatest Songs of All Time". RollingStone.com. Retrieved 2009-06-03 . [ dead link ]
  7. ^ "CashBox Record Reviews" (PDF). Cash Box. May 25, 1963. p. x. Retrieved 2022-01-12 .
  8. ^ "100 Greatest Daughter Group Songs of All Fourth dimension: Critics' Picks". Billboard. Retrieved July 11, 2017.
  9. ^ "The Chiffons : Soundtrack". IMDb.com . Retrieved 2016-08-19 .
  10. ^ "Pen15 (TV Series) "Opening Night" (2020) Soundtracks". IMDb.com . Retrieved 2020-11-21 .
  11. ^ "Review: Carole Rex — I Fine Day" (PDF). Billboard. Vol. 85, no. 19. ten May 1980. p. 79. ISSN 0006-2510. Retrieved 31 May 2020 – via American Radio History.
  12. ^ "Elevation 100 Hits of 1980/Top 100 Songs of 1980". Musicoutfitters.com . Retrieved 2016-08-19 .
  13. ^ Top Single Picks. Billboard Magazine. August 18, 1973.
  14. ^ Kids Incorporated - One Fine Day (1985)
  15. ^ Kids Incorporated - One Fine Twenty-four hours (1987)
  16. ^ "Cover versions of I Fine 24-hour interval written by Carole King,Gerry Goffin". SecondHandSongs.com . Retrieved 2016-08-nineteen .

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/One_Fine_Day_(song)

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