Friday, April 29, 2011
May 1, 2011 - Connie Stevens - "Sixteen Reasons"
Here's another of the dozens of hits Don Graham worked on -
I think Connie owes him a few bucks!
Sixteen Reasons (Why I Love You) is a song written by Bill and Doree Post which in 1960 reached #3 via a recording by Connie Stevens. The composers: Bill and Doree Post, were a husband-and-wife team from Kansas who had several single releases on Crest Records but their own version of "Sixteen Reasons" was not released until 1963: Doree Post was then deceased having been claimed by stomach cancer on 24 July 1961. Stevens' single - arrangement and accompaniment by Don Ralke was issued in December 1959 with the Robert Allen composition "Little Sister" being the intended A-side - another version of the last-named song by Cathy Carr was issued as a single at the same time - but it was as "Sixteen Reasons" that Stevens' single debuted at #89 on the Billboard Hot 100 dated 1 February 1960, to reach #3 on the chart dated 9 May 1960. "Sixteen Reasons" also afforded Stevens' a hit in the UK over the spring and summer of 1960 despite at least three cover versions by British singers, specifically Sheila Buxton, Shani Wallis and Marion Ryan. After reaching #9 - its overall UK peak - in May 1960[, Stevens' single re-entered the top 20 at #17 that June, spending 12 weeks on the chart in all. Total sales for Connie Stevens' "Sixteen Reasons" single are estimated at two million units. The sheet music for the song was also a bestseller in both the US and the UK. "Sixteen Reasons" was a popular song on the American Forces Network in Germany that summer. A recounting of sixteen reasons for being in love, beginning "The way you hold my hand", "Sixteen Reasons" was Stevens' second Top 40 hit, the precedent being a duet with "77 Sunset Strip" co-star Edd Byrnes: '"Kookie, Kookie (Lend Me Your Comb)'", a novelty spoken word number which reached #4. Stevens' had her success with "Sixteen Reasons" despite her label Warner Bros. handicapping her promotion of the single: as the song was not published by MPHC the label refused to allow Stevens to perform the song on Hawaiian Eye and also prevented her from singing it on The Ed Sullivan Show. Although Stevens' would continue to record for Warner Bros until 1972 - with a brief tenure at MGM Records in 1968 - none of her singles subsequent to "Sixteen Reasons" would reach the Top 40; her last appearance on the Billboard Hot 100 would be in 1965. Professionally Stevens has downplayed her identity as the singer of a "golden oldie", stating in 2005: "I never did 'Sixteen Reasons' in my stage act. It was really a kids' song aimed at 12-year-old girls. It would be a little silly for me to do it now." CONNIE STEVENS - "Sixteen Reasons"
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The history of Top Forty radio and Music Surveys on hit radio stations.