"There! I've Said It Again" | |
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Single by Vaughn Monroe and his Orchestra | |
B-side | "Rum and Coca-Cola" |
Published | December 18, 1941[1] | by Radio Tunes, Inc., New York
Released | February 1945 |
Recorded | December 21, 1944[2] |
Genre | Popular music |
Length | 3:05 |
Label | Victor 20-1637 |
Songwriter(s) | Redd Evans, David Mann |
"There! I've Said It Again" | ||||
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Single by Bobby Vinton | ||||
from the album There! I've Said It Again | ||||
B-side | "The Girl with the Bow in Her Hair" | |||
Released | November 7, 1963 | |||
Recorded | September 5, 1963[3] | |||
Genre | Pop[4] | |||
Length | 2:23 | |||
Label | Epic | |||
Producer(s) | Bob Morgan | |||
Bobby Vinton singles chronology | ||||
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"There! I've Said It Again" is a popular song written and published by Redd Evans and David Mann in 1941. In early 1945, Vaughn Monroe and his Orchestra released Victor 20-1637, which reached the number one position on the Billboard's National Radio Airplay chart for five straight weeks, then no.2 for six more weeks, and a total run of 29 weeks.[5] It finished 1945 as the no. 4 record of the year.[6]
The received-wisdom history of pop music is that things were shitty before the Beatles showed up...when you listen to the last #1 of the pre-Beatles era ["There! I've Said It Again"], it gets harder to argue with that whole narrative.