My Ding-a-Ling

"My Ding-a-Ling"
Single by Chuck Berry
from the album The London Chuck Berry Sessions
B-side
ReleasedJuly 1972 (1972-07)
RecordedFebruary 3, 1972 at the Lanchester Arts Festival in Coventry, England
Genre
Length4:18 / 11:33 (Full Version)
LabelChess 2131
Songwriter(s)Dave Bartholomew
Producer(s)Esmond Edwards
Chuck Berry singles chronology
"Tulane"
(1970)
"My Ding-a-Ling"
(1972)
"Reelin' and Rockin'"
(1973)

"My Ding-a-Ling" is a novelty song written and recorded by Dave Bartholomew. It was covered by Chuck Berry in 1972 and became his only number-one Billboard Hot 100 single in the United States.[1] Later that year, a longer version was included on the album The London Chuck Berry Sessions. Guitarist Onnie McIntyre and drummer Robbie McIntosh, who later formed the Average White Band, played on the single, along with Nic Potter of Van der Graaf Generator on bass.

"My Ding-a-Ling" was originally recorded by Dave Bartholomew in 1952 for King Records. When Bartholomew moved to Imperial Records, he re-recorded the song under the new title "Little Girl Sing Ting-a-Ling". In 1954, the Bees on Imperial released a version titled "Toy Bell". Doug Clark and the Hot Nuts recorded it in 1961,[2] and it was part of their live act for many years. Berry recorded a version called "My Tambourine" in 1968, but the version that topped the charts was recorded live during the Lanchester Arts Festival at the Locarno ballroom in Coventry, England, on 3 February 1972 by the Pye Mobile Recording Unit, engineered by Alan Perkins, where Berry—backed by the Roy Young Band—topped a bill that also included Slade, George Carlin, Billy Preston and Pink Floyd. Boston radio station WMEX disc jockey Jim Connors was credited with a gold record for discovering the song and pushing it to #1 over the airwaves and amongst his peers in the United States. Billboard ranked it as the No. 15 song for 1972.

The song is based on the melody of the 19th-century folk song "Little Brown Jug". Bartholomew's 1952 version contains a Shave and a Haircut motif.

  1. ^ "Chuck Berry Chart History". Billboard.com. Eldridge Industries. Retrieved January 23, 2018.
  2. ^ "Nuts to You". YouTube. Archived from the original on 2020-06-27.