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As Chad & Jill, they performed the Chad & Jeremy songs "I Don't Want to Lose You Baby" and "Funny How Love Can Be" on the television show Shindig! in September. [23] In late November, Columbia arranged for Chad & Jill to sing on television again, this time a rendition of the folk music standard "The Cruel War" on Hullabaloo .
The song was written in 1962 by Chad Stuart, who comprised Chad & Jeremy with Jeremy Clyde; it is the first song Stuart wrote.Stuart shares the song's writing credit with Wendy Kidd, the manager of a band Stuart belonged to at the time of the song's writing.
Yesterday's Gone: The Complete Ember & World Artists Recordings is a complete collection of all of Chad & Jeremy's music from the early years of their career, 1963 and 1964. It contains all of their recordings for Ember Records in the UK and World Artists Records in the US.
It should only contain pages that are Chad & Jeremy songs or lists of Chad & Jeremy songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Chad & Jeremy songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
"Before and After" is a 1965 hit single by Chad & Jeremy. It was the duo's label debut on Columbia Records, released after Columbia acquired rights to all of the duo's post-January 1, 1965 recordings. [1] The song was written by Van McCoy, then a staff writer for Columbia's publishing arm April Blackwood Music.
David Stuart Chadwick (10 December 1941 – 20 December 2020), better known by his stage name Chad Stuart, was an English musician. He was one half of the duo Chad & Jeremy. Stuart has writing credits on four of the 11 Chad & Jeremy songs which entered the U.S. Hot 100.
"Distant Shores was a milestone in Chad & Jeremy history because the title track (and two others) were recorded on the West Coast. This was an important development because we were finally able to track our recordings (build them layer by layer) and work with a producer with whom we had a strong rapport, namely Larry Marks, a fellow song writer and creative spirit," Chad Stuart recalls.
"Yesterday's Gone" (song), a 1963 single by Chad & Jeremy "Yesterday's Gone", a song on the 1974 album I Came to Hear the Music by Mickey Newbury "Yesterday's Gone", a 1977 single by Vern Gosdin