Monday 11 July 2016

Mungo Jerry - In the Summertime


July, Monday, Summertime, time for Tune Of The Day to take some holiday. So no ”Record Of The Week” today or for the upcoming weeks. As it’s time to take some rest, spend some quality time with the family, do some travel between the works I obligated to do during this summer and I will have some time to go thru some dusty records and hopefully find some new ones.



Yes I will be back in a few weeks, so hang out, for the autumn will be full speed with the new charged batteries and a lot of great music to listen to, the pile of new records is huge already (:

So today’s tune will be a classic Summer tune by the British rock band MUNGO JERRY.

"In the Summertime" is the debut single by MUNGO JERRY. Written and composed by its lead singer, Ray Dorset, it celebrates the carefree days of summer. In 1970 it reached number one in charts around the world, including seven weeks in the UK Singles Chart, two weeks in one of the Canadian charts, and number three on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart in the US. It is considered one of the best-selling singles of all time with an estimated 30 million copies sold.

The song took Dorset only ten minutes to write and compose, which he did using a second-hand Fender Stratocaster while he was taking time off work from his regular job, working in a lab for Timex. The song's lyric "have a drink, have a drive, go out and see what you can find" led to the song's somewhat ironic use in a UK advert for the campaign Drinking and Driving Wrecks Lives.

The initial UK release was on Dawn Records, a new label launched by Pye. It was unusual in that it was a maxi single, playing at 33-1/3 rpm, whereas singles generally played at 45 rpm. It included an additional song also written and composed by Dorset, "Mighty Man," on the A-side, and a much longer track, the Woody Guthrie song "Dust Pneumonia Blues," on the B-side. As the record was sold in a picture sleeve, also not standard at the time, and only sold at a few pence more than the normal 45 rpm two-track single, it was considered value for money. The small quantities of 45 rpm discs on the Pye record label, with "Mighty Man" on the B-side, and without a picture sleeve, were pressed for use in jukeboxes. These are now rare collectors items.

In 2012 Dorset sued Associated Music International, claiming over £2 million in royalties from the song that he believed had been withheld from him.

In an interview with Gary James, Dorset explained the origin of the "motorcycle" sound towards the end of the song: "I said, 'We'll just get a recording of a motorcycle, stick it on the end of the song and then re-edit the front and then put the front off to the motorcycle so it starts up again.' But I couldn't find a motorcycle. Howard Barry, the engineer had an old, well, it wasn't old then, a Triumph sports car, which he drove past the studio while Barry Marrit was holding the microphone. So, he got the stereo effects from left to right or right to left, whatever. And that was it.”



So have a nice holiday and a great summer, cya soon folks!



More info @

Official Mungo Jerry Web

Listen to ”Mungo Jerry - In the Summertime" on Spotify!





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