"Day After Day" | ||||
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Single by Badfinger | ||||
from the album Straight Up | ||||
B-side | "Money" (US) "Sweet Tuesday Morning" (UK) |
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Released | 10 November 1971 (US) 14 January 1972 (UK) |
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Format | 7" single | |||
Genre | Power pop | |||
Length | 3:02 | |||
Label | Apple | |||
Writer(s) | Pete Ham | |||
Producer(s) | George Harrison | |||
Badfinger singles chronology | ||||
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"Day After Day" is a song recorded by the rock band Badfinger for inclusion on their 1971 album, Straight Up. The song became a Gold record.
The song was written and sung by Pete Ham and produced by George Harrison, who plays some of the slide guitar parts of the song along with Ham. The record also features Leon Russell on piano. As the song was unfinished at the time Harrison left the Badfinger album to produce the Concert for Bangladesh, the final mix was done by Todd Rundgren, who took over Straight Up after Harrison's departure.
Released as a single in the US in November 1971 (January 1972 elsewhere), it would become the group's highest charting single there, peaking at number 4 on the Billboard Pop Singles chart. It also peaked at number 10 on the UK Singles Chart in January 1972. It remains one of the band's best-known songs, most notably for the slide guitar solos. It went Gold in March 1972, becoming the band's first and only gold single. "Day After Day" reached number 10 on Billboard's Easy Listening survey.