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Lucky Lips

"Lucky Lips"
Single by Ruth Brown
B-side "My Heart Is Breaking Over You"
Released 1957
Format 7" single
Recorded September 25, 1956
New York City
Genre R&B, pop
Length 2:07
Label Atlantic 1125
Writer(s) Jerry Leiber, Mike Stoller
Ruth Brown singles chronology
"I Still Love You"
(1957)
"Lucky Lips"
(1957)
"One More Time"
(1957)
"Lucky Lips"
Single by Cliff Richard and The Shadows
B-side "I Wonder"
Released May 1963 (UK)
Format 7" single
Recorded 8 March 1963, EMI Studios, London
Genre Pop music
Length 2:41
Label Columbia (EMI)
Writer(s) Jerry Leiber, Mike Stoller
Producer(s) Norrie Paramor
Cliff Richard and The Shadows singles chronology
"Summer Holiday"
(1962)
"Lucky Lips"
(1963)
"It's All in the Game"
(1963)
"Rote Lippen soll man küssen"
Single by Cliff Richard and The Shadows
B-side "Let's Make A Memory"
Released September 1963 (Germany)
Format 7" single
Recorded 11 August 1963, Abbey Road, London; Vocals dubbed onto original Lucky Lips backing track.
Genre Pop music
Length 2:41
Label Columbia (EMI)
Writer(s) , Mike Stoller
Producer(s) Norrie Paramor
Cliff Richard and The Shadows singles chronology
"It's All in the Game"
(1963)
"Rote Lippen soll man küssen"
(1963)
"Don't Talk to Him"
(1963)
(German chronology)

Lucky Lips is a song written by Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller. It was originally recorded by Ruth Brown in 1957 and was successfully covered by Cliff Richard in 1963.

The song was first recorded by the R&B singer Ruth Brown for Atlantic Records in New York in September 1956, and was released as a single in early 1957. It was her second hit on the US pop chart, after "(Mama) He Treats Your Daughter Mean" in 1953, reaching number 25 on the pop chart and number 6 on the Billboard R&B chart.

The song was covered by the white singer Gale Storm, as the B-side of her single "On Treasure Island", for Dot Records. Storm's recording reached number 77 on the Billboard pop chart. The song was also covered by Dottie Evans for Bell Records. In Britain, it was recorded by Alma Cogan as the B-side of "Whatever Lola Wants", which reached number 26 on the UK singles chart, also in 1957.

In 1963 the song was recorded by Cliff Richard, whose version went to number 4 in the UK. It was more successful internationally, reaching number 1 in Belgium, Denmark, Hong Kong, India, Israel, Netherlands, Norway, South Africa and Sweden. His version with German lyrics reached number 1 in West Germany, Austria and Switzerland.

Richard's German version, titled "Rote Lippen soll man küssen", with lyrics by Hans Bradtke, stayed at number 1 in West Germany for seven weeks and had sold half a million by the end of 1963. The English version also charted in West Germany in its own right before the German version was released.


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Wikipedia

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