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He's So Fine

"He's So Fine" is a song written by Ronnie Mack. It was recorded by The Chiffons who topped the Billboard Hot 100 for four weeks in the spring of 1963. One of the most instantly recognizable golden oldies with its doo-lang doo-lang doo-lang background vocal, "He's So Fine" is also renowned as the plaintiff song in the famous plagiarism case against George Harrison's "My Sweet Lord".

"He's So Fine"
Single by The Chiffons
from the album He's So Fine
B-side"Oh My Lover"
ReleasedJanuary 1963 (US)
February 1963 (CAN)
March 1963 (UK)
April 12, 1963 (AUS)
May 1963 (Germany)
RecordedDecember 1962
GenrePop[1]
Length1:53
LabelLaurie Records
Songwriter(s)Ronald Mack[2]
Producer(s)Phil Margo, Mitch Margo, Jay Siegal, and Hank Medress
The Chiffons singles chronology
"He's So Fine"
(1963)
"Lucky Me"
(1963)

Country music singer Jody Miller scored a top-ten hit of her own in 1971 with her cover of "He's So Fine".

The Chiffons version edit

Background edit

"He's So Fine" was written by Ronald Mack, an acquaintance of the Chiffons' members who set himself up as their manager after overhearing them harmonise in their high school's lunch room. Mack elicited the interest of Bright Tunes Corporation, a production company run by the Tokens, who produced the Chiffons singing "He's So Fine", and two other Mack compositions at Capitol Recording Studios (New York, 165 W. 46th St.)

The Tokens themselves – who had never previously played on a recording session – provided the instrumentation, with the services of drummer Gary Chester.[3]

Originally one of the two other songs: "Oh, My Lover", was considered the potential hit. But the completed track for "He's So Fine" with its now-classic 'Doo-lang doo-lang doo-lang' background vocal – the suggestion of the session's sound engineer Johnny Cue – seemed an obvious smash. However Capitol Records (for whom the Tokens were house producers) rejected the track: Jay Siegal of the Tokens recalled Capitol's president Voyle Gilmore dismissing the track as "too trite...too simple". The Tokens shopped "He's So Fine" to ten labels before placing it with Laurie Records. According to Siegal, "We played it, and they locked the doors and said 'You're not getting out of here. We want that record.'...Of course we'd already been turned down by ten companies. Give us eighty cents and we'd have given you the record."[4][5]

The Chiffons' two later Top 10 hits both contain echoes of "He's So Fine", although neither song was written by Ronald Mack, who died soon after the Chiffons had recorded his song. "One Fine Day" was written by Carole King and Gerry Goffin, and "Sweet Talking Guy" – in which the background vocalists sing "he's so fine" – was co-written by the co-founder of Laurie Records, Eliot Greenberg.

"He's So Fine" by The Chiffons is also featured on the soundtrack album to the 1979 film Quadrophenia by the English band The Who.

Reception edit

Released in early 1963, "He's So Fine" entered the national charts in February 1963 attaining the No. 1 position on March 30 and remaining No. 1 for a four-week period and also made it to number one on the soul singles chart.[6] Billboard ranked the record as the No. 5 song of 1963. "He's So Fine" was also a No. 16 hit in the UK. Billboard named the song No. 73 on their list of 100 Greatest Girl Group Songs of All Time.[7]

Chart performance edit

Chart (1963) Peak
position
Canada (CHUM)[8] 1
New Zealand (Lever Hit Parade)[9] 1
UK Singles (The Official Charts Company)[10] 16
US Billboard Hot 100 1
US Hot R&B Singles (Billboard) 1

All-time charts edit

Chart (1958–2018) Position
US Billboard Hot 100[11] 429

"My Sweet Lord" lawsuit edit

On February 10, 1971, Bright Tunes Music Corporation filed suit alleging the then current George Harrison hit, "My Sweet Lord", was a plagiarism of "He's So Fine". The case did not go to trial until February 1976 when the judge ruled on the liability portion of the suit in favor of Bright Tunes, determining that Harrison had committed "subconscious" plagiarism.[12] The suit to determine damages was scheduled for November 1976 but delayed until February 1981, by which time Allen Klein, Harrison's onetime manager who had been his legal adviser in the first phase of the suit, had become the plaintiff by virtue of purchasing Bright Tunes. The final decision was that Harrison himself would purchase Bright Tunes from Klein for $587,000—the amount Klein had paid for the corporation—and although litigation continued for at least ten more years that decision was upheld.[13] In 1975 the Chiffons would record a version of "My Sweet Lord", attempting to capitalize on the publicity generated by the lawsuit. Harrison's "This Song" was written in reaction to the plagiarism suit.

Jody Miller version edit

"He's So Fine"
Single by Jody Miller
from the album He's So Fine
B-side"Your Number Two"
ReleasedMay 12, 1971
RecordedFebruary 17, 1971
GenreCountrypolitan
Length2:35
LabelEpic Records
Songwriter(s)Ronald Mack
Producer(s)Billy Sherrill
Jody Miller singles chronology
"If You Think I Love You Now (I've Just Started)"
(1970)
"He's So Fine"
(1971)
"Baby I'm Yours"
(1971)

Background edit

Jody Miller had a Top Ten C&W hit with her remake of "He's So Fine" recorded in a February 17, 1971 session at the Columbia studio in Nashville and issued May 12, 1971 as the advance single from Miller's He's So Fine album, that album—released August 1971—being Miller's second full-length collaboration with producer Billy Sherrill. Miller's remake omits the original's 'doo lang' background vocal. Besides the title cut, the He's So Fine album featured Miller's remake of the 1965 Barbara Lewis hit "Baby I'm Yours": Miller's third Sherrill-produced album There's a Party Going On afforded Miller C&W hit remakes of the Ronettes' "Be My Baby" and the Teddy Bears' "To Know Him is to Love Him".

Impressed by the 1968 Tammy Wynette hit "Stand by Your Man", Miller had contacted that track's producer Billy Sherrill in the hopes of reviving her own flagging recording career and after Look at Mine, Miller's first album in Sherrill's charge, generated two Top Twenty C&W hits in 1970, Sherrill opted for a new musical direction for Miller who recalls: "He said I didn't phrase my words like a country singer, so we took some old, sexy pop songs and put in a little boppy steel guitar".[14]

Reception edit

Miller's cover version of "He's So Fine" peaked at No. 5 C&W in July 1971, and crossed over to the Pop charts and also Easy Listening charts with July 1971 peaks of No. 53 Pop and No. 2 Easy Listening, the latter stat representing Miller's alltime best chart showing. The song also peaked at number 28 in Australia.[15] "He's So Fine" also afforded Miller a Top Ten C&W hit in Canada with a No. 3 peak, with the track reaching No. 1 on the Adult Contemporary chart for Canada and crossing over to No. 46 on the Canadian Pop chart.

1978: Jane Olivor / Kristy McNichol remakes edit

In the spring of 1978 two disparate remakes of "He's So Fine" were released as singles with both singles eventually ranking on the Billboard Hot 100. Jane Olivor recorded the song as a ballad for her album Stay the Night, producer Jason Darrow having wanted a "lighter song" for the album: Olivor had been initially unmoved by Darrow's endorsement of a slow version of "He's So Fine" – whose lyrics Olivor found vapid – but the singer saw the validity of her producer's suggestion after Darrow played Olivor the Chiffons' 45 rpm single at 331⁄3 rpm.[16] Released as a single in April 1978, "He's So Fine" debuted on the Hot 100 dated 20 May 1978 becoming the second of Olivor's two Hot 100 entries and with its eventual peak of No. 77 becoming the more successful as Olivor's precedent Hot 100 single "Some Enchanted Evening" had peaked at No. 91 in 1976. (Olivor would "bubble under the Hot 100" chart in 1980 when her single "Don't Let Go of Me" peaked at No. 108.) "He's So Fine" would also afford Olivor her sole ranking on the Billboard Easy Listening chart where its peak would be No. 21, also ranking in the Canadian singles chart with a No. 71 peak and rising as high as No. 3 on the Canadian Easy Listening chart.[17]

May 1978 saw the release of an attempted replication of the original "He's So Fine" credited to Kristy and Jimmy McNichol although the track only featured the former, being credited to the duo to reflect its parent Kristy and Jimmy McNichol album which was produced by Philip Margo and Mitch Margo who – as members of the Tokens – had produced the Chiffons' original: three members of the Chiffons: Patricia Bennett, Barbara Lee, and Sylvia Peterson, sang back-up on the McNichol remake of "He's So Fine." Both the McNichol version of "He's So Fine" and that by Jane Olivor appeared in the Record World ranking of the singles at positions No. 101 to No. 150 as early as the chart dated 20 May 1978 although the McNichol take would not debut on the Record World ranking of the top 100 singles until that dated 5 August 1978 two weeks subsequent to the track's debut on the Billboard Hot 100 dated 22 July 1978 (one week after the final Hot 100 appearance of the Jane Olivor take whose Hot 100 tenure ended as of the chart dated 15 July 1978): on the Cash Box Top 100 the McNichol "He's So Fine" made its debut on the chart dated 30 July 1978. The McNichol "He's So Fine" peaked at No. 70 on the Hot 100. (The chart fortunes of both the Olivor and McNichol takes on "He's So Fine" varied widely, according to which of the three music trade periodicals is cited: Record World affords a peak of No. 87 to both the Oliver and McNichol versions, while according to Cash Box, the Olivor take peaked at No. 67, McNicol's at No. 83).[citation needed]

References edit

  1. ^ Breihan, Tom (May 17, 2018). "The Number Ones: The Chiffons' "He's So Fine"". Stereogum. Retrieved June 10, 2023. In the end, I don't think "He's So Fine" was a masterpiece of girl-group pop. It's sturdy and efficient pop music...
  2. ^ "HE S SO FINE". ACE Title Search. American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers. Retrieved 2011-06-03.[permanent dead link]
  3. ^ "The Official Gary Chester Website – Discography". Angelfire.com. Retrieved 2016-09-27.
  4. ^ . 11 August 2007. Archived from the original on 11 August 2007. Retrieved March 10, 2022.
  5. ^ Artie Wayne. "Hangin' in: Spectropop presents Hank Medress," Spectropop.com, 2006. Retrieved 2012-01-20.
  6. ^ Whitburn, Joel (2004). Top R&B/Hip-Hop Singles: 1942–2004. Record Research. p. 116.
  7. ^ "100 Greatest Girl Group Songs of All Time: Critics' Picks". Billboard. 10 July 2017. Retrieved July 11, 2017.
  8. ^ "CHUM Hit Parade". The chum Tribute Site. March 25, 1963.
  9. ^ "Lever hit parades: 23-May-1963". Flavour of New Zealand.
  10. ^ "He's So Fine". Officialcharts.com. Retrieved November 9, 2021.
  11. ^ "Billboard Hot 100 60th Anniversary Interactive Chart". Billboard. Retrieved 10 December 2018.
  12. ^ "Bright Tunes Music v. Harrisongs Music". Columbia Law School Arthur W. Diamond Law Library Music Plagiarism Project. 2002. Retrieved 2007-09-05.
  13. ^ . Archived from the original on 2008-12-21. Retrieved 2008-11-23.
  14. ^ "Blanchard's Jody Miller Prepares to Hit the Road With Daughter". News.OK.com. Retrieved April 29, 2015.
  15. ^ Kent, David (1993). Australian Chart Book 1970–1992 (illustrated ed.). St Ives, N.S.W.: Australian Chart Book. p. 201. ISBN 0-646-11917-6.
  16. ^ Wendy Fraser. ""You just knew she had heartbreak in her veins" - Jason Darrow recalls his musical partnership with Jane Olivor" (PDF). Janeolivortribute.com. Retrieved March 10, 2022.
  17. ^ "Results: RPM Weekly". Bac-lac.gc.ca. Retrieved March 10, 2022.

External links edit

    fine, song, written, ronnie, mack, recorded, chiffons, topped, billboard, four, weeks, spring, 1963, most, instantly, recognizable, golden, oldies, with, lang, lang, lang, background, vocal, also, renowned, plaintiff, song, famous, plagiarism, case, against, g. He s So Fine is a song written by Ronnie Mack It was recorded by The Chiffons who topped the Billboard Hot 100 for four weeks in the spring of 1963 One of the most instantly recognizable golden oldies with its doo lang doo lang doo lang background vocal He s So Fine is also renowned as the plaintiff song in the famous plagiarism case against George Harrison s My Sweet Lord He s So Fine Single by The Chiffonsfrom the album He s So FineB side Oh My Lover ReleasedJanuary 1963 US February 1963 CAN March 1963 UK April 12 1963 AUS May 1963 Germany RecordedDecember 1962GenrePop 1 Length1 53LabelLaurie RecordsSongwriter s Ronald Mack 2 Producer s Phil Margo Mitch Margo Jay Siegal and Hank MedressThe Chiffons singles chronology He s So Fine 1963 Lucky Me 1963 Country music singer Jody Miller scored a top ten hit of her own in 1971 with her cover of He s So Fine Contents 1 The Chiffons version 1 1 Background 1 2 Reception 1 3 Chart performance 1 3 1 All time charts 1 4 My Sweet Lord lawsuit 2 Jody Miller version 2 1 Background 2 2 Reception 3 1978 Jane Olivor Kristy McNichol remakes 4 References 5 External linksThe Chiffons version editBackground edit He s So Fine was written by Ronald Mack an acquaintance of the Chiffons members who set himself up as their manager after overhearing them harmonise in their high school s lunch room Mack elicited the interest of Bright Tunes Corporation a production company run by the Tokens who produced the Chiffons singing He s So Fine and two other Mack compositions at Capitol Recording Studios New York 165 W 46th St The Tokens themselves who had never previously played on a recording session provided the instrumentation with the services of drummer Gary Chester 3 Originally one of the two other songs Oh My Lover was considered the potential hit But the completed track for He s So Fine with its now classic Doo lang doo lang doo lang background vocal the suggestion of the session s sound engineer Johnny Cue seemed an obvious smash However Capitol Records for whom the Tokens were house producers rejected the track Jay Siegal of the Tokens recalled Capitol s president Voyle Gilmore dismissing the track as too trite too simple The Tokens shopped He s So Fine to ten labels before placing it with Laurie Records According to Siegal We played it and they locked the doors and said You re not getting out of here We want that record Of course we d already been turned down by ten companies Give us eighty cents and we d have given you the record 4 5 The Chiffons two later Top 10 hits both contain echoes of He s So Fine although neither song was written by Ronald Mack who died soon after the Chiffons had recorded his song One Fine Day was written by Carole King and Gerry Goffin and Sweet Talking Guy in which the background vocalists sing he s so fine was co written by the co founder of Laurie Records Eliot Greenberg He s So Fine by The Chiffons is also featured on the soundtrack album to the 1979 film Quadrophenia by the English band The Who Reception edit Released in early 1963 He s So Fine entered the national charts in February 1963 attaining the No 1 position on March 30 and remaining No 1 for a four week period and also made it to number one on the soul singles chart 6 Billboard ranked the record as the No 5 song of 1963 He s So Fine was also a No 16 hit in the UK Billboard named the song No 73 on their list of 100 Greatest Girl Group Songs of All Time 7 Chart performance edit Chart 1963 PeakpositionCanada CHUM 8 1New Zealand Lever Hit Parade 9 1UK Singles The Official Charts Company 10 16US Billboard Hot 100 1US Hot R amp B Singles Billboard 1All time charts edit Chart 1958 2018 PositionUS Billboard Hot 100 11 429 My Sweet Lord lawsuit edit Further information List of songs that have been the subject of plagiarism disputes On February 10 1971 Bright Tunes Music Corporation filed suit alleging the then current George Harrison hit My Sweet Lord was a plagiarism of He s So Fine The case did not go to trial until February 1976 when the judge ruled on the liability portion of the suit in favor of Bright Tunes determining that Harrison had committed subconscious plagiarism 12 The suit to determine damages was scheduled for November 1976 but delayed until February 1981 by which time Allen Klein Harrison s onetime manager who had been his legal adviser in the first phase of the suit had become the plaintiff by virtue of purchasing Bright Tunes The final decision was that Harrison himself would purchase Bright Tunes from Klein for 587 000 the amount Klein had paid for the corporation and although litigation continued for at least ten more years that decision was upheld 13 In 1975 the Chiffons would record a version of My Sweet Lord attempting to capitalize on the publicity generated by the lawsuit Harrison s This Song was written in reaction to the plagiarism suit Jody Miller version edit He s So Fine Single by Jody Millerfrom the album He s So FineB side Your Number Two ReleasedMay 12 1971RecordedFebruary 17 1971GenreCountrypolitanLength2 35LabelEpic RecordsSongwriter s Ronald MackProducer s Billy SherrillJody Miller singles chronology If You Think I Love You Now I ve Just Started 1970 He s So Fine 1971 Baby I m Yours 1971 Background edit Jody Miller had a Top Ten C amp W hit with her remake of He s So Fine recorded in a February 17 1971 session at the Columbia studio in Nashville and issued May 12 1971 as the advance single from Miller s He s So Fine album that album released August 1971 being Miller s second full length collaboration with producer Billy Sherrill Miller s remake omits the original s doo lang background vocal Besides the title cut the He s So Fine album featured Miller s remake of the 1965 Barbara Lewis hit Baby I m Yours Miller s third Sherrill produced album There s a Party Going On afforded Miller C amp W hit remakes of the Ronettes Be My Baby and the Teddy Bears To Know Him is to Love Him Impressed by the 1968 Tammy Wynette hit Stand by Your Man Miller had contacted that track s producer Billy Sherrill in the hopes of reviving her own flagging recording career and after Look at Mine Miller s first album in Sherrill s charge generated two Top Twenty C amp W hits in 1970 Sherrill opted for a new musical direction for Miller who recalls He said I didn t phrase my words like a country singer so we took some old sexy pop songs and put in a little boppy steel guitar 14 Reception edit Miller s cover version of He s So Fine peaked at No 5 C amp W in July 1971 and crossed over to the Pop charts and also Easy Listening charts with July 1971 peaks of No 53 Pop and No 2 Easy Listening the latter stat representing Miller s alltime best chart showing The song also peaked at number 28 in Australia 15 He s So Fine also afforded Miller a Top Ten C amp W hit in Canada with a No 3 peak with the track reaching No 1 on the Adult Contemporary chart for Canada and crossing over to No 46 on the Canadian Pop chart 1978 Jane Olivor Kristy McNichol remakes editIn the spring of 1978 two disparate remakes of He s So Fine were released as singles with both singles eventually ranking on the Billboard Hot 100 Jane Olivor recorded the song as a ballad for her album Stay the Night producer Jason Darrow having wanted a lighter song for the album Olivor had been initially unmoved by Darrow s endorsement of a slow version of He s So Fine whose lyrics Olivor found vapid but the singer saw the validity of her producer s suggestion after Darrow played Olivor the Chiffons 45 rpm single at 331 3 rpm 16 Released as a single in April 1978 He s So Fine debuted on the Hot 100 dated 20 May 1978 becoming the second of Olivor s two Hot 100 entries and with its eventual peak of No 77 becoming the more successful as Olivor s precedent Hot 100 single Some Enchanted Evening had peaked at No 91 in 1976 Olivor would bubble under the Hot 100 chart in 1980 when her single Don t Let Go of Me peaked at No 108 He s So Fine would also afford Olivor her sole ranking on the Billboard Easy Listening chart where its peak would be No 21 also ranking in the Canadian singles chart with a No 71 peak and rising as high as No 3 on the Canadian Easy Listening chart 17 May 1978 saw the release of an attempted replication of the original He s So Fine credited to Kristy and Jimmy McNichol although the track only featured the former being credited to the duo to reflect its parent Kristy and Jimmy McNichol album which was produced by Philip Margo and Mitch Margo who as members of the Tokens had produced the Chiffons original three members of the Chiffons Patricia Bennett Barbara Lee and Sylvia Peterson sang back up on the McNichol remake of He s So Fine Both the McNichol version of He s So Fine and that by Jane Olivor appeared in the Record World ranking of the singles at positions No 101 to No 150 as early as the chart dated 20 May 1978 although the McNichol take would not debut on the Record World ranking of the top 100 singles until that dated 5 August 1978 two weeks subsequent to the track s debut on the Billboard Hot 100 dated 22 July 1978 one week after the final Hot 100 appearance of the Jane Olivor take whose Hot 100 tenure ended as of the chart dated 15 July 1978 on the Cash Box Top 100 the McNichol He s So Fine made its debut on the chart dated 30 July 1978 The McNichol He s So Fine peaked at No 70 on the Hot 100 The chart fortunes of both the Olivor and McNichol takes on He s So Fine varied widely according to which of the three music trade periodicals is cited Record World affords a peak of No 87 to both the Oliver and McNichol versions while according to Cash Box the Olivor take peaked at No 67 McNicol s at No 83 citation needed References edit Breihan Tom May 17 2018 The Number Ones The Chiffons He s So Fine Stereogum Retrieved June 10 2023 In the end I don t think He s So Fine was a masterpiece of girl group pop It s sturdy and efficient pop music HE S SO FINE ACE Title Search American Society of Composers Authors and Publishers Retrieved 2011 06 03 permanent dead link The Official Gary Chester Website Discography Angelfire com Retrieved 2016 09 27 Bob Shannon s Behind The Hits Stories He s So Fine 11 August 2007 Archived from the original on 11 August 2007 Retrieved March 10 2022 Artie Wayne Hangin in Spectropop presents Hank Medress Spectropop com 2006 Retrieved 2012 01 20 Whitburn Joel 2004 Top R amp B Hip Hop Singles 1942 2004 Record Research p 116 100 Greatest Girl Group Songs of All Time Critics Picks Billboard 10 July 2017 Retrieved July 11 2017 CHUM Hit Parade The chum Tribute Site March 25 1963 Lever hit parades 23 May 1963 Flavour of New Zealand He s So Fine Officialcharts com Retrieved November 9 2021 Billboard Hot 100 60th Anniversary Interactive Chart Billboard Retrieved 10 December 2018 Bright Tunes Music v Harrisongs Music Columbia Law School Arthur W Diamond Law Library Music Plagiarism Project 2002 Retrieved 2007 09 05 The My Sweet Lord He s So Fine Plagiarism Suit Archived from the original on 2008 12 21 Retrieved 2008 11 23 Blanchard s Jody Miller Prepares to Hit the Road With Daughter News OK com Retrieved April 29 2015 Kent David 1993 Australian Chart Book 1970 1992 illustrated ed St Ives N S W Australian Chart Book p 201 ISBN 0 646 11917 6 Wendy Fraser You just knew she had heartbreak in her veins Jason Darrow recalls his musical partnership with Jane Olivor PDF Janeolivortribute com Retrieved March 10 2022 Results RPM Weekly Bac lac gc ca Retrieved March 10 2022 External links editBob Shannon s Behind The Hits Stories He s So Fine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title He 27s So Fine amp oldid 1163477216, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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