A Guy Is a Guy explained

A Guy Is a Guy
Published:1952
A Guy Is a Guy
Type:single
Artist:Doris Day
B-Side:Who Who Who
Released:March 7, 1952
Recorded:1952
Genre:Traditional pop
Length:2:40
Label:Columbia
Prev Title:Domino
Prev Year:1951
Next Title:Sugarbush
Next Year:1952

"A Guy Is a Guy" is a popular song written by Oscar Brand. It was published in 1952.

The song is reputed to have originated in a British song, "I Went to the Alehouse (A Knave Is a Knave)," dating from 1719. During World War II, soldiers sang a bawdy song based on "A Knave Is a Knave," entitled "A Gob Is a Slob," a seduced-and-abandoned lyric recorded in Vol.2 of Oscar Brand's "Bawdy Songs and Backroom Ballads" collections released in the 1940s and '50s.[1]

"A Guy Is a Guy," a hit for Doris Day in 1952, is less bedroom-explicit. It was recorded on February 7, 1952, and released by Columbia Records as catalog number 39673. The song quotes Wagner's "Bridal Chorus" and Mendelssohn's "Wedding March", both played on a pipe organ. The flip side was "Who Who Who". The song first entered the Billboard Best-Selling Records chart on March 7, 1952, and lasted 19 weeks, peaking at #4 on the chart.[2] (According to some sources,[3] the song reached #1 on the chart "Most Played in Juke Box".)

The song was also recorded by Ella Fitzgerald in 1951, and by Australian singer June Miller, with Les Welch and his orchestra, in May 1952, although Doris Day's version was actually #1 on the Australian charts.

Yvette Giraud recorded a French version called “Un homme est un homme”.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Oscar Brand - Bawdy Songs and Backroom Ballads Vol. 2 . . 1956 .
  2. Book: Whitburn , Joel . Joel Whitburn . Top Pop Records 1940-1955 . Record Research . Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin . 1973 .
  3. Book: Lonergan, David. Hit Records 1950-1975. Scarecrow Press. Lanham, Maryland. 2004-01-28. 978-0-8108-5129-0 .