Scoubidou (song) explained

Scoubidou
Artist:Sacha Distel
Recorded:1958
Composer:Abel Meeropol

Scoubidou is the title of a French song, translated from the American "Apples, Peaches and Cherries" composed by Abel Meeropol[1] which was a hit when recorded by Peggy Lee in the United States. The song was originally written and recorded in English.

The French version was sung by Sacha Distel, and it was his first hit song, becoming number one in France. Abel Meeropol filed a copyright infringement suit against Distel, as originally he did not arrange for payment of royalties to the songwriter. After the suit was settled, royalties from the French version of the song continued to provide income to Michael and Robert Meeropol, the adopted sons of Meeropol and his wife Anne. The boys were the orphaned sons of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, Americans who were convicted and executed for treason as spies for the Soviet Union.[2]

The Distel lyrics that correspond to the English title are "des pommes, des poires, et des Scoubidous", or "apples, pears, and scoubidous".[3] Coined for the song as a nonce word, the term scoubidou was soon applied to a form of knotted handicraft.

Notes and References

  1. Book: Distel . Sacha . Sacha Distel. Allan . Lewis. Lewis Allan. Scoubidou. 1959 . 499093809.
  2. Book: Meeropol, Robert. An Execution in the family. One Son's Journey . registration . 2003. St. Martin's Griffin. 978-0-312-30637-3 . 51647500 . 47–48.
  3. Web site: RFI - Chanson française - La disparition de Sacha Distel. 1.rfi.fr. fr-fr. 2018-04-06.