You Don't Know What You've Got Explained

You Don't Know What You've Got (Until You Lose It)
Cover:You_Don't_Know_What_You've_Got_(Ral_Donner)_(1961_single).jpg
Type:single
Artist:Ral Donner
Album:Takin' Care of Business
B-Side:So Close to Heaven
Released:1961
Length:2:10
Label:Gone
Producer:George Goldner
Prev Title:The Girl of My Best Friend
Prev Year:1961
Next Title:Please Don't Go
Next Year:1961

"You Don't Know What You've Got (Until You Lose It)" is a 1961 single by Ral Donner. It was his biggest hit, peaking at number four on the Billboard Hot 100.[1] and at #25 on the UK charts. The song also appears on Donner's 1961 album Takin' Care of Business.

The song was written by Paul Hampton and George Burton and released by Gone Records.[2] It debuted on the Billboard Hot 100 chart for the week of July 16, 1961, at spot 83. It continued to rise on the chart for the next eight weeks, peaking at number 4 for the week of September 10, 1961 (during the reign of Michael by The Highwaymen at number 1).[3] It dropped off the chart after a 12-week run.[4]

Donner's Elvis Presley-like vocals caused many to think the song was by Elvis.[5] [6] According to a 1979 interview with Donner, the song was recorded in Florida and was intended for recording by a girl group, but Ral and his colleagues liked the demo they heard of the song and decided to record it.[7]

Chart performance

Chart (1961)Peak
position
Canada CHUM Chart[8] 10
U.S. Billboard Hot 1004
U.S. Cash Box Top 100 Singles[9] 10

Notes and References

  1. Allmusic
  2. https://books.google.com/books?id=GxYiAwAAQBAJ&pg=PA421 Rock Song Index: The 7500 Most Important Songs for the Rock and Roll Era
  3. https://books.google.com/books?id=2CAEAAAAMBAJ Billboard Hot 100
  4. Poore, Billy. Rockabilly: A Forty-year Journey, p. 132 (1998)
  5. Osborne, Jerry (9 January 1990). Elvis had imitators even then, Milwaukee Journal
  6. Popson, Tom (26 May 1989). Indie Lps: Remembering Ral Donner, Exploring The World Of Rev. Wirtz, Chicago Tribune ("if you didn`t know who was singing, you might swear it was Elvis.")
  7. Lay, Rip (November 1979). A Conversation With Ral Donner, Goldmine
  8. Web site: CHUM Hit Parade - August 21, 1961.
  9. Cash Box Top 100, Week ending September 9, 1961. Cash Box. July 19, 2014.