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Speedy Gonzales (song)
1961 popular music song From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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"Speedy Gonzales" is a 1961 song by David Hess (RCA 8056),[1] who recorded it under the name David Dante, about Speedy Gonzales, "the fastest mouse in all Mexico". It was written by Buddy Kaye, Ethel Lee and Dante/Hess. The David Dante original version briefly entered the U.S. Music Vendor chart in April 1961.
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Pat Boone version
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The song was popularized in the United States as a 1962 single by Pat Boone.[2] The Boone version peaked at the No. 6 Billboard Hot 100 position in 1962 during a total chart run of 13 weeks, doing better in many national charts in Europe, where it sold a million copies.[3] The female voice ("La-la-la...") on this song was of Robin Ward.[3] It also incorporated Mel Blanc voicing Speedy Gonzales as he did in the Warner Brothers cartoons.
Dante's version details a demand from a girl named Consuela to Speedy to stop roving about and take care of his neglected household. Boone's song adds a spoken introduction stating that he was wandering between some old adobe haciendas on a moonlit night in Mexico, where he heard the voice of a Mexican girl calling to Speedy, and Mel Blanc's inserts replace a recurring line from Dante's lyrics.
Warner Bros. Pictures sued Boone and Dot Records for $850,000 over Blanc's performance of Speedy's voice on Boone's record without their authorization. The case was later dropped.
Charts
Pat Boone version
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Kumbia All Starz version
"Speedy Gonzales" by A.B. Quintanilla y Los Kumbia All Starz is the third single from the album Ayer Fue Kumbia Kings, Hoy Es Kumbia All Starz. The song was covered in Spanish.
Personnel
- Written by Buddy Kaye, David Hess, and Ethel Lee
- Produced by A.B. Quintanilla III
- Lead vocals by Pee Wee
- Background vocals by Roque Morales and Memo Morales
- Intro by A.B. Quintanilla III
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Other versions
English-language versions
- In 1965, Soupy Sales recorded the song on his album "Soupy Sales Sez Do The Mouse"
- Recorded in English, but with a Cantonese spoken section: "墨西哥女郎" ("Mexican Girl") by The Fabulous Echoes featuring Tang Kei Chan (鄧寄塵) (Hong Kong, 1965)
- In 1969, the song was recorded by the Hep Stars and became their last single[17]
- In 1973, the song was recorded by the Navajo Sundowners on their album "Navajo Sundowners, Volume 3, and re-released in 1974 on Volume 8.[18][19]
- Recorded by The Wurzels on their 1975 album The Wurzels Are Scrumptious and later featured as a B-Side to their single Give Me England in 1977.
- In 1977, Charo and the Salsoul Orchestra included the song on the album Cuchi Cuchi
- In 1980, Lena Zavaroni included the song on her album Songs Are Such Good Things
- In 2002, the Belgian band Swoop had a hit with their version.
- In 2014, the Ubisoft-based band Los Pimientos Locos recorded this song for the game Just Dance 2015.
Other-language versions
- In Spanish: Manolo Muñoz, The Sacados
- In Spanish: Klasse (Venezuelan band) (1987)[20]
- In German ("Kleiner Gonzales"): Rex Gildo, Caterina Valente with her brother Silvio Francesco, Dalida, and Lou van Burg
- In French ("Le Petit Gonzales"): Danyel Gérard, Dalida, Jean Chabrier and Pierre Lalonde
- In Serbo-Croatian ("Mali Gonzales"): Dušan Jakšić (1963)
- In Italian: Johnny Dorelli, Peppino Di Capri, Catullo e gli Enigmisti (Nuova Enigmistica Tascabile, N. 424) (1962)
- In Greek: "Kakosalesi" by Yannis Miliokas (1986)
- In Norwegian: "Fisking i Valdres" (Fishing in Valdres) by Viggo Sandvik (1988)
- In Hungarian: János Koós
- In Korean: 바람둥이 아가씨 by The Key Boys (1964)
- In Estonian: "Viimane vaatus" ("Last act") by Anne Veski (1983)
- In Czech: "Speedy Gonzales" Hana Ulrychová (1971)
- In Finnish: "Hiiri Gonzales" by Erkki Liikanen (1962)
See also
- Crocodile Rock (a song by Elton John with a similar chorus)
- Blue Jeans (a song recorded in 1996 by German eurodance group Squeezer with a similar chorus)
- Putin khuilo! (a Russian/Ukrainian football chant, as assumed by Artemy Troitsky,[21] inspired by "Speedy Gonzales" chorus)
References
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