| "Any Old Time (You`re Lonely and Sad)" | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Single by The Foundations | ||||
| B-side | "We Are Happy People" | |||
| Released | 1968 | |||
| Genre | Pop | |||
| Label | ||||
| Songwriter(s) | ||||
| Producer(s) | Tony Macaulay | |||
| The Foundations singles chronology | ||||
| ||||
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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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1968 single by The Foundations
"Any Old Time (You`re Lonely and Sad)" was the third single by the Foundations. It reached number 48 on the UK Singles Chart.[1] It was the last single they released with Clem Curtis as their lead singer. Their next single with lead singer Colin Young would give them a bigger hit with "Build Me Up Buttercup".
The B side "We Are Happy People", which was composed by Foundations trombone player Eric Allandale, was a top 10 hit in Scandinavia for Swedish group Slam Creepers’.[2]
The Foundations would re-record the song in stereo and with Colin Young on vocals instead of Clem Curtis. This appeared on their 1968 LP released on Marble Arch MALS 1157.[3] Clem Curtis and Alan Warner re-recorded the song in the 1980s as Clem Curtis and the Foundations.[4]
| Chart (1968) | Peak position |
|---|---|
| Argentina (Escalera a la Fama)[5] | 7 |
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1968 single by The Foundations
"Any Old Time (You`re Lonely and Sad)" was the third single by the Foundations. It reached number 48 on the UK Singles Chart.[1] It was the last single they released with Clem Curtis as their lead singer. Their next single with lead singer Colin Young would give them a bigger hit with "Build Me Up Buttercup".
The B side "We Are Happy People", which was composed by Foundations trombone player Eric Allandale, was a top 10 hit in Scandinavia for Swedish group Slam Creepers’.[2]
The Foundations would re-record the song in stereo and with Colin Young on vocals instead of Clem Curtis. This appeared on their 1968 LP released on Marble Arch MALS 1157.[3] Clem Curtis and Alan Warner re-recorded the song in the 1980s as Clem Curtis and the Foundations.[4]
| Chart (1968) | Peak position |
|---|---|
| Argentina (Escalera a la Fama)[5] | 7 |