“Twilight Time” | ||||
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Single by The Platters | ||||
B-side | “Out of My Mind” | |||
Released | April 1958 | |||
Format | 7″, 10″ | |||
Genre | R&B, traditional pop | |||
Length | 2:47 | |||
Label | Mercury Records 71289 | |||
Songwriter(s) | Buck Ram, Morty Nevins, Al Nevins, Artie Dunn | |||
The Platters singles chronology | ||||
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“Twilight Time” is a popular song with lyrics by Buck Ram, and the music by The Three Suns (Morty Nevins, Al Nevins, and Artie Dunn). Ram said that he originally wrote it as a poem, without music, while in college.
Original instrumental recordings of “Twilight Time” included those made respectively by the Three Suns (1944) and Les Brown & His Band of Renown (1945).
Les Brown’s version of “Twilight Time” was recorded in November 1944 and released in early 1945 as the B-side of “Sentimental Journey,” the first recording of that song. While the A-side featured Doris Day’s vocals, “Twilight Time” was an instrumental. The first vocal version of the song on record was released, also in 1945, by bandleader Jimmy Dorseywith Teddy Walters on vocals.
It has been recorded by numerous groups over the years. However, the best-known version of the song was recorded by the Platters and became a number one hit on both the pop singles and R&B Best Sellers charts in 1958 in the United States. The song also reached number three in the United Kingdom. In 1963, the Platters recorded a Spanish version of the song entitled “La Hora del Crepúsculo”, sung in a rhumba-style tempo.
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