| "I Was Such a Fool (To Fall in Love with You)" | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Single by Connie Francis | ||||
| from the album Connie Francis Sings "For Mama" | ||||
| B-side | "He Thinks I Still Care" | |||
| Released | September 1962 | |||
| Genre | Vocal, Pop [1] | |||
| Length | 2:45 | |||
| Label | MGM 13096 | |||
| Songwriters | Michael Canosa, Danny Stradella | |||
| Connie Francis singles chronology | ||||
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"I Was Such a Fool (To Fall in Love with You)" is a song written by Michael Canosa and Danny Stradella, and was released first as a single in late 1959 by The Flamingos. The song was revived three years later by Connie Francis. [2]
The Flamingos released the original version of the song as a single in December 1959, with the recording session produced by George Goldner. Their version reached No. 71 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart the next year. [3] It was ranked higher on the Cashbox Top 100 Singles, where it peaked at No. 67. [4]
In early 1962 "Don't Break the Heart That Loves You" had become Francis' third and final single to top the Billboard Hot 100 and the Billboard Easy Listening charts. [5] The single also rose to high positions on internation charts. [6] After the chart-topper, she would have two more top ten singles and later "I Was Such a Fool (To Fall in Love with You)", a familiar ballad like singles before, was scheduled to release in the fall of 1962. The recording session was arranged and conducted by Bill McElhiney. [7]
"I Was Such a Fool (To Fall in Love with You)" was released as a seven-inch single in September 1962 by MGM Records. [7] It was backed by a country song, [1] "He Thinks I Still Care" on the B-side, [7] which was lifted from her album Country Music Connie Style released earlier that year. It was produced by Danny Davis. [2] "I Was Such a Fool" would make its album debut three years later on Connie Francis Sings "For Mama" . [8]
The single received a positive critical reception upon its release. Cashbox stated that "The lark, who just has a solid sales “Vacation,” heads into the Fall months with a double-decker that's sure to be all over the charts in no time flat. One half, “He Still Thinks I Care,” is a lilting, crying towel ‘answer’ to the recent George Jones country smash. “I Was Such A Fool” is a beat-ballad new comer also from the weeper dept." [9] Billboard believed that it was "two more powerhouse sides from Connie." Saying "Both are in the ballad groove," continuing that "He Still Thinks I Care" is a "moving weeper done with country touches against chorus and ork", and called "I Was Such a Fool" a "tender ballad which the lass emotes over tasteful backing." [1]
"I Was Such a Fool (To Fall in Love with You)" debuted on Billboard magazine's Easy Listening chart on September 20, 1962, peaking at No. 8 during a seven-week run on the chart. [5] The single didn't reach the top 10 on the Billboard Hot 100, although it reached the top 40, and peaked at No. 24 on the chart. [10] On Cashbox magazine's Top 100 Singles chart the single was ranked higher, peaking at No. 18. [11] The single also reached No. 19 on the Music Vendor 100 Top Pops chart. [12] The single also sold well in Canada, reaching No. 32 on the CHUM charts. [13] "He Thinks I Still Care" reached No. 26 the next week on the same charts. [14]
Connie Francis version
| The Flamingos version
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