A Taste of Honey (song)

"A Taste of Honey"
Cover of the 1965 single
Single by Herb Alpert's Tijuana Brass
from the album Whipped Cream and Other Delights
B-side "Third Man Theme"
Released August 1965
Recorded March 10, 1965
Studio A&M Studios, Hollywood, California
Genre
Length 2:43
Label A&M
Songwriter(s) Bobby Scott, Ric Marlow
Producer(s) Herb Alpert, Jerry Moss
Herb Alpert's Tijuana Brass singles chronology
"Mae"
(1965)
"A Taste of Honey"
(1965)
"Tijuana Taxi"
(1965)

"A Taste of Honey" is a pop standard written by Bobby Scott and Ric Marlow. It was originally an instrumental track (or recurring theme) written for the 1960 Broadway version of the 1958 British play A Taste of Honey (which was also made into the film of the same name in 1961). Both the original and a later recording by Herb Alpert in 1965 earned the song four Grammy Awards.

A vocal version of the song—first recorded by Billy Dee Williams (and released in 1961 on the Prestige label), and then recorded very successfully by Lenny Welch in the summer of 1962—was also recorded by the Beatles for their first album in 1963. Barbra Streisand performed the song as part of her cabaret act during 1962, and recorded it in January 1963 for her debut album The Barbra Streisand Album, on Columbia, which won a Grammy for Album of the Year (1963).

Instrumental versions

The original recorded versions of the song "A Taste of Honey", "A Taste of Honey (refrain)" and "A Taste of Honey (closing theme)", appeared on Bobby Scott's 1960 album, also titled A Taste of Honey, on Atlantic 1355. The composition won Best Instrumental Theme at the Grammy Awards of 1963.

Vocal versions

The Beatles

"A Taste of Honey"
Cover of the 1964 Germany single
Song by the Beatles
from the album Please Please Me
Released March 22, 1963
Recorded February 11, 1963
Studio EMI, London
Genre Pop
Length 2:01
Label Parlophone
Songwriter(s) Bobby Scott/Ric Marlow
Producer(s) George Martin

The Beatles performed Lenny Welch's adaptation as part of their repertoire in 1962, slightly changing the lyrics in the chorus. Because the instrumental version by Acker Bilk was popular in the United Kingdom at the time, the song was chosen to be recorded for their 1963 debut album, Please Please Me. A version from that time was released in 1977 on the album Live! at the Star-Club in Hamburg, Germany; 1962.

In the US, this song first appeared on the Vee-Jay Records album Introducing... The Beatles. They also performed "A Taste of Honey" seven times for BBC radio shows, including Here We Go, Side by Side, and Easy Beat. In 1967, McCartney was inspired to compose “Your Mother Should Know” based on a line taken from the screenplay.

Personnel

Engineered by Norman Smith

The Supremes & Four Tops

"A Taste of Honey"
Cover of the 1971 Netherlands single
Song by The Supremes & Four Tops
from the album The Magnificent 7
Released 1971
Genre R&B, soul
Length 2:57
Label Tamla Motown
Songwriter(s) Bobby Scott/Ric Marlow
Producer(s) Clay McMurray, Duke Browner

Personnel

The Supremes
The Four Tops

Charts

The Supremes & Four Tops version

Chart (1971) Peak
position
Netherlands (Dutch Top 40 Tipparade) 7

Other artists

Television and film

  • The song is used for the theme of the UK comedy series Hardware.
  • The song is used in the 2000 Australian film The Dish, a partially fictionalised account of the role that the Parkes Observatory played in relaying the live television feed of man's first steps on the moon, during the Apollo 11 mission in 1969.
  • Herb Alpert's version is the opening and closing tune of the Italian Rai Radio 1's sport broadcast Tutto il calcio, minuto per minuto (All soccer, minute by minute).
  • Herb Alpert's version is used during the prank war sequence in the episode "The Europa Project" of the Netflix series Space Force.

See also