"Cry" is a 1951 popular song written by Churchill Kohlman. The song was first recorded by Ruth Casey on the Cadillac label.[1] The biggest hit version was recorded in New York City by Johnnie Ray and The Four Lads on October 16, 1951. Singer Ronnie Dove also had a big hit with the song in 1966.
Ronnie Dove had a hit with the song in 1966. Released in November, it would reach the Top 20 on both the Pop and Easy Listening Charts by the end of the year. He would go on to perform this song on The Ed Sullivan Show early the following year. This would be Dove's last Top 40 hit, although he would continue to chart on the Easy Listening and, later, country charts.
In 1982, singer/comedian André van Duin recorded it as "Als je huilt" (a double A-side with his take on Edith Piaf's "Les Trois Cloches") which became a #1-hit in the Dutch Top 40 by mid-August.[15] During TV-promotion he wore specially designed specs with an in-built water-sprayer for audience-exposure.[16]
Stan Freberg did a 1952 parody of Johnnie Ray's version of "Cry" entitled "Try", in which he did an emotional "sobbing out of tune" performance with different lyrics. The lyrics include the title of the B-side song "The Little White Cloud That Cried", in the line "even little white clouds do it". Johnnie Ray was not initially pleased with this parody. However, he later accepted Freberg's version.[17] It peaked at #15 on the Billboard Hot 100.
Estela Raval realizó en 1983 una fantástica versión (la primera en castellano), incluida en su álbum 'El Mejor Momento' celebrando el retorno triunfal de su mitico conjunto Los 5 Latinos.
^Whitburn, Joel (1973). Top Pop Records 1940-1955. Record Research.
^Schmidt Horning, Susan (2013). Chasing Sound: Technology, Culture & the Art of Studio Recording from Edison to the LP. Baltimore, United States: Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 91. ISBN978-1-4214-1848-3.
^According to Freberg, years later Ray told him, "I wanted to thank you for keeping my career going for another five or ten years because long after DJs stopped playing my records, they would continue to play you lampooning me". Hansen, Barry and Freberg, Stan, Tip of the Freberg: The Stan Freberg Collection 1951–1998 (1999), ISBN0-7379-0060-1, notes booklet, p. 10.