*NZ chart position calculated by Warwick Freeman.
Song originally known as Where Have You Been All My Life or Where Have You Been (see other versions, below).
Single on Zodiac by popular New Zealand band: see She’s A Mod, their biggest Australian hit.
Ray Columbus & The Invaders can be seen performing Till We Kissed on Long Way To The Top, the 2002 concert DVD that grew out of ABC-TV’s pop history series.
NZ band Herbs revived Till We Kissed in the 90s with the participation of Ray Columbus (scroll down for details).
Thanks to Terry Stacey for version alerts.
Single on Quality January 1965 by the Canadian band initially known as Chad Allan & The Expressions but later familiar as The Guess Who
Till we kissed is the opening phrase of this song, originally entitled Where Have You Been All My Life, also known as Where Have You Been.
The Guess Who? single credited the song to “Gunter”, which appears to be a confusion with Sidney ‘Hardrock’ Gunter’s 1953 song Where Have You Been (see Red herring below).
In a further confusion, this time of surnames, the song has also been mistakenly credited to Lonnie Gunther, another songwriter altogether.
Further reading: Guess Who history at All Music Guide.
On Fontana album Wayne Fontana & The Mindbenders December 1964.
British Invasion band whose biggest hits were Game Of Love (1965, #2 UK, #1 USA) and (post-Wayne Fontana who went solo) A Groovy Kind Of Love (1966, #2 UK & USA).
Song also known as Till We Kissed (its opening phrase).
On the 1964 Pye album It's Fab! It's Gear! It's The Searchers!
Song also known as Till We Kissed (its opening phrase).
*The record credits "Gunther" as writer (corrected on reissues), clearly a case of confusion with Sidney 'Hardrock' Gunter's 1953 song with the same title (see below).
Single on Columbia, UK November 1963, by Presley-era American rocker (1935-1971) who was popular and influential in the UK where he worked for much of the 60s. His biggest hit was the multi-million-selling Be-Bop-A-Lula (1956, #7 USA).
Recorded at Olympia studios, London, with the Bill Shepherd Orchestra. B-side of Temptation Baby (wr. Joe Meek).
Song also known as Till We Kissed (its opening phrase).
References: Rolling Stone Encyclopedia of Rock &
Roll. Gene Vincent discography at Discographie Rock ‘n’ Country. Susan Vanhecke’s biography of Gene Vincent, Race with the Devil, 2000 (thanks to Terry Stacey).
On Columbia album How Do You Like It? October 1963.
Song also known as Till We Kissed (its opening phrase).
Live performance, recorded in Germany, released in 1977 on the album Live! At The Star Club In Hamburg. (Some CD reissues do not include this track.)
Song also known as Till We Kissed (its opening phrase).
Single on Dot by US r&b/pop singer highly regarded by British Invasion artists, several of whom recorded Where Have You Been All My Life. The song was later known as Till We Kissed, from its opening phrase. Also known as Where Have You Been.
Arthur Alexander (1940-1993):
Further reading: Arthur Alexander: All Music Guide biography.
Husband and wife team Barry Mann & Cynthia Weil were amongst the most prolific and successful songwriters of the 1960s.
Mann-Weil hit compositions included I Love How You Love Me (The Paris Sisters), Blame It On The Bossa Nova (Eydie Gormé), On Broadway (The Drifters), Saturday Night At The Movies (The Drifters), Home Of The Brave (Jody Miller), We Gotta Get Out Of This Place (The Animals) and You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feeling (co-write with Phil Spector; The Righteous Brothers).
To get an idea of their output, browse Hiroto Yanagida’s Barry Mann discography at his Magic Town site.
Mann-Weil songs recorded in Australia and featured at this site include It’s Not Easy (Normie Rowe), Heart (Lynne Randell), Come On Over To Our Place (Bev Harrell), It’s A Happening World (The Executives), Kicks (The Librettos), We Gotta Get Out Of This Place (The Angels) and Walking In The Rain (co-write with Phil Spector; Cheetah)
New Zealand ‘Pacific reggae’ group formed 1979, often on the local charts from the early 80s to the mid-90s. Their hits include
collaborations with Dave Dobbyn (Slice Of Heaven, 1986, from
Footrot Flats), Tim Finn (Parihaka, 1989) and Annie Crummer (See What Love Can Do, 1992).
Further reading: Herbs at
MySpace; Article and video at NZ History online.
Not the same song as Where Have You Been All My Life (Mann-Weil), also known as Where Have You Been or Till We Kissed.
The Mann-Weil song has sometimes been mistakenly credited to Gunter (or Gunther), for example on records by Guess Who and The Searchers.
Country boogie singer Sidney Louie 'Hardrock' Gunter (b.1925) was a pioneer of rock'n'roll whose 1950 release Birmingham Bounce has been cited by some as the first rock'n'roll song. That's a good argument starter, but Birmingham Bounce does rock in a 1950 kind of way, and the lyrics do say, "The music's rockin' ".
References: US Copyright Office (Reg. # RE-96-113, Dec 1953);
Hardrock Gunter discography.
Further reading: HardrockGunter.com; Hardrock Gunter interview at TheRanchGirls.com;
Similar title but not the same song as ‘Where Have You Been All My Life’, aka ‘Till We Kissed’.
C&W parody by an alter ego of the Kate
Miller-Heidke Band’s lead
guitarist.