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The End of the World (Skeeter Davis song)

"The End of the World" is a pop song written by composer Arthur Kent and lyricist Sylvia Dee, who often worked as a team. They wrote the song for American singer Skeeter Davis, and her recording of it was highly successful in the early 1960s, reaching the top five on four different charts, including No. 2 on the main Billboard Hot 100. It spawned many cover versions.

"The End of the World"

"Somebody Loves You", "Blueberry Hill"

December 1962

June 8, 1962

2:33

Background[edit]

"The End of the World" is a sad song about the aftermath of a romantic breakup. Dee, the lyricist, said she drew on her sorrow from her father's death to set the mood for the song.


Davis recorded her version with sound engineer Bill Porter on June 8, 1962, at the RCA Studios in Nashville, produced by Chet Atkins, and featuring Floyd Cramer.[1] Released by RCA Records in December 1962, "The End of the World" peaked in March 1963 at No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100 (behind "Our Day Will Come" by Ruby & the Romantics), No. 2 on Billboard's Hot Country Singles chart,[2] No. 1 on Billboard's Easy Listening chart, and No. 4 on Billboard's Hot R&B Singles chart.[3] It is the first, and, to date, only time that a song cracked the Top 10 (and Top 5) on all four Billboard charts.[4] Billboard ranked the record as the No. 2 song of 1963.


In the Davis version, after she sings the whole song through in the key of B-flat-major, the song modulates up by a half step to the key of B, where Davis speaks the first two lines of the final stanza, before singing the rest of the stanza, ending the song.


"The End of the World" was played at Atkins' funeral in an instrumental by Marty Stuart. The song was also played at Davis's own funeral at the Ryman Auditorium. Her version has been featured in several films, TV shows, and video games (see "Appearances in media" below).

"End of the World"

"Can't Help the Way That I Feel"

13 August 1990

1990

Pop

3:36

Arthur Kent, Sylvia Dee

Other notable versions[edit]

The song was recorded by Julie London in 1963 on her album of the same name.


During the summer of 1966, Swedish pop group Mike Wallace & The Caretakers recorded the song.[13] Released as a single in August of that year, it was backed by the song "Whitsand Bay" written by Wallace, based on the tourist destination he'd often visited.[14] It became a hit on Tio i Topp, entering the chart on August 6, 1966, at a position of number five.[15] It topped the chart on August 27, staying on the top for a week.[15] It exited the chart on October 29, at a position of number 14, having spent 13 weeks on the chart.[15] On sales chart Kvällstoppen, it entered on August 16, 1966, at a position of 18.[16] It would reach its peak of number two on September 6, being kept off the top by the Beatles "Yellow Submarine".[16] It exited on November 8, at a position of 18, having spent 13 weeks on the chart.[16]


To capitalize on the Caretakers version, Anna-Lena Löfgren recorded the song in Swedish, as "Allt är förbi",[17] scoring a Svensktoppen hit for seven weeks between 9 October–19 November 1966.[18]


In 1985, Stock Aitken Waterman produced an R&B-style cover of the song for band Brilliant,[9] which was released as a single in the UK in November 1986. Jerry Smith of the Music Week magazine praised this "radical" cover version for its "very polished" production and "its all round appeal" and deemed "it should make an impression".[19] However, the single failed to chart.


A version by Allison Paige peaked at number 72 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart in May 2000.[20]


The Dot Wiggin Band released a cover of "End of the World" as the last song on their album Ready! Get! Go! (2013), which Shintaro Sakamoto opined "actually sounds like the end of the world."[21]

The song is featured in the 1960s period drama film (1999)[22]

Girl, Interrupted

The song appears as a radio track in the video game .[23]

Fallout 4

The song appears at the end of episode 12 ("") of the third season of Mad Men[24]

The Grown-Ups

The song is used as the opening and closing theme for the 2012 radio drama Pandemic, produced by BBC Radio 4.[25]

political thriller

In June 1965 the English pop group released their cover of the song as a B-side on their international hit "I'm Henry VIII, I Am" with a slower tempo. This version was heard during the closing scene of the third episode of The Queen’s Gambit.[26]

Herman's Hermits

's cover is played during the end credits of the 2017 film Mother!.[27]

Patti Smith

The song is used diegetically in the 2017 short film Black Eyed Susan, which stars and her son, Louis Healy.[28]

Denise Welch