"Jennifer Eccles" is a 1968 single by The Hollies. It was released with the B-side "Open Up Your Eyes" on the Parlophone label, Catalogue number R5680. The track reached #7 on the UK singles chart in March 1968. Around the same time, it was released in the US with a different B-side, "Try It", and reached #40 on the Billboard Hot 100. The song was written by members of the band with input from their wives and the title is a combination of their names (Allan Clarke's wife Jennifer née Bowstead and Graham Nash's wife Rose née Eccles). After criticism of "King Midas in Reverse", this tune was a return to the popular format that had been commercially successful though not necessarily lyrically sophisticated. Despite this song's success, the band would return to relying on outside writers for its next several singles, with none of the members involved in writing the A-sides until "Hey Willy" in 1971.
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"Jennifer Eccles" | ||||
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Single by The Hollies | ||||
B-side |
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Released | 22 March 1968 (UK) | |||
Recorded | 3 & 22 February 1968 | |||
Studio | Chappell's & EMI Studios, London[1] | |||
Genre | Pop rock | |||
Length | 2:40 (album version) 3:04 (single version) | |||
Label | UK: Parlophone R5680 US/Can: Epic 10298 | |||
Songwriter(s) | Graham Nash Allan Clarke | |||
Producer(s) | Ron Richards | |||
The Hollies singles chronology | ||||
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Cash Box praised the song's "simplicity and straightforward happiness."[2]
Jennifer Eccles (who had "terrible freckles") also features in the song "Lily the Pink" by The Scaffold; the reference is an in-joke, as Graham Nash, who left the Hollies in December 1968, sang backing vocals on this recording; Nash had been married to Rose Eccles from 1964 until 1966.[3]
Chart (1968) | Peak position |
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Australia (Go-Set)[4] | 10 |
Austria (Austrian Singles Chart)[5] | 5 |
Canada (RPM Magazine) | 19 |
West Germany (Official German Charts)[6] | 8 |
Netherlands (Dutch Singles Chart)[7] | 17 |
Norway (VG-Lista)[8] | 5 |
United Kingdom (UK Singles Chart)[9] | 7 |
Billboard Hot 100[10] | 40 |
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