"Juanita Banana" is a novelty song adaptation from Mexican folk music by Tash Howard and Murray Kenton.[1] The song, which tells the story of a Mexican banana farmer's daughter with operatic ambitions and whose chorus is an adaptation of "Caro Nome" from Giuseppe Verdi's opera Rigoletto, was originally released in the United States in 1966.
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"Juanita Banana" | |
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Single by The Peels | |
B-side | "Fun" |
Released | 1966 |
Recorded | 1966 |
Label | Karate 522 Stateside 513 (UK) |
Songwriter(s) | Tash Howard Murray Kenton |
Producer(s) | "A (Tash) Howard/Smith Production" |
The original release of "Juanita Banana" was performed by The Peels, a studio group assembled by co-writer Tash Howard, who also co-produced the single. The Peels consisted of Gail Allan (22), Bill Spilka (25) and Harvey Davis (23). and Harold Swart[2] Howard also wrote "Juanita Banana Part 2" for The Peels as a follow-up release later in the same year.
The record by The Peels charted on the Billboard Hot 100 peaking at #59 in 1966.[3]
The Verdi-inspired chorus of the Peels recording was sampled later that year in the Dickie Goodman record "Batman & His Grandmother".[citation needed]
Henri Salvador, Luis Aguilé, Los Tres Sudamericanos [es], Paola Neri, Het Cocktail Trio [nl], Los Yaki, Quartetto Cetra and Bukasový Masív were among the many artists who recorded non-English cover versions of the song.
The song was also covered by Freddie & The Dreamers on their 1967 album ‘King Freddie & His Dreaming Knights’.
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Giuseppe Verdi's Rigoletto | |
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Films |
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Music |
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