The Roving Kind is a 1950 popular song by Jessie Cavanaugh and Arnold Stanton, both pseudonyms used by music publisher The Richmond Organisation. It was adapted from a British folk song, "The Pirate Ship". "The Roving Kind" is about a girl who is nice but a wanderer.
| "The Roving Kind" | ||||
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| Single by Guy Mitchell | ||||
| Released | 1950 | |||
| Genre | Pop | |||
| Length | 3:02 | |||
| Songwriter(s) | Jessie Cavanaugh, Arnold Stanton | |||
| Guy Mitchell singles chronology | ||||
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The best-known version was recorded by Guy Mitchell in 1950, which reached No. 4 on Billboard in December 1950. The single also reached No. 6 on the Cashbox charts the same month.[1]
The song had first been recorded by the American folk group, The Weavers. Mitchell's jocular version followed the original sea-shanty style. Columbia's A&R director Mitch Miller followed this "folk-origin" formula for most of Mitchell's subsequent hits.[2]
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