Let me tell ya 'bout the birds and the bees And the flowers and the trees And the moon up above And a thing called 'Love'
Let me tell ya 'bout the stars in the sky And a girl and a guy And the way they could kiss On a night like this
When I look into your big brown eyes It's so very plain to see That it's time you learned about the facts of life Starting from A to Z
Let me tell ya 'bout the birds and the bees And the flowers and the trees And the moon up above And a thing called 'Love' (Yeah)
When I look into your big brown eyes It's so very plain to see That it's time you learned about the facts of life Starting from a to z
Let me tell ya 'bout the birds and the bees And the flowers and the trees And the moon up above And a thing called 'Love'
Let me tell ya 'bout the birds and the bees And the flowers and the trees And the birds and the bees And the flowers and the trees, 'bout the birds
And the bees And the bees And the bees
WIKIPEDIA
The Birds and the Bees (Jewel Akens song)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia "The Birds and the Bees"
Song by Jewel Akens Released 1964 Genre Pop, easy listening Language English Length 2:08 Writer Barry Stuart
"The Birds and the Bees" was a 1964 single release by Jewel Akens with a lyric based on the "birds and the bees" idiom commonly referenced with regard to affording young people their introductory sex education. An international hit in 1965, "The Birds and the Bees" was reminiscent of such 1950s' honky tonk-style hits as "Blueberry Hill" by Fats Domino and "Kansas City" by Wilbert Harrison.
History
"The Birds and the Bees" is said to have been written by the twelve year old son of Era Records' owner Herb Newman: the songwriting credit on the Jewel Akens' recording of "The Birds and the Bees" reads Barry Stuart which is the song's standard songwriting credit although some subsequent recordings (ie. by artists other than Akens) identify the composer as Herb Newman himself (Newman had written "The Wayward Wind" a 1956 #1 hit for Gogi Grant). Jewel Akens had recorded one single for Era as frontman for the doo-wop group the Turn-Arounds in 1964 when Newman pitched "The Birds and the Bees" as the group's next recording: as Akens was the only group member to favor the song he recorded it solo, working through four or five different arrangements and thus considerably honing the song's original format.[1]
Recorded at Gold Star Studios - with sound engineer Stan Ross employing the innovative technique of "chorusing" by patching the session guitarist into an organ speaker [2] - "The Birds and the Bees" afforded Akens a Top Ten hit in the first quarter of 1965 reaching #2 on the US Cash Box singles chart and #3 on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart: the single also reached #21 on the US Billboard Black Singles chart. The disc also had strong chart impact internationally reaching #3 in Australia, #6 in Belgium (Flemish Region), #3 in the Netherlands and #4 in Norway.
In the UK "The Birds and the Bees" afforded Akens a more moderate hit reaching #29.[3] with Akens besting a cover version by Johnny Kidd & the Pirates which failed to chart. Alma Cogan is often credited with a UK cover of "The Birds and the Bees": in fact her UK single of that name - #25 in 1956 - was a recording of "(The Same Thing Happens with) The Birds and the Bees". However, Cogan did cover Akens's hit for release in Scandinavia and was afforded a #1 hit in Sweden for three weeks in the summer of 1965, and also a Top Ten hit in both Denmark and Norway, with respective peaks of #8 and #4 (Cogan's version of "The Birds and the Bees" matching the Norwegian chart peak of Akens&