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Mr. Custer

1960 single by Larry Verne From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"Mr. Custer" is a march novelty song, sung by Larry Verne, and written by Al De Lory, Fred Darian, and Joseph Van Winkle.

Quick Facts Single by Larry Verne, from the album Mister Larry Verne ...
"Mr. Custer"
Single by Larry Verne
from the album Mister Larry Verne
B-side"Okeefenokee Two Step"
Released1960
GenreNovelty
Length3:04
LabelEra
Songwriter(s)
Larry Verne singles chronology
"Mr. Custer"
(1960)
"Mister Livingston"
(1960)
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Background

It is a comical song about a soldier's plea to General Custer before the climactic Battle of the Little Bighorn against the Sioux, to allow him to stay behind, because he had a bad dream about the battle.[1]

Chart performance

It was a No. 1 song in the United States in 1960, topping the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart for the issue dated October 10, 1960, and remained there for one week. On the US Hot R&B Sides chart, it went to No. 9. It reached No. 12 in Canada, also October 10, 1960.[2]

Reception

In a retrospective review for his Number Ones column, Stereogum writer Tom Breihan panned the song, giving it one star out of ten while calling it "offensive", "morally wrongheaded", and "unlistenable musically".[3]

Chart history

More information Chart (1960), Peak position ...
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Sequel

A follow-up record, "Return of Mr. Custer (Please Mr. Sittin' Bull)", was released in 1964, which used the same melody and music arrangement, but it failed to chart.[13]

Cover versions

See also

References

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