About The Song

Composed by Buck Ram, “Only You (And You Alone)” was originally recorded by American vocal group The Platters and was released in May 1955. Lead singer Tony Williams played the lead vocals. With a lengthy title, the song was often shortened to “Only You” which was more popularly known.
On May 20, 1954, The Platters initially recorded the song for Federal Records. However, the recording was not released. The following year, the band re-recorded the song after moving to Mercury Records. Interestingly, it went on to be a big hit after it was released in May 1955.
In an interview, the group’s bass singer Herb Reed recalled how The Platters came up with their successful version:

“We tried it so many times, and it was terrible. One time we were rehearsing in the car … and the car jerked. Tony went ‘O-oHHHH-nly you.’ We laughed at first, but when he sang that song—that was the sign we had hit on something.”

Furthermore, according to the songwriter and manager of The Platters, Buck Ram, he revealed that Tony Williams’ voice actually “broke” in their rehearsal. However, they decided to keep it as an effect in the recording. In addition, in the original recording, Ram played the piano accompaniment.
“Only You” was a chart-topper for The Platters. For seven weeks, it stayed at the no. 1 spot on the U.S. R&B charts while no. 5 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. Overall, the song remained on the charts for a total of 30 weeks beating out a cover version by another band, The Hilltoppers.

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5 thoughts on “The Platters – Only You, And You Alone”
  1. Why can’t we have this type of music now. The men are dressed in a beautiful suit and the women dress like a lady. The song are with out ugly words. I am 77 and have witnessed many groups but I believe the true meaning music was from the late 40 to the middle 60

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