There Must Be a Way


"There Must Be a Way" is a song written by David Saxon, Robert Cook and Sammy Gallop in 1945. The first recording was by Johnnie Johnston with Paul Baron and His Orchestra in the same year.

Background

The song was published in the post–World War II era, part of a wave of sentimental ballads expressing love, longing, and heartbreak — very much in the style of traditional pop and pre-rock balladry. It became a standard in pop and easy listening, covered by many notable artists over the years.

Early recordings

Later recordings

Jimmy Roselli version

Release

Jimmy Roselli recorded the song in 1967, releasing it as a single with "I'm Yours To Command" on the B-side. It was his first and only single that appeared on the Billboard Hot 100, peaking at No. 93 on August 12, 1967. It was his most successful song on the Billboard Easy Listening chart, where it peaked at No. 13, And his most successful single on the Cashbox Top 100 Singles chart, where it reached No. 90 and stayed on the it for 9 weeks. The single would also go on to reach No. 2 on Record World's Top Non-Rock chart, which was similar to Billboard's Easy Listening chart. On the magazine's 100 Top Pops chart the single would stall at No. 87 and quickly drop out.

Aftermath

The single's success made him rush out two more singles that year, but none cracked the top 100s. Roselli, like Frankie Vaughan, also released an album titled There Must Be a Way in 1967.

Charts

Chart Peak
position
US Billboard Hot 10033
US Cashbox Top 100 Singles28
CAN Singles Chart30
UK Singles Chart24

Chart Peak
position
UK Singles Chart7
Irish Singles Chart19

Chart Peak
position
US Billboard Hot 10093
US Billboard Easy Listening13
US Cashbox Top 100 Singles90
US Record World 100 Top Pops87
US Record World Top Non-Rock2