The Twelfth of Never
"The Twelfth of Never" is a popular song adapted from an old English folk song in 1956 by Jerry Livingston and Paul Francis Webster. Various recording artists have had chart hits with "The Twelfth of Never", including Johnny Mathis, Cliff Richard, Donny Osmond and Slim Whitman.
Background
"The Twelfth of Never" was adapted from "The Riddle Song", an old English folk song. Jerry Livingston and Paul Francis Webster wrote the bridge and new lyrics in 1956. The title "The Twelfth of Never" is an idiom referring to the date of a future occurrence that will never come to pass. In the case of the song, "the 12th of Never" is given as the date on which the singer will stop loving his beloved, thus indicating that he will always love her.Johnny Mathis version
recorded "The Twelfth of Never" and another song, "Chances Are", on June 16, 1957, with Mitch Miller and Al Ham producing. Years later Mathis told John Gilliland's Pop Chronicles:Release and reception
"The Twelfth of Never" was released on August 12, 1957, with the A-side "Chances Are". "The Twelfth of Never" spent 17 weeks on Billboard magazine's Top 100 record chart, a predecessor to the Hot 100 that combined the statistics from the magazine's Best Sellers in Stores and Most Played by Jockeys charts. It made its debut on the Top 100 in the issue dated October 14, 1957, and later peaked at number 51 there. It went to number 9 on the Most Played by Jockeys chart. The "Chances Are"/"The Twelfth of Never" single reached number 4 on their list of Best Sellers in Stores.The editors of Cash Box magazine compared "The Twelfth of Never" to "Chances Are", writing that the former "displays Johnny in a more dramatic vein as he chants an emotional and very touching folk flavored ballad of deep love." After noting the origins of the song, the Billboard editors wrote, "Charming new lyrics and presentation by Mathis should attract."
In his 2023 book B-Side: A Flipsided History of Pop, Andy Cowan mentioned several other artists who have covered the song but wrote, "none have quite matched Mathis's quivering emotional reach or the sustained emotive power of his heavy vibrato." In 2024 American Songwriter included "The Twelfth of Never" on its list of 5 Songs that Show Johnny Mathis Is the King of the Classic Ballad Singers. They wrote:
Chart performance
Cliff Richard version
A version by Cliff Richard was released in 1964 and reached number 8 in the UK. It also hit number 3 in Malaysia, number 5 in Hong Kong, number 6 in Australia, number 9 in Ireland and Norway and number 13 in the Netherlands.The editors of Billboard wrote, "The hot English vocalist with a tasteful reading of the old Johnny Mathis hit should prove equally successful on the charts. A bow to producer Norrie Paramor."
In a retrospective review of More Hits by Cliff, AllMusic's Dave Thompson included Richard's "skillful reading" of "The Twelfth of Never" on his list of "exquisite" singles on the compilation.
Chart performance
Donny Osmond version
's version, produced by Mike Curb and Don Costa, debuted on the Billboard Hot 100 in the issue dated March 3, 1973, and spent 13 weeks there, peaking at number 8 in the April 28 issue. It debuted on the UK Singles Chart for the week ending March 10, 1973, but rose to its peak position there much more quickly, spending a week at number one three weeks later, on March 31. It also went to number 7 on Billboard's Adult Contemporary chart during its 9 weeks there.The editors of Billboard wrote, "Donny provides a full, alive interpretation to this beautiful evergreen. His voice is getting deeper and there is a nice contrast between his vocal quality and Costa's mid-range string sounds."
In a retrospective review of Osmond's 1973 album Alone Together, AllMusic's Dave Thompson wrote that "his version of 'Twelfth of Never' is all but definitive".
Chart performance
Certifications
;Donny Osmond versionOther charting versions
- 1966: Slim Whitman reached number 17 on Billboard's Country singles chart.
- 1969: The Chi-Lites took the song to number 47 on the R&B chart. They also "bubbled under" the Hot 100 in Billboard to number 122.
- 1974: Elvis Presley recorded an informal rehearsal, which was released as a single in 1995 to promote Walk a Mile in My Shoes: The Essential '70s Masters, reaching number 21 in the UK.
- 1977ː David Houston's version on his album David Houston spent its one week on the Billboard Country chart at number 98. The magazine's editors noted that it was one of the best songs on the album.
Notable cover versions
On Bobby Vinton Sings the Big Ones in 1962, the singer "shines". The 1963 album The Fleetwoods Sing for Lovers by Night includes a "professional and harmonious rendition" of the song. They described the version on 1963's Nina Simone at Carnegie Hall as a "top-flight reading". The editors called the song one of the "bright bands" on both Mel Carter's When a Boy Falls in Love in 1963 and Billy J. Kramer's I'll Keep You Satisfied in 1964.
Billboard also highlighted recordings of "The Twelfth of Never" in various reviews. They felt that the version on 1963's Swing Along with Floyd Cramer "should get a lot of play" by radio stations. They gave Mark Dinning's 1963 recording four stars. The song was mentioned as one of the "highly playable tracks" on Nina Simone at Carnegie Hall. The 1966 album Chér had a "fresh approach". Arthur Prysock brought "his very own phrasing and intonation" to the track from 1969's Where the Soul Trees Grow. Tammy Wynette's rendition on 1970's The Ways to Love a Man was "beautiful". They felt it was one of the best songs on Charlie Rich's Tomorrow Night in 1973 and Charlie McCoy's Charlie My Boy in 1975.
AllMusic critics have commented in retrospective and contemporary reviews on various interpretations of the song. In his comments on the version from Oliver's 1970 album Again, Joe Viglione wrote that "the execution is way off". Conversely, he described Olivia Newton-John's rendition on her 1989 album Warm and Tender as a "great job". Scott Yanow noted that the "folkish" arrangement on Dianne Reeves's 1997 album That Day… was a highlight. In a review of The Greatest Love Songs of All Time by Barry Manilow in 2010, Stephen Thomas Erlewine described the song as "great".