Australian singles chart:
Delilah entered the Kent charts on 9 March 1968 and peaked at #2. The song was #17 on the Top 100 of 1968.
Album:
The song is on Tom’s album Delilah which charted in Australia in 1968.
Songwriters:
Les Reed, Barry Mason
Producer:
Peter Sullivan
Record label of Australian release:
Decca
The Ed Sullivan Show
When Jones performed Delilah on The Ed Sullivan Show in 1968, the censors (unsuccessfully) attempted to insist that the line “At break of day when the man drove away” be changed to “At break of day I was still ‘cross the way”, as the original version implied he had spent the night with Delilah. Jones later described the proposed change as “such bullshit”. The song’s story is below.
From: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delilah_(Tom_Jones_song)
Wikipedia:
The song Delilah tells the story of a man who passes his girlfriend’s window and sees her inside having sex with another man. He waits outside all night, and then confronts her in the morning, only to have her laugh in his face. He stabs her to death, and then waits for the police to come break down the door and arrest him. The lyrics unfold from the killer’s point of view, and are filled with his, often contradictory, emotions. He speaks of Delilah in possessive terms, but also refers to himself as her “slave.” He asks his dead girlfriend to “forgive” him, but still clearly sees himself as having been wronged by her.
Produced by Peter Sullivan, Jones’ version of Delilah features a big-band accompaniment set to a flamenco rhythm. Flamenco was a curious choice, since there is no reference to Spain anywhere in the song.
Read more: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delilah_(Tom_Jones_song)
Lyrics:
I saw the light on the night that I passed by her window
I saw the flickering shadow of love on her blind
She was my woman
As she deceived me I watched and went out of my mind
Click for full lyrics
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