The backstory: Britain’s biggest pop star
Though it is often assumed that British pop music barely existed before The Beatles, that’s just ignorance. Cliff Richard was one of Britain’s finest talents and a massive star before The Beatles broke through. His backing group, The Shadows, were also hugely famous and influential in their own right – numerous teenagers picked up a guitar in tribute to their bespectacled axe hero, Hank Marvin, someone most stars of the rock’n’roll era still hail as one of the best guitarists of all time. Both Cliff and The Shads’ superstar status lingered long after The Fabs arrived.
Early British rock’n’roll was barely rebellious, however, and the moment a pop singer became big enough, they were ushered into the world of mainstream showbiz – which made sense when you consider that many pundits believed rock was just a passing fad. Hence Cliff and The Shadows took star billing in a series of movies, mostly musical comedies, of which 1963’s Summer Holiday was the fourth. Screen fame brought further opportunities: to show off their songwriting skills, and to promote their records in the most dazzling way.
Writing Summer Holiday: A very thin brief
Movies were not the only path for Cliff Richard and The Shadows to explore. Pantomime was another channel, and the two forms of entertainment accidentally came together when a title song was required for Summer Holiday. Brian Bennett and Bruce Welch, drummer and rhythm guitarist of The Shadows, delivered the goods. The band were performing in a panto at Stockton-on-Tees, County Durham, when the synopsis for their next movie arrived. They’d been invited to write some songs for it, but the brief they’d been sent was somewhat thin. “Four or five guys hire a London bus and drive through Europe meeting girls on a summer holiday,” Bruce Welch recalled, speaking to The Mail’s Weekend magazine. “That was it.”
Undeterred, Welch immediately began working on the song – by singing the first thing that came into his head. “Brian Bennett was in the orchestra pit, and I sang, ‘We’re all going on a summer holiday, no more working for a week or two.’ Brian added, ‘We’re going where the sun shines brightly. We’re going where the sea is blue.’”
Paydirt! That’s how classic pop is made when you have the talent to do it: it took about 30 minutes to complete a song which still resonates, 60 years later.