
Peak
19
Weeks
15
Score
1,822
Chart Year
1975
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The words for this romantic ballad of separation were written by Ron Webster, an amateur folk singer and silversmith living in the Solihull area of the Midlands. The inspiration came to him one rainy night when he was returning home from work on the upper deck of a Midland bus with wet and dripping windows. He wished he was somewhere where it was warm, not on a dripping-wet Midland bus. Roger Whittaker was hosting a radio series at the time and he invited his listeners to submit lyrics that he would put to music. Webster sent in "The Last Farewell," which Whittaker liked, and after putting his own music to Webster's words, he recorded it on his 1971 album Special Kind Of Man. Four years later an Atlanta radio station began to play the track after the wife of a programmer heard it on vacation in Canada. It was released as a single in the States, where it became Whittaker's sole Top 40 hit. It went on to become his biggest ever hit, selling over 11 million copies worldwide. Among numerous cover versions is one by Elvis Presley on his 1976 album From Elvis Presley Boulevard, Memphis, Tennessee. This was not the only hit song to originate from Whittaker's radio competition. Another amateur songwriter Joan Stanton sent in a lyric "Why," which Whittaker put to music and recorded as a single. It peaked at #47 in the UK in 1971. Roger Whittaker was a singer-songwriter who was born and raised in Kenya and came to England to attend university there. After graduating in the early 1960s he turned to music and among the other UK hits he recorded were: "Durham Town (The Leavin')" (1969 #12), "I Don't Believe In If Anymore" (1969 #8), "New World In The Morning" (1970 #17), and in a duet with fellow easy-listening singer Des O'Connor "The Skye Boat Song" (1986 #10). Whittaker has won two Ivor Novello Awards for songwriting, in 1971-72 for "Why" and in 1975-76 for the other song that came from his radio competition, "The Last Farewell."
There's a ship lies rigged and ready in the harbor Tomorrow for old England she sails Far away from your land of endless sunshine To my land full of rainy skies and gales And I shall be aboard that ship tomorrow Though my heart is full of tears at this farewell For you are beautiful, and I have loved you dearly More dearly than the spoken word can tell For you are beautiful, and I have loved you dearly More dearly than the spoken word can tell I heard there's a wicked war a-blazing And the taste of war I know so very well Even now I see the foreign flag a-raising Their guns on fire as we sail into Hell I have no fear of death, it brings no sorrow But how bitter will be this last farewell For you are beautiful, and I have loved you dearly More dearly than the spoken word can tell For you are beautiful, and I have loved you dearly More dearly than the spoken word can tell Though death and darkness gather all about me And my ship be torn apart upon the seas I shall smell again the fragrance of these islands In the heaving waves that brought me once to thee And should I return home safe again to England I shall watch the English mist roll through the dale For you are beautiful, and I have loved you dearly More dearly than the spoken word can tell For you are beautiful, and I have loved you dearly More dearly than the spoken word can tell
| Week | Chart Date | Position | Points |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Apr 5, 1975 | 97 | 29 |
| 2 | Apr 12, 1975 | 86 | 40 |
| 3 | Apr 19, 1975 | 67 | 59 |
| 4 | Apr 26, 1975 | 57 | 69 |
| 5 | May 3, 1975 | 44 | 82 |
| 6 | May 10, 1975 | 40 | 86 |
| 7 | May 17, 1975 | 33 | 93 |
| 8 | May 24, 1975 | 29 | 97 |
| 9 | May 31, 1975 | 24 | 102 |
| 10 | Jun 7, 1975 | 21 | 105 |
| 11 | Jun 14, 1975 | 20 | 106 |
| 12 | Jun 21, 1975 | 19 | 107 |
| 13 | Jun 28, 1975 | 35 | 91 |
| 14 | Jul 5, 1975 | 36 | 90 |
| 15 | Jul 12, 1975 | 82 | 44 |