Andy Williams........cant Get Used To Losing You. -
When songwriters and Mort Shuman (the duo behind hits like "Save the Last Dance for Me") brought the song to Andy, it had a peculiar, staccato "pizzicato" beat. It wasn't a sweeping orchestral ballad, which was Andy’s bread and butter. Instead, it had a persistent, almost annoying "plink-plink-plink" backing that mimicked the steady ticking of a clock—a reminder of the time passing since a lover left [1, 2]. The Perfectionist at Work
The year was 1963, and the airwaves were filled with the smooth, effortless velvet of Andy Williams’ voice. But behind the polished performance of lies a story of a song that almost sounded very different—and a singer who knew exactly how to make a heartbreak feel sophisticated. The Unusual Rhythm Andy Williams........Cant Get Used To Losing You.
Andy Williams was known for his "easy" style, but he was a meticulous craftsman in the studio. He recognized that the song’s power came from the contrast: the against his calm, melodic vocal . When songwriters and Mort Shuman (the duo behind
Today, the track remains the gold standard for "polite" heartbreak—a song that sounds like a sunny afternoon even while the lyrics describe a world falling apart. The Perfectionist at Work The year was 1963,
Decades later, the song took on a second life when the British ska band (known as The English Beat in the US) covered it in 1983. Their version turned the "pizzicato" into a reggae-tinged groove, proving the song’s melody was timeless.
During the recording session, they decided to double-track his voice. If you listen closely, you’re actually hearing two Andys singing in harmony with himself. This technique gave the song a slightly haunting, echo-filled quality that captured the "mental fog" of someone unable to accept a breakup [2]. A Global Sensation