"Bésame Mucho." Original issue. 1944 •
Pedro Vargas (inducted into the
Latin Grammy Hall of Fame in 2001) •
Bob Eberly and
Kitty Kallen with
Jimmy Dorsey & His Orchestra (reached number one in the United States in 1944) •
Andy Russell (reached No. 8 in the US in 1944) • Velázquez herself recorded the song as a piano instrumental on her album
Piano Interpretations (1955). •
Ray Conniff and His Orchestra and Chorus recorded this song on 25 March 1960, for the album
Say It with Music (A Touch of Latin), issued originally on August 8, 1960. A worldwide hit and a trademark for Conniff for decades. •
The Coasters hit the
Hot 100 with their version, which peaked at No. 70, in 1960. •
The Beatles (recorded during their
Decca audition on January 1, 1962. A second version was recorded during their first session at
Abbey Road Studios on June 6, 1962. The latter is included on The Beatles'
Anthology 1). It was also performed by the band in 1969 at their
Apple Studio and published in the documentary film
Let It Be. •
Dean Martin recorded it for his album,
Dino Latino in 1962. •
Jet Harris reached No. 22 in the UK with his version in 1962. •
Dalida reached No 5 in France and No 10 in Turkey in 1976. •
João Gilberto recorded a cover of the song for his 1977
bossa nova album
Amoroso. •
Plácido Domingo (received a
Grammy nomination for
Best Latin Pop Performance in 1983) •
Luis Miguel on the album,
Romances (1997), No. 1 on the Mexican ballads chart and among the top ten best-performing songs of 1998 in Venezuela. •
Zoé (nominated for a
Latin Grammy for
Record of the Year in 2012) ==References==