Background The song was recorded on 18 February 1964. The record was originally credited to Caesar & Cleo. The song was recorded under the direction of Richard Delvy. The arrangements were handled by
Harold Battiste. The B side was "String Fever". Caesar & Cleo were actually
Sonny & Cher. When they had a hit with "
I Got You Babe" under their name Sonny & Cher, Vault Records took advantage of an opportunity and re-released the single as a Sonny & Cher record, which gave the label its first national chart hit.
Reception As reported in the 7 March 1964 issue of
Music Reporter, the new Caesar & Cleo single, "The Letter" was a "grand slam West Coast Pick". The stations playing the single were KYA and KEWB in San Francisco and KFWB and KRLA in Los Angeles. The distributors
ATCO Records reported that dealers were finding it hard to keep up with the orders. The record was one of the Pop Spotlights in the 14 March issue of
Billboard. The reviewer referred to the single as a driver, unrelenting and highly danceable.
Airplay For the week of 30 October 1965, the
Cash Box Radio Active Chart showed that 15% of radio stations had added "The Letter" to their program schedule that week.
Charts The record, credited to
Sonny & Cher debuted at no. 47 in the
Cash Box Looking Ahead chart for the week of 23 October. It peaked at no. 4 on the
Cash Box Looking Ahead Chart for the week of 20 November. For the week of 27 November 1975, "The Letter" debuted at No. 9 in the
Record World Singles Coming Up chart. The Sonny & Cher version of "The Letter" peaked at no. 75 nationally. ==References==