}} , 1997 In 1977,
Debby Boone,
Pat Boone's daughter, recorded the song under the guidance of
Curb Records executive
Mike Curb and songwriter
Joseph Brooks. The single became the biggest single of the 1970s in the United States, setting a new
Billboard Hot 100 record for most weeks spent at number one.
Elvis Presley's double-sided hit "
Don't Be Cruel/
Hound Dog", then recognized as the longest-running number one song of the rock era, spent eleven weeks atop the
Billboard Best Sellers chart in 1956, before the 1958 debut of the Hot 100. The previous Hot 100 record was held by Bobby Darin's "
Mack the Knife",
Percy Faith's recording of "
Theme from A Summer Place" (1960) and
the Beatles' "
Hey Jude" (1968), all three of which remained at No. 1 for nine weeks. The ten-week record was matched in 1982 by
Olivia Newton-John's "
Physical", but was not surpassed until a 1991 change in chart methodology allowed songs to achieve longer reigns at No. 1. In 1992, "
End of the Road" by
Boyz II Men would set the new record with 13 weeks. Besting her chart performance in
Billboard, Boone's "You Light Up My Life" single topped
Record Worlds Top 100 Singles Chart for an unbroken record of 13 weeks. it had knocked
Carly Simon's "
Nobody Does It Better" out of the top spot after only one week. The single, which was certified
platinum by the
Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), also hit No. 1 on the
Adult Contemporary chart and reached No. 4 on the
Country chart. The single peaked at No. 48 on the
UK Singles Chart. Boone's hit single led to her winning the
1978 Grammy Award for Best New Artist, with additional
Grammy nominations for
Best Pop Vocal Performance, Female and
Record of the Year. Boone also won the 1977
American Music Award for Favorite Pop Single. In 2008, it was ranked at No. 7 on
Billboards "Hot 100 All-Time Top Songs" list (August 1958 - July 2008).
Track listing •
7" vinyl single • "You Light Up My Life"* – 3:35 • "
Hasta Mañana"** – 3:12 •
Note: Produced and arranged by
Joe Brooks.**
Note: Produced by
Mike Curb and arranged by
Al Capps.
Chart performance (Debby Boone single) Weekly charts Year-end charts All-time charts ==LeAnn Rimes version==