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" Yesterday Man" is a song written by Chris Andrews and was his first single as a solo singer, released on 17 September 1965. It climbed to No. 3 in the UK Singles Chart, and No. 1 in Ireland,, , and . In England it sold 20,000 copies in its first day. After a visit to England in September 1965, made a deal for to release the single in the United States. In the US, it reached No. 94 in 1966. The trade paper reported in its 5 February 1966 issue that it had passed 300,000 sales in Germany alone, and later over 800,000 as a final tally in that country (28 May 1966). Additionally, Andrews was awarded a silver disc for 250,000 sales of the single in the UK.


Reception
In a contemporary review of the song, the wrote how: "Why write hits for and all the time? says Andrews and sounds quite good on his own", further deeming it to be " and good." In 2014, Spin included the song in their list of "25 Major Moments in History"; in the accompanying write-up, writer Chris Martins deemed it "the birth of White Reggae" and highlighted how the song "made Andrews' heart pitter and patter to an island ". Mario Villanueva of The Greenville News included the song in a list of twelve exemplary "cod-reggae" songs.

Reggae Mint of wrote that the "-styled solo hit" was a musical predecessor to ' song "Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da" (1968). Andrews' brass-heavy hit was also a partial inspiration for the arrangement written by for ' song "Frankly Mr. Shankly" (1986).

(2026). 9780857127822, Omnibus Press.

A German-language version was also recorded. Named "Alles tuʼ ich für dich", it was released on the label Deutsche Vogue.


Robert Wyatt version
In 1974, the song was by (with production by ) as the follow-up to his hit with 's "I'm a Believer" (released on ). However, it was never officially released, due to Virgin head deeming the version "a bit too gloomy". In 1992, Wyatt recalled: "I did 'Yesterday Man', a major-key, upbeat, jolly pseudo-reggae thing. I bent all the chords out of shape and did the whole thing kind of sideways. And I was so happy with that. They said, 'We're not putting this out. It's too lugubrious.' I thought, 'That must be good,' but I got a dictionary, and it's not."

According to Wyatt in an interview with Uncut, "We never pretended to be reggae but it was obviously influenced by that feel, which was very much the heartbeat of London around that time." Richard Cook of Mojo deemed the Wyatt version to be "heartbreakingly desolate and a complete antithesis to Chris Andrew's original". Charles Shaar Murray of wrote: "Where Andrews' original was aggressively petulant, Wyatt's is wistfully surreal", noting that the musician performs the song "on assorted bits of percussion (including a bass-drum whomped by hand) and what sounds like a , but plays around the beat while the main rhythmic push comes from and ."


Chart performance

Weekly charts


Year-end charts

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