"Barry Manilow songs" . "false"^^ . . "1973 singles" . . "Cher songs" . "Jerry Livingston" . "1981-06-15"^^ . "Songs with lyrics by Paul Francis Webster" . "-0.413161"^^ . "Barry Gibb songs" . "Elvis Presley songs" . "Songs written by Jerry Livingston" . "Columbia Graphophone Company singles" . "The Twelfth Of Never" . "Johnny Mathis songs" . "GBAYE8700310" . "Oliver (singer) songs" . "-12.6"^^ . "Donny Osmond songs" . "3127402" . "Columbia Records singles" . "272907"^^ . . "Columbia Records" . "UK Singles Chart number-one singles" . "1957 songs" . "Dolly Parton songs" . . "Columbia Graphophone Company" . "163.0"^^ . . . "The Chi-Lites songs" . "5714deca25ac0d8aee3db17e" . "Andy Williams songs" . "-0.349418"^^ . "Cliff Richard songs" . "Song recordings produced by Norrie Paramor" . "The Twelfth Of Never" . "163000.0"^^ . . "1973-02-24"^^ . "Norrie Paramor" . "MGM Records singles" . "false"^^ . "Keith Urban songs" . . "0"^^ . "f36503ff-c023-40d3-bc66-2677416c8346" . "%22The Twelfth of Never%22 is a popular song recorded by Johnny Mathis and later by other artists, including Cliff Richard and Donny Osmond. The song's title comes from the popular expression %22the 12th of Never%22, which is used as the date of a future occurrence that will never come to pass. In the case of the song, %22the 12th of Never%22 is given as the date on which the singer will stop loving his beloved, thus indicating that he will always love her. The song draws a similar link between the cessation of love and a number of other events expected never to happen.Mathis initially disliked the song, which was released as the flip side to his number-one hit single %22Chances Are%22.The song was written by Jerry Livingston and Paul Francis Webster, the tune (except for the bridge) being adapted from %22The Riddle Song%22 (also known as %22I Gave My Love a Cherry%22), an old English folk song. Mathis's original version reached number 9 on what is now called the Billboard Hot 100 in the USA in 1957. A version by Cliff Richard was released in 1964 and reached number 8 in the UK. Donny Osmond's version, produced by Mike Curb and Don Costa, was his second number 1 single in the UK, spending a single week at the top of the UK Singles Chart in March 1973. In the U.S. it peaked at number 8." . . . "2416" . "8"^^ . "Tammy Wynette songs" . "Olivia Newton-John songs" . "1972-11-27" . . "english" . "Paul Francis Webster" . "false"^^ . "MGM Records" . "1957 singles" . "1969 singles" .