"We'll Sing in the Sunshine" is a 1964 hit song written and recorded by Gale Garnett which reached No. 2 in Canada,[1] and No. 4 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 chart for the week ending 17 October 1964.[2] It also enjoyed success on easy listening and country music radio stations, spending seven weeks at No. 1 on the BillboardEasy Listening chart[3] and No. 42 on the country chart. The Cash Box Top 100 ranked "We'll Sing in the Sunshine" at No. 1 for the week of 31 October 1964, and it also reached No. 1 in Garnett's native New Zealand that November.[4] In Australia, "We'll Sing in the Sunshine" afforded Garnett a Top Ten hit with a No. 10 peak in October 1964. Garnett's sole Top 40 hit, "We'll Sing in the Sunshine" won the Grammy Award for Best Ethnic or Traditional Folk Recording in 1965.
In the song, a woman tells her would-be lover that she does not believe in long-term relationships. She says she will give him a year, then leave him, and assures him he will look back fondly on their year together.[6]
"We'll Sing in the Sunshine" was a minor C&W hit in 1970 for LaWanda Lindsey, reaching No. 63, serving as the title cut for Lindsey's album.[citation needed]
Helen Reddy remade the song, with Kim Fowley producing, for her May 1978 album release We'll Sing in the Sunshine with the track being released as advance single on 28 March, with a special 1 March advance release in Hawaii, in hopes a new single release from Reddy would foment interest in the singer's high-profile Easter Sunday (26 March) Sheraton Waikiki shows, and also that a "sunshine" song might be afforded an early breakout in a tropical region.[20][21] The single failed to arouse any evident Top 40 radio interest, becoming the first lead single from a Helen Reddy album to fall short of the Hot 100 in Billboard: "We'll Sing in the Sunshine" afforded Reddy her last Top 20 ranking on Billboard's Adult Contemporary chart.[22] Reddy's live recording of "We'll Sing in the Sunshine" was featured on her concert album Live in London recorded at the Palladium in May 1978.[23] In 1984, Dolly Parton sang the song on her album of covers, The Great Pretender, released by RCA Records.[24] It was one of her last records with RCA.