Since you are reading this in a senior publication, there’s a good chance that you not only remember Ringo Starr’s “You’re Sixteen” from 50 years ago, but the original 1960 version by Johnny Burnette, as well.
Burnette was born in 1935 and lived with his parents and brother Dorsey in a Memphis housing project that included equally poor neighbors Vernon, Gladys and Elvis Presley.
After school days ended, music lovers Johnny, Dorsey and a mutual friend formed the hard-driving Johnny Burnette Trio. They toured constantly and recorded some high-octane 45s that went nowhere. (Rockabilly collectors now lust after those obscure plastic discs.)
Later, Johnny and Dorsey Burnette moved to Los Angeles to become songwriters for Ricky Nelson (“Believe What You Say,” “It’s Late”). As a solo artist, Johnny Burnette signed with Los Angeles’s Liberty Records and proceeded to cut some minor hit singles.
Burnette’s only Top 10 career tune was the bouncy, violin saturated “You’re Sixteen,” which ended up on the best-selling soundtrack of George Lucas’ 1973 nostalgia movie “American Graffiti.” In 1964, Johnny Burnette died in a California boating accident.
Source: Randal C. Hill/vieravoice.com