Snowbird (song)


"Snowbird" is a song by the Canadian songwriter Gene MacLellan. Though it has been recorded by many performers, it is best known through Anne Murray's 1969 recording, which—after appearing as an album track in mid-1969—was eventually released as a single in the summer of 1970. It was a No. 2 hit on Canada's pop chart and went to No. 1 on both the Canadian adult contemporary and country charts. The song reached No. 8 on the U.S. pop singles chart, spent six weeks at No. 1 on the U.S. adult contemporary chart, and became a surprise Top 10 U.S. country hit as well. It was certified as a gold single by the RIAA, the first American Gold record ever awarded to a Canadian solo female artist. The song peaked at No. 23 on the UK Singles Chart. In 2003 it was an inaugural song inductee of the Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame.
Anne Murray and Gene MacLellan had met while both were regulars on the CBC television series Singalong Jubilee and Murray recorded two of MacLellan's compositions, "Snowbird" and "Biding My Time", for her first major label album release, This Way Is My Way, in 1969. Murray would recall: "Gene told me he wrote in twenty minutes while walking on a beach on Prince Edward Island."
The theme and approach broadly resemble that of the earlier hits "Message to Michael" and "Yellow Bird" in contrasting the narrator's being stranded in the place of their heartache to the bird's ability to just up and fly away. "Snowbird" sold well over a million copies and was recently picked as 19th on the list, a partially populist approach to defining the most influential songs by Canadians.

Chart performance

Weekly singles charts

Year-end charts

Other versions

's own recording of "Snowbird" on his 1970 album Street Corner Preacher features an additional verse to the song's standard two verse format.
In 2007, Murray remade "Snowbird" for her ' album; the song being rendered as a duet with Sarah Brightman.
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