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This song was written by Carole King and Gerry Goffin, part of the legendary Brill Building club. Carole King pecked out the tune on the piano, and almost handed it over to Cynthia Weil, but Gerry Goffin turned up some lyrics for it. Writers Carole King and Gerry Goffin came out to L.A. at the behest of Garrett's calling Aldon Music, and at last when King and Goffin sat down to a piano to play "Take Good Care Of My Baby," Vee was blown away. They asked Don Kirshner at Aldon to come out and produce with them, and Kirshner came all the way from New York by train.

Furthermore, another singer with Aldon, Dion Dimucci, had already been interested in the song. But when he tried to record it, it didn't take, so he had to settle for his later hit with "Runaround Sue." This left the song open for Vee. Ten days after Goffin and King signed the song off to Vee, they heard it playing on the car radio on the trip back home. The song became King and Goffin's second #1 single after The Shirelles' "Will You Love Me Tomorrow" put them on the map. It was also Bobby Vee's only #1. King and Giffin's next chart-topper would be "The Loco-Motion" in 1962.

Before this song, Bobby Vee's claim to fame was filling in for Buddy Holly, who along with Ritchie Valens and The Big Bopper, died in rock history's most famous plane crash en route to a show in Fargo, North Dakota. Vee had been scraping up a band already. On the date of the crash, the local radio actually put out a call for replacements, and Vee and his band volunteered. Not that Vee was small potatoes - Bob Dylan played in his band early on! Vee charted three times previously and made the Top-40 on the Billboard Hot 100 a total of 14 times.