"Sugar and Spice" is a 1963 song by Merseybeat band The Searchers written by Tony Hatch under the pseudonym Fred Nightingale.[1] It made #2 on the UK charts (on Pye), #44 in the USA charts,[2][3] and #11 in the Canadian CHUM Charts.[4]
The Searchers recorded a German interpretation of the song entitled Süß ist sie[1], and also the French rendering C'est De Notre Age. [2], released in both countries by French Record Label, Disques Vogue.
Background
The composer and producer of "Sugar and Spice", Tony Hatch, had produced the precedent Searchers' single: a cover of the Drifters' "Sweets for My Sweet", which had afforded the Searchers a #1 UK hit. Hatch, having written "Sugar and Spice" on the template of "Sweets for My Sweet", pitched his original song to the Searchers as the work of an as-yet unknown songwriter named Fred Nightingale, as Hatch felt the group might be dismissive of the song if they knew it to be their producer's work.