This was Berry's second single, after "Maybellene." Officially titled "Thirty Days (To Come Back Home)," it is usually alluded to as simply "Thirty Days." According to Berry's piano player and collaborator Johnnie Johnson in Bruce Pegg's unauthorized biography Brown Eyed Handsome Man..., like the B-Side "Together (We Will Always Be)," this track was written by Berry while they were on the road, and recorded in haste at Chicago. "I don't think that it took more than an hour for each one," he said. An attempt to reproduce "Maybellene," it was released on the Chess label, made #8 on the R&B chart, but never troubled the Hot 100, and was soon covered by Ernest Tubb on Decca.
In this song, Berry's girl has left him and he's giving her 30 days to return, warning her that if she doesn't, he'll "send out a world wide hoodoo" and press false charges against her. It's not a very romantic sentiment, but that wasn't Berry's game: his songs were filled with humor and dysfunction.
Mick Jagger got the title for "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction" from the line in this: "Can't get no satisfaction from the judge."
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