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Call Me

 
Lyrics: Call Me
 

Performed by: Blondie; Franz Ferdinand; Re-Touch; Tina Arena
Written by: Deborah Harry; Giorgio Moroder

Credits: Harry, Deborah (Songwriter); Moroder, Giorgio (Songwriter); CHRYSALIS MUSIC (Publisher); SONY/ATV MELODY (Publisher)

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Wikipedia: Call Me (Blondie song)
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"Call Me"
Single by Blondie
from the album American Gigolo
Released February 1980 (US)
April 1980 (UK)
Format Vinyl 7" & 12" single
Recorded August 1979
Genre New wave, hard rock
Length 3:32 (7" version)
8:04 (LP version)
Label Polydor Records
Chrysalis Records
Salsoul Records
Writer(s) Debbie Harry, Giorgio Moroder
Producer Giorgio Moroder
Certification Gold (US)
Silver (UK)
Blondie singles chronology
"The Hardest Part"
(1980)
Call Me
(1980)
"Atomic"
(1980)
Audio sample
file info · help
Alternate cover
The US edition of the 1980 "Call Me" 7" single with alternate cover art.
The US edition of the 1980 "Call Me" 7" single with alternate cover art.

"Call Me" is a song by the American new wave band Blondie. Released in 1980, "Call Me" topped the singles charts in both the US (where it became the band's biggest selling single) and the UK (where it became their fourth no.1 hit).

Contents

Song and single information

The song was the main theme of the film American Gigolo. European disco producer Giorgio Moroder originally asked Stevie Nicks and Fleetwood Mac to help compose and perform a song for the soundtrack, but she declined (as a recently signed contract with Modern Records prevented her from working with Moroder). It was at this time that Moroder turned to Debbie Harry and Blondie. Moroder presented Harry with a rough instrumental track called "Man Machine." Harry was asked to write the lyrics and melody, a process that Harry states took only a few hours [1]. The completed song was then recorded by the band, with Moroder producing. The bridge of the original English language version also includes Harry singing "Call Me" in Italian ("Amore, chiamami") and French ("Appelle-moi, mon cheri").

In the US the song was released by three different record companies: on the soundtrack album by Polydor, the 7" and 12" on Blondie's label Chrysalis, and a Spanish language 12" version, with lyrics by Buddy and Mary McCluskey, on disco label Salsoul Records. The Spanish version, titled "Llámame," was meant for release in Mexico and some South American countries. This version was also released in the US and the UK and had its CD debut on Chrysalis/EMI's rarities compilation Blonde and Beyond (1993). In 1988, a remixed version by Ben Liebrand taken from the Blondie remix album Once More into the Bleach was issued as a single in the UK. In 2001 the "original long version" appeared as a bonus track on the Autoamerican album re-issue.

Popularity and acclaim

The single was released in the United States in February 1980. It peaked at #1 for 6 weeks, and was certified Gold (for one million copies sold) by the RIAA. It also spent four weeks at number two on the U.S. Dance chart. According to Billboard magazine, the track was the best selling single of the year in 1980. It was released in the UK two months later, where it became Blondie's fourth UK no.1 single in little over a year. The song was also played on a British Telecom advert from the 1980s. Twenty-five years after its original release, "Call Me" was ranked at #283 on the list of Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.

The song lists at #44 on Billboard's All Time Top 100.[1]

Music video

There were two videos made:

  • One was compiled clips and video footage in New York and Manhattan of Deborah Harry. The video can be found on the 1991 UK video compilation The Complete Picture: The Very Best of Deborah Harry and Blondie.
  • The other, which came out in 1980, was non-representational, not featuring any of the band. It depicted a New York taxi driver (who had in fact appeared in numerous other Blondie music videos) driving his Checker through Manhattan traffic. This version was part of the 1981 "Best Of Blondie" compilation video.

Release history

All tracks written by Deborah Harry and Giorgio Moroder.

US, UK 7" (CHS 2414)
  1. "Call Me (Theme from American Gigolo)" (7" edit) – 3:32
  2. "Call Me" (7" instrumental) – 3:27
UK 12" (CHS 12 2414)
  1. "Call Me" (7" edit) – 3:32
  2. "Call Me" (Spanish version - 7" edit) – 3:32
  3. "Call Me" (7" instrumental) - 3:27
US 12" (Salsoul SG 341)
  1. "Call Me" (Spanish version, extended) – 6:23
  2. "Call Me" (12" instrumental) – 6:10

In Film

The song appeared in 1998 film Bride Of Chucky.

Chart peaks

Chart (1980) Peak Position
(Weeks on top)
US 1 6
Canada 1 6
UK 1
Ireland 2
Norway 2
Sweden 3
Switzerland 3
Austria 5
New Zealand 6
Netherlands 12
Germany 14

Chipmunks version

"Call Me"
Single by The Chipmunks
from the album Chipmunk Punk
Released August 1980
Format Vinyl
Recorded September 1979
Length 3:11 (LP/radio version)
3:49 (12" version)
Label Excelsior Records
Writer(s) Debbie Harry
Giorgio Moroder
The Chipmunks singles chronology
"My Sharona"
(1980)
Call Me
(1980)
"On the Road Again"
(1981)

In 1980, KMET DJ Chuck Taylor played the 12" version of this single at double speed and announced, in jest, that it was The Chipmunks' latest single. So many requests came for this "new" Chipmunks release, that Ross Bagdasarian, Jr. and his collaborator Steve Vining rushed to record what would be the Chipmunks' "comeback album," Chipmunk Punk in 1980.

Other cover versions

Live cover performances


Preceded by
"Another Brick in the Wall (Part II)" by Pink Floyd
Billboard Hot 100 number one single
April 19 - May 24, 1980
Succeeded by
"Funkytown" by Lipps Inc
Preceded by
"My Sharona" by The Knack
Billboard Hot 100 Number one single of the year
1980
Succeeded by
"Bette Davis Eyes" by Kim Carnes
Preceded by
"Working My Way Back to You" by The Detroit Spinners
UK number one single
26 April 1980
Succeeded by
"Geno" by Dexys Midnight Runners
Preceded by
"Another Brick in the Wall (Part II)" by Pink Floyd
ARC Weekly Top 40 number one single
April 12, 1980 - May 24, 1980
Succeeded by
"Funkytown" by Lipps Inc

References

The Swedish charts

See also


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