"Angie Baby" | ||||
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Single by Helen Reddy | ||||
from the album Free and Easy | ||||
B-side | "I Think I'll Write a Song" | |||
Released | October 7, 1974 | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 3:29 | |||
Label | Capitol | |||
Songwriter(s) | Alan O'Day | |||
Producer(s) | Joe Wissert | |||
Helen Reddy singles chronology | ||||
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"Angie Baby" is a song written by American singer-songwriter Alan O'Day which became a hit for Australian singer Helen Reddy. The song reached #1 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 chart December 28, 1974, and became one of Reddy's biggest-selling singles. The song also topped the U.S. adult contemporary chart, Reddy's fifth #1 on this chart. [3]
The song's cryptic lyrics have inspired a number of listener theories as to what the song is really about. Reddy never said what her interpretation of the storyline was, partly because she said she enjoyed hearing listeners' interpretations. Reddy also said that "Angie Baby" was the one song she never had to push radio stations into playing.
The song tells the story of Angie, a young girl who "lives [her] life in the songs" she hears on "rock and roll radio," her mental disturbances leading to her being removed from school and having no friends. She then spends most of her time listening to the radio, imagining lovers entering her room and then disappearing when her father knocks on the door. One day, a neighbor arrives at Angie's house with intent to do her harm, but once he enters Angie's room he is disoriented by the loud music. The song then turns surreal when, as Angie turns the volume of the radio down, the boy begins to shrink and is pulled into the radio. The closing verse describes the disappearance of the boy and the townsfolks' speculation that he was dead, but nobody asks Angie for an explanation; the lyrics imply that the boy has become her "secret lover." [4]
Though not an official video, John D. Wilson of Fine Arts Films made an accompanying animated short film for the song when it appeared on The Sonny & Cher Show in the mid-1970s (Wilson made many other animated shorts for various hit records of the era and his work became a prominent regular feature of the show). [5] The film does not feature Reddy herself but is a literal interpretation of the song's lyrics.
In an article he wrote in 2006, Alan O'Day said the song took three months to write. Originally it was loosely based on the character in the Beatles' "Lady Madonna". In order to make the character more interesting, O'Day decided to make her abnormal, and he thought of a young next door neighbor girl he had known who had seemed "socially retarded". O'Day said he also thought of his own childhood. As an only child who was often ill, many of his days were spent in bed with a radio to keep him company. He named the character Angie, possibly inspired by the Rolling Stones' 1973 hit song "Angie". [6]
Originally the character was portrayed as mentally "slow", but while writing the song, O'Day showed it to his therapist, who pointed out that the character's reactions in the song were not those of a mentally disabled person, so O'Day changed the lyric from "slow" to "touched," and the character's image changed from being mentally disabled to being "crazy". This expanded to her living in a dream world of lovers, inspired by the songs on her radio. When a "neighbor boy with evil on his mind" tries to enter her room to take advantage of the girl, he is instead drawn into her reality, with weird and unexpected consequences. The intent was to show that the Angie character had more power than he or the listener expected; she shrank him down into her radio, where he remained as her slave whenever she desired him to come out. [6]
O'Day's lyrics inspired a great deal of speculation about their meaning. The song was compared to Bobbie Gentry’s "Ode to Billie Joe" (which had a mystery about "something" thrown off the Tallahatchie Bridge). Some also thought of it as a "Women's Lib" song along the line of Reddy's other hits, like her other #1's, "I Am Woman" and "Delta Dawn", though O'Day says that that was not his intent, and that he was not consciously making a public statement. [6]
O'Day revealed in 1998 that the "crazy" heroine in the song had "magic power" and "special abilities", and that he had deliberately blurred the lines between fantasy and reality. [7] Reddy joked that the boy had become "a sound wave", [8] an explanation that O'Day later denied.
Jeff Wald, who at the time was Reddy's husband and manager, would recall being bowled over upon first hearing the demo of "Angie Baby": "I heard 'Angie...' at 11 am...By noon, Helen had heard it. By three, we were beginning to put an arrangement together. Eight days later it was on the street. Her biggest hit. It had story, melody, everything." [9]
"Angie Baby" became Helen Reddy's first charting single in the British Isles reaching #5 in both the UK and Ireland in February 1975; Reddy would chart again once in both nations with "I Can't Say Goodbye to You" - (#43 UK/ #16 Ireland) - in 1981. [10] "Angie Baby" was also Reddy's final major hit in her native Australia at #13 while affording Reddy her sole charting single in Italy at #36.
Weekly charts
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The song was also featured as the sole Helen Reddy track as part of a promotional-only compilation album issued by Capitol Records entitled "The Greatest Music Ever Sold" (Capitol SPRO-8511/8512), which was distributed to record stores during the 1976 Holiday season as part of Capitol's "Greatest Music Ever Sold" campaign, promoting 15 "Best Of" albums that were released by the record label.
In 1975 a Finnish rendering of the song retaining the English title was recorded by Cascade and also by Päivi Paunu while Zandra - the duo of Örjan Englund and Liza Öhman - recorded a Swedish version which renamed the title character "Carolina". Alan O' Day recorded his composition for his 1977 album Appetizers. "Angie Baby" has also been recorded by Barbara Dickson.
The song was covered by Robin Fox on her 2000 album I See Stars .
The song was sampled in the song "Radio" by Backini. It was covered by The Uncle Devil Show for their record A Terrible Beauty .
Title | Artist [22] | Year | Album |
---|---|---|---|
Angie Baby | Laurie Bower Singers | 1974 | |
Angie Baby (French version) | Sylvie Vartan | 1974 | L'amour au Diapason |
Angie Baby (Finnish version) | Cascade | 1975 | |
Angie Baby | Ray Conniff | 1975 | Laughter in the rain |
Angie Baby | Anne Lise Gjostel | 1975 | |
Angie Baby | Tina Charles | 1975 | |
Angie Baby | Reggie David | 1975 | Live |
Angie Baby | Peter Dean et son Orchestre | 1975 | Trompette Success Vol 3 |
Angie Baby | Sylvia Murdock | 1975 | Live at Southwest High School Folk Music Assembly |
Angie Baby | Tombstones | 1975 | |
Angie Baby | Top Hits International | 1975 | |
Angie Baby | Lin Yang & Prinstar Punchers | 1975 | |
Carolina (Swedish version) | Zandra | 1975 | |
Angie Baby | Marx | 1976 | |
Angie baby (Finnish version) | Paivi Paunu | 1976 | Maailmalla Soi 13 |
Angie Baby | Jennifer Florence | 1977 | The hits of Helen Reddy |
Angie Baby | Alan O'Day | 1977 | Appetizers |
Angie baby (live in london) | Helen Reddy | 1978 | Live in London |
Rare Lina (Norwegian version) | Hanne Krogh | 1978 | Hanne Krogh |
Angie Baby | B.T. Kimbrough | 1979 | Girl for Every Season |
Angie Baby | Reg Livermore | 1979 | Sacred cow |
Angie Baby | Barbara Dickson | 1986 | The right moment/the essential |
Angie Baby | 6 volts | 1991 | Stretch |
Angie Baby | Siobhan Pettit | 1999 | Don't try to cushion the blow |
Angie Baby | Laini Risto | 2000 | where I belong |
Angie Baby | Mark Aaron James | 2001 | Adventures with a Plastic Bag |
Angie Baby | Syd Dale Orchestra | 2001 | love isn't just for the young |
Angie Baby | Robin Fox | 2001 | I see stars |
Angie Baby | Dick Heckstall-Smith | 2001 | blues and beyond |
Hip hop Radio | Erick Sermon | 2002 | react |
Angie Baby | Melissa Langton | 2002 | when the rain falls up |
Angie Baby | Mary Callanan and Brian Patton | 2003 | How I spent my summer vacation |
Angie Baby | The Uncle Devil Show | 2004 | A terrible beauty |
Radio (Angie baby sample) | Backini | 2005 | re:Creation |
Angie Baby | Paul Mauriat | 2007 | |
Angie Baby | Morrismovies | 2007 | |
Angie Baby | Pete Ware | 2007 | |
Angie Baby | Rain 910 | 2008 | American Dreamin |
Angie Baby | Comptones | 2008 | |
Angie Baby | 1970's karaoke band | 2009 | |
Angie Baby | Backtrack Professional Karaoke | 2009 | In style of helen reddy |
Angie Baby | John & Linda | 2009 | |
Angie Baby | perilousRelish | 2009 | |
Angie Baby | Craig Hood | 2009 | |
Angie Baby | Ashley | 2010 | |
Angie Baby | Lynda Baldwin | 2010 | |
Angie Baby | Sandra Porter Bohlken | 2010 | |
Angie Baby | Debbie | 2010 | |
Angie Baby | SexyVampKat2011 | 2011 | |
Angie Baby | Nicky Kurta | 2011 | |
Angie Baby | Popettes | 2011 | cheesy guilty pleasures |
Angie baby (rerecording) | Helen Reddy | 2011 | Very best of Helen Reddy rerecorded |
Angie Baby | Ron Goodwin | 2012 | |
Angie Baby | Graham Blvd | 2012 | |
Angie Baby | Helen Reddy & Alan O'Day | 2012 | |
Angie Baby | Let the Music Play | 2012 | Essential Pop Divas Hit Collection |
Angie Baby | Richard Hildebrand | 2012 | |
Angie Baby | Maria Lawson | 2012 | |
Angie Baby | TingleTrees | 2012 | |
Angie Baby | Charmaine | 2013 | the beginning |
Angie Baby | ProSound Karaoke Band | 2013 | karaoke in the style of Helen Reddy |
Angie Baby | SBI Audio Karaoke | 2013 | SBI Superstars- Helen Reddy, Melissa Manchester |
Angie Baby | Paris Music | 2013 | Karaoke Hits 1974 Vol 2 |
Angie Baby | Kevin Rosentreter | 2013 | |
Angie Baby | Krissie Lees | 2013 | |
Angie Baby | Kelley | 2013 | |
Angie Baby | Seankerry72 | 2013 | |
Angie Baby | A* Karaoke Jukebox | 2013 | 70s Karaoke Hits Vol 10 |
Angie Baby | Ameritz karaoke hits | 2013 | karaoke in the style of Helen Reddy |
Angie Baby | Charmaine | 2013 | The Beginning |
Angie Baby | Hit crew | 2013 | best pop hits of 70s, vol 2 |
Angie Baby | Knightsbridge | 2013 | 70s pop songs that you love- 1974 |
Angie Baby | Miss Michelle | 2013 | All I Need Is You |
Angie Baby | ProSound Karaoke Band | 2013 | karaoke in the style of Helen Reddy |
Angie Baby | Paris Music | 2013 | Karaoke Hits 1974 Vol 2 |
Angie Baby | SBI Audio Karaoke | 2013 | SBI Superstars- Helen Reddy, Melissa Manchester |
Angie Baby | Wahl Collins | 2013 | |
Angie Baby | angela | 2014 | is this love |
Angie Baby | Careysingsjustforyou | 2014 | |
Angie Baby | Corey Farrell | 2014 | |
Angie Baby | Memory Lane | 2014 | remember 1974 |
Angie Baby | w1av | 2014 | |
Angie Baby | Beyer, Matt | 2014 | Yesterday Once More |
Angie Baby | Williams, Brad | 2015 | |
Angie Baby | Dame Gayna Tension | 2015 | |
Angie Baby | Jukebox Pete | 2015 | |
Angie Baby | Emma Robson & Federico Bernardini | 2015 | |
Angie Baby | Anna Gramm | 2015 | Favorite Playbacks, Vol. 125 |
Angie Baby | Lisa Azzolino | 2015 | |
Angie Baby | Ellen Lang | 2015 | Popular Backing Tracks, Vol. 125 |
Angie Baby | Jenni Rudolph | 2015 | |
Angie Baby | Danny McEvoy | 2015 | |
Angie Baby | Tracey Roberts Quartet | 2015 | |
Angie Baby | Inger Lise Rypdal | 2016 | 20 Perler |
Angie Baby | Karafun Karaoke | 2016 | |
Angie Baby | Christine Pflueger | 2016 | |
Angie Baby | Chris from Covington | 2016 | |
Angie Baby | Richard H. | 2016 | Has Been Man vol 3 |
Angie Baby | Plum Busby | 2016 | Live at Hideaway, London |
Angie Baby | Karaoke Maestro | 2017 | Backing Tracks |
Angie Baby | Nello Pinello | 2017 | |
Angie Baby | Rosie Brake & Alan Jackson | 2017 | |
Angie Baby | Harmony TH | 2017 | |
Angie Baby | Chris Gandy | 2017 | |
Angie Baby | Centipeed | 2017 | |
Angie Baby | Half Brit | 2017 | Live at O'Neill's |
Angie Baby | Terri B. | 2017 | |
Angie Baby | Sara Collins | 2017 | |
Angie Baby | Jenny Daniels | 2017 | |
Angie Baby | Karaoke Diamonds | 2017 | chart songs vol 1 |
Angie Baby | Loveydoves | 2017 | |
Angie Baby | Zerabio | 2017 | |
Angie Baby | AngeLofLourdes | 2018 | |
Angie Baby | Maya and Robin | 2018 | |
Angie Baby | Party Tyme Karaoke | 2018 | |
Angie Baby | Some Other Band | 2018 | |
Angie Baby | Werner K. | 2018 | |
Angie Baby | Yopporai Kyabetsu | 2018 | |
Angie Baby | Snorkel Parka | 2018 | |
Angie Baby | Shatner's Hairpiece | 2018 | |
Angie Baby | Lightship Band | 2019 | Live at the Royal George, Pembroke |
Angie Baby | Videoke King | 2019 | |
Angie Baby | Billboard Band | 2019 | Back to 70s Vol 5 |
Angie Baby | Chancellorpink | 2019 | |
Angie Baby | Countdown Singers | 2019 | Throwback Thursday 70s hits |
Angie Baby | Ceri Justice | 2019 | justified |
Angie Baby | Electric Parrot | 2019 | |
Angie Baby | Haysweed Lannett | 2019 | |
Angie Baby | Cyrus Vesuvala | 2019 | |
Angie Baby | Mark Anderson | 2020 | |
Angie Baby | Bettina sings | 2020 | |
Angie Baby | Shruti Chakravarti | 2020 | |
Angie baby | Chelsea Cullen | 2020 | I am woman soundtrack |
Angie Baby | Dave's Guitar Channel | 2020 | |
Angie Baby | Paul Gaspot | 2020 | |
Angie Baby | Angie Gray | 2020 | |
Angie Baby | Idaho Muscle | 2020 | |
Angie Baby | Kim n Dennis | 2020 | |
Angie Baby | M454b | 2020 | |
Angie Baby | Margaret | 2020 | |
Angie Baby | Mel | 2020 | |
Angie Baby | Barbie Milliard | 2020 | |
Angie Baby | Mrj | 2020 | |
Angie Baby | Piano Nuts | 2020 | |
Angie Baby | Pickin Mix Diary | 2020 | |
Angie Baby | Sharta Rae | 2020 | |
Angie Baby | C.R. Sherman | 2020 | |
Angie Baby | Brenna Stage | 2020 | |
Angie Baby | Charlee Tea | 2020 | |
Angie Baby | Andy Watmore | 2020 | |
Angie Baby | John Wurzer | 2020 | |
Angie Baby | Zoom Karaoke | 2020 | |
Angie Baby | Ian How | 2020 | |
Angie Baby | Nichole Madsen | 2020 | |
Angie Baby | Dame the Real | 2020 | |
Angie Baby | Cyndi Burger | 2020 | |
Angie Baby | John Burns | 2020 | |
Angie Baby | Kimberly Dawn | 2020 | |
Angie Baby | Kimberlee | 2021 | |
Angie Baby | Mark Feven | 2021 | |
Angie Baby | facemac91 | 2021 | |
Angie Baby | Sudhanshu Laddha | 2021 | |
Angie Baby | Ivor Sorefingers | 2021 | |
Angie Baby | lefthanderfrog | 2021 | Ukelele- Vol. 891 |
Angie Baby | origin888 | 2021 | |
Angie Baby | Darkraven93 | 2021 | |
Angie Baby | Trisha Gaffey-buck | 2021 | |
Angie Baby | Chris H. | 2021 | |
Angie Baby | Homebirds | 2021 | |
Angie Baby | Sarah Jones | 2021 | |
Angie Baby | La tribe university society | 2021 | |
Angie Baby | Scott Lenz | 2021 | |
Angie Baby | Isobel Martin | 2021 | |
Angie Baby | Stuart Pendrill | 2021 | |
Angie Baby | Lisa Rosey | 2021 | |
Angie Baby | Suze Singer | 2021 | |
Angie Baby | Rhonda Swindell | 2021 | |
Angie Babe | j.ezzer and co. | Noise machine | |
Angie Baby | 70s greatest hits | ||
Angie Baby | To Ada | ||
Angie Baby | Latcho Drum | ||
Angie Baby | John Gregory | ||
Angie Baby | Dave Major and the Minors | Our 3rd record | |
Angie Baby | Sarah Moore | Women of Folk | |
Angie Baby | Anne Murray, Judy collins & Helen Reddy | ||
Angie Baby | Pmc all-stars | ||
Angie Baby | Queen Beaver | ||
Mo Wei Ai Shang Be! (Cantonese version) | Stephanie Lai Ming Sze | ||
Angie Baby | George Greeley | ||
Angie Baby | Seeburg | ||
Angie Baby | Pete Moore Orch. | ||
Angie Baby | Vocal Music Laserdisc |
Alan Earle O'Day was an American singer-songwriter, best known for writing and singing "Undercover Angel," a million-selling Gold-certified American No. 1 hit in 1977. He also wrote songs for many other notable performers, such as 1974's Helen Reddy No. 1 hit "Angie Baby" and the Righteous Brothers' No. 3 Gold hit "Rock and Roll Heaven". In the 1980s he moved from pop music to television, co-writing nearly 100 songs for the Saturday morning Muppet Babies series, and in the 1990s he wrote and performed music on the National Geographic series Really Wild Animals. O'Day also collaborated with Tatsuro Yamashita on a series of popular songs in Japan including "Your Eyes", "Magic Ways", "Christmas Eve" and "Fragile".
"Delta Dawn" is a song written by musician Larry Collins and country songwriter Alex Harvey. The first notable recording of the song was in 1971 by American singer and actress Bette Midler for her debut album The Divine Miss M. However it is best known as a 1972 top ten country hit for Tanya Tucker and a 1973 US number one hit for Helen Reddy.
"I Am Woman" is a song written by Australian musicians Helen Reddy and Ray Burton. Performed by Reddy, the first recording of "I Am Woman" appeared on her debut album I Don't Know How to Love Him, released in May 1971, and was heard during the closing credits for the 1972 film Stand Up and Be Counted. A new recording of the song was released as a single in May 1972 and became a number-one hit later that year, eventually selling over one million copies. The song came near the apex of the counterculture era and, by celebrating female empowerment, became an enduring feminist anthem for the women's liberation movement. Following Reddy's death in September 2020, the song peaked at number 2 on the Australian digital sales chart.
Dark Lady is the eleventh studio album by American singer-actress Cher, released in May 1974 by MCA. Cher again collaborated with Snuff Garrett as a record producer, and with Al Capps for the arrangements. Dark Lady was the third and final studio album for MCA. It was also the last record promoted on her successful The Sonny & Cher Comedy Hour show. After its release, the album received positive reviews from critics but, unlike her previous record produced by Garrett, was only moderately successful.
"You're My World" is a cover of Italian ballad originally recorded in 1963 as "Il mio mondo" by Umberto Bindi, who co-wrote the original version with Gino Paoli. Subsequently, an English version was commissioned, and the lyrics were written by Carl Sigman as "You're My World". The song reached No. 1 in Australia (twice), Belgium, Mexico, Netherlands, South Africa and United Kingdom in recordings by Cilla Black, Daryl Braithwaite, Guys 'n' Dolls and Helen Reddy. Black's and Reddy's versions reached the US Top 40 in 1964 and 1977, respectively. The song also reached No. 1 in France and Spain in the respective translations "Ce monde" and "Mi Mundo", both sung by Richard Anthony.
"Undercover Angel" is a song by singer-songwriter Alan O'Day. Released as a single in 1977, it was certified gold, having reached No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 and No. 9 on the Australian Singles Chart.
"More Love" is a 1967 hit single recorded by the American soul group The Miracles for Motown Records' Tamla label. The single, included on the group's 1967 album Make It Happen, later reissued in 1970 as The Tears of a Clown. Kim Carnes's 1980 cover of the song reached the Top 10 of Billboard's Adult Contemporary and Hot 100 charts.
"Keep on Singing" is a 1973 song composed by Danny Janssen and Bobby Hart, and was originally recorded by Austin Roberts from the album Austin Roberts. It was released as a single on Chelsea Records and reached No. 50 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 and No. 39 on the Cash Box Top 100. In Canada it reached # 79. "Keep on Singing" was best known as a hit single by Helen Reddy in 1974.
"(You're) Having My Baby" is a song written and recorded in 1974 by Canadian singer Paul Anka. Recorded as a duet with female vocalist Odia Coates, the song became Anka's first No. 1 hit on the Billboard Hot 100 in 15 years, since 1959's "Lonely Boy". The song was certified Gold by the RIAA.
"We'll Sing in the Sunshine" is a 1964 hit song written and recorded by Gale Garnett which reached No. 2 in Canada, and No. 4 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 chart for the week ending 17 October 1964. It also enjoyed success on easy listening and country music radio stations, spending seven weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard Easy Listening chart and No. 42 on the country chart. The Cash Box Top 100 ranked "We'll Sing in the Sunshine" at No. 1 for the week of 31 October 1964, and it also reached No. 1 in Garnett's native New Zealand that November. In Australia, "We'll Sing in the Sunshine" afforded Garnett a Top Ten hit with a No. 10 peak in October 1964. Garnett's sole Top 40 hit, "We'll Sing in the Sunshine" won the Grammy Award for Best Ethnic or Traditional Folk Recording in 1965.
"Leave Me Alone " is a 1973 song written and first recorded by American singer-songwriter Linda Laurie. It was famously covered by Australian-American singer Helen Reddy several months later; Reddy's cover was a million-selling, Gold-certified hit single.
"Peaceful" is a song written by Kenny Rankin, and recorded by several artists. It is best known as hit singles for Georgie Fame (1969) and Helen Reddy (1973).
"Ain't No Way to Treat a Lady" is a 1974 written and first recorded by American singer-songwriter Harriet Schock. It was covered by various other artists, and saw its greatest success when it was covered by Helen Reddy, whose 1975 rendition became a top 10 hit.
Australian-American singer Helen Reddy (1941–2020), often referred to as the "Queen of 70s Pop", recorded 18 studio albums, seven of which have achieved sales of 500,000 units in the US for which they were awarded Gold certification by the Recording Industry Association of America. One of those seven, I Am Woman, eventually went Platinum by reaching sales of one million copies, and her first compilation album, Helen Reddy's Greatest Hits, was awarded Double Platinum status in 1992 for hitting the two million sales mark. The respective US and Canadian album charts in Billboard and RPM magazine each had appearances by 10 of these LPs during the 1970s.
Free and Easy is the sixth studio album by Australian-American pop singer Helen Reddy that was released in the fall of 1974 by Capitol Records. The album included rare forays into rock and vaudeville ("Showbiz"). The album debuted on Billboard's Top LP's & Tapes chart in the issue dated November 2, 1974, and reached number eight during its 28 weeks there. The following month, on December 18, the Recording Industry Association of America awarded the album with Gold certification for sales of 500,000 copies in the United States. In the UK it peaked at number 17, and in Canada's RPM magazine it got as high as number nine on its list of the top LPs in the issue dated January 11, 1975. On January 27, 2004, it was released for the first time on compact disc as one of two albums on one CD, the other album being her other 1974 release, Love Song for Jeffrey.
Helen Reddy's Greatest Hits is a compilation album by Australian-American pop singer Helen Reddy. It was released in 1975 by Capitol Records.
Ear Candy is the ninth studio album by Australian-American pop singer Helen Reddy, released on 25 April 1977 by Capitol Records. The album included a modern take on the doo-wop genre, a Cajun number that gave the Melbourne native her first and only appearance on Billboard magazine's Country chart, and a dark self-parody on which Reddy proclaims: "I don't take no shit from nobody". Unusually, half of the songs recorded for Ear Candy were co-written by Reddy herself, including the second single, "The Happy Girls", Reddy's first self-penned A-side single since "I am Woman". The album's first single, a remake of the 1964 Cilla Black hit "You're My World", gave Reddy a final Top 40 hit.
Live in London is the first live album by Australian-American pop singer Helen Reddy that was released in 1978 by Capitol Records and, as with her previous release, did not reach Billboard magazine's Top LP's & Tapes chart. On June 25, 2002, the album was released for the first time on compact disc.
"Long Tall Glasses (I Can Dance)" is a 1974 song by Leo Sayer, co-written with David Courtney. It was released in the United Kingdom in late 1974, becoming Sayer's third hit record on both the British and Irish singles charts and reaching number four in both nations. It was included on Sayer's album Just a Boy.
"Don't Throw It All Away" is a song written by British musician Gary Benson and first released by the Shadows on their 1975 album Specs Appeal. Benson released his version as a single later the same year, which reached number 20 on the UK Singles Chart in the fall of 1975.
It sounds like standard mid-'70s popcraft...But "Angie Baby" takes those ideas further, into a truly wild psychedelic realm...'60s psychedelia must've made for a good time, but it has absolutely nothing on what it would become in '70s pop...