Love to Love You Baby (song)

Last updated

"Love to Love You Baby"
Love to Love You Baby by Donna Summer 1975 US vinyl A-side.jpg
A-side label of US vinyl single
Single by Donna Summer
from the album Love to Love You Baby
B-side "Need-a-Man Blues"
ReleasedJune 1975 (Netherlands, as "Love to Love You")
November 26, 1975 (worldwide, as "Love to Love You Baby")
Recorded1974 (as "Love to Love You")
May–June 1975 (as "Love to Love You Baby")
Studio Musicland, Munich, West Germany
Genre
Length3:20 (original NL version)
16:49 (album version)
4:57 (single version)
Label Oasis
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s) Pete Bellotte
Donna Summer singles chronology
"Lady of the Night"
(1974)
"Love to Love You Baby"
(1975)
"Virgin Mary"
(1975)

"Virgin Mary"
(1975)

"Love to Love You Baby"
(1975)

"Could It Be Magic"
(1976)

1983 re-issue

Following the dance chart success of the Patrick Cowley remix of Summer's "I Feel Love" in 1982, Casablanca Records/PolyGram re-issued her first hit single "Love to Love You Baby". However, the single failed to make an impact on the charts the second time around, and it would be the label's final single re-release of tracks from the Donna Summer back catalog in the 1980s. In 1984, Casablanca Records was closed by PolyGram.

  1. "Love to Love You Baby" (Part One) – 3:35
  2. "Love to Love You Baby" (Part Two) – 4:12
  1. "Love to Love You Baby" (Come On Over to My Place Version) – 16:50
  2. "Love to Love You Baby" (Come Dancing Version) – 8:10 (A Young and Strong mega-edit)

Note: The "Come On Over to My Place Version" is in fact the original full-length album version.

1990 re-release

  1. "Love to Love You Baby" – 4:15
  2. "I Feel Love" – 5:39
  3. "Bad Girls" – 3:54
  4. "On the Radio" (long version) – 5:51

2013 release

  1. "Love to Love You Baby" (Giorgio Moroder Remix) (featuring Chris Cox) (4:15)

Charts

Certifications and sales

RegionCertification Certified units/sales
Canada (Music Canada) [39] Gold75,000^
United Kingdom250,000 [40]
United States (RIAA) [41] Gold1,000,000^

^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.

Cover versions and samples

Tech N9ne "Trapped in A psychos body"

See also

Related Research Articles

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Thank God It's Friday is a 1978 American musical-comedy film directed by Robert Klane and produced by Motown Productions and Casablanca FilmWorks for Columbia Pictures. Produced at the height of the disco craze, the film features The Commodores performing "Too Hot ta Trot", and Donna Summer performing "Last Dance", which won the Academy Award for Best Original Song in 1978. The film features an early performance by Jeff Goldblum and the first major screen appearance by Debra Winger. The film also features Terri Nunn, who later achieved fame in the 1980s new wave group Berlin. This was one of several Columbia Pictures films in which the studio's "Torch Lady" came to life in the opening credits, showing off her moves for a few seconds before the start of the film.

<i>Love to Love You Baby</i> (album) 1975 studio album by Donna Summer

Love to Love You Baby is the second studio album by American singer Donna Summer, released on August 27, 1975, and her first to be released internationally and in the United States. Her previous album Lady of the Night (1974) was released only in the Netherlands. The album was commercially successful, mainly because of the success of its title track, which reached number 2 on the US Pop charts despite some radio stations choosing not to play the song due to its sexually explicit nature.

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"I Feel Love" is a song by the American singer Donna Summer. Produced and co-written by Giorgio Moroder and Pete Bellotte, it was recorded for Summer's fifth studio album, I Remember Yesterday (1977). The album concept was to have each track evoke a different musical decade; for "I Feel Love", the team aimed to create a futuristic mood, employing a Moog synthesizer.

<i>A Love Trilogy</i> 1976 studio album by Donna Summer

A Love Trilogy is the third studio album by American singer and songwriter Donna Summer. It was released on March 5, 1976, eight months after her international breakthrough with the single and album of the same name – "Love to Love You Baby". The bold, sexual nature of that particular song had earned Summer the title 'the first lady of love'. By now Summer's work was being distributed in the U.S. by Casablanca Records, and the label encouraged Summer, Moroder and team to continue in this vein. A Love Trilogy uses the first side for one long disco track in three distinct movements 'Try Me', 'I Know', 'We Can Make It', and coalescing into the "love trilogy" of the title – "Try Me, I Know We Can Make It". Side two contained three additional erotic disco songs, including a cover of Barry Manilow's "Could It Be Magic". The album's artwork showed Summer floating light-heartedly through the clouds, again adding to the image of her as a fantasy figure.

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