Ooh I Do

Last updated

"Ooh I Do"
Single by Lynsey de Paul
B-side "Nothing Really Lasts Forever"
Released17 May 1974 (1974-05-17)
Studio ATV Music
Genre Pop rock
Length3:31
Label Warner Bros.
Songwriter(s) Lynsey de Paul and Barry Blue
Producer(s) Lynsey de Paul
Lynsey de Paul singles chronology
"Won't Somebody Dance with Me"
(1973)
"Ooh I Do"
(1974)
"No, Honestly"
(1974)

"Ooh I Do" is the fifth single released by Lynsey de Paul on 17 May 1974 and her only single released on the Warner Bros. label, after moving there from MAM Records. [1] Co-written by de Paul and Barry Blue, [2] this Phil Spector-ish song with a nod to the style of the Roy Wood/Wizzard sound, [3] conveys the angst about parents not believing in a teenage love affair represented a change of style for de Paul, who also produced the recording. De Paul performed the song on TV shows in Spain and Germany, however, her only UK performance was for Top of the Pops , but this was never shown because of industrial action at the BBC. [4] De Paul re-recorded the song for this episode and this version was released on the BBC Transcription Services album, Top Of The Pops-495, which also featured an interview conducted by Brian Matthews. [5]

Contents

History

Together with "Sugar Me" it was her biggest hit in Japan. [6] In the UK, some copies were mis-pressed with the B-side label appearing as "Ten Years After on Strawberry Jam" by The Scaffold, that also appeared on the Warner Bros label, although the track that plays is "Nothing Really Lasts Forever" (K 16400), also sung, composed and produced by de Paul. [7] According to Barry Blue, "Ooh I Do" is the only song he and de Paul co-write that they fell out over - Blue wanted to release his version of the song as a single but de Paul recorded it first. [8]

Chart performance

It was a hit in the UK Singles Chart (number 25), [9] and in corresponding charts in Belgium, [10] the Netherlands [11] and Brazil. [12] It reached number 13 on the Capital countdown chart [13] and number 20 on the NME chart. [14] It was ranked 50th best single of 1974 by Joepie, a Flemish hit list that was published in the youth magazine, Joepie, [15] as well as on the Radio Mi Amigo year end chart. [16]

Other recordings

The song has been covered by other artists, notably Barry Blue, albeit it with different lyrics; as well as the Japanese artists Kojima Mayumi, on the album, Jive Bunny Project – Stepping - Spectre Sounds, [17] as well as on her 2015 album Cover Songs, [18] and GML (Girl Meets Love) on their CD GML Meets Union Jack. [19]

Chart performance

Chart (1974)Peak
position
Belgium12
Brazil11
Netherlands16
UK25

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<i>Taste Me... Dont Waste Me</i> 1974 studio album by Lynsey de Paul

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<i>Surprise</i> (Lynsey de Paul album) 1973 studio album by Lynsey de Paul

Surprise is the first album released by Lynsey de Paul on the MAM record label in 1973. In Australia, the album name was changed to Sugar Me, after de Paul's first hit single. All of the songs on the album were written or co-written by de Paul, who was accompanied by some of the UK's leading session musicians including Terry Cox, Ralph McTell, Ray Cooper, Jeff Daly, John Gustafson, Chris Rae, Danny Thompson, Gary Boyle, Barry de Souza, Dick Katz, Robert Kirby, Francis Monkman, John Richardson and violinist Johnny Van Derrick. The album front cover is a portrait photo of de Paul photographed by Clive Arrowsmith, and a gatefold sleeve with illustrations provided by de Paul, a nod to her previous career of designing album sleeves and song lyrics.

"Sugar Me" is a song written by Lynsey de Paul and Barry Green. The first version of this song to be released was recorded by de Paul as her first single on MAM Records in 1972. It was produced by Gordon Mills and the B-side was de Paul's version of "Storm in a Teacup", a song she had co-written and had been a hit for the Fortunes earlier that year.

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"Papa Do" is a song written by Lynsey de Paul and Barry Blue, who are credited as Rubin and Green. The song was released as a single performed by Barry Green in February 1972 backed with "Boomerang" on the Decca label and had a modicum of chart success in Spain, France and Sweden. It received a number of favourable reviews, including one from the BBC DJ Alan Freeman on his Sunday radio show Pick of the Pops. The Dutch group, Cardinal Point, recorded a version which was similar in style to that recorded by Green, as a track on their self-named album, and the Greek group, The Daltons, also released a version of the song as a single. The song was re-titled "Mama Do" and the text slightly modified for de Paul's own jazzed up version, that served as the opening track for her debut album, Surprise, which was released in 1973. In January 1974, Decca Records re-released the single to capitalize on Barry Blue's chart success and it again received positive reviews.

"Tip of My Tongue" is a song written by Lynsey de Paul and Barry Blue. It was first released as the fifth single by Brotherly Love with the song "I Love Everything About You" as the flip side on CBS Records on 27 April 1973. and was produced by Phil Wainman. According to music journalist James Craig, de Paul was in the audience for a Brotherly Love performance at Gulliver's and was so impressed with them that she co-penned "Tip of My Tongue" for them. The trio performed the song on the Granada TV programme Lift Off With Ayshea on 22 June 1973. The song received positive reviews from the British music press, and the brothers were interviewed about the single It made the UK chart breakers on 23 May 1973 but did not manage to enter the UK Singles Chart. Barry Blue was credited as "Barry Green" on this release.

"House of Cards" is a song written by Lynsey de Paul and Barry Blue and is one of their most covered songs. It was first released as a single by Chris Kelly on the CBS label on 7 April 1972, credited as being written by Rubin and Green (Blue). The song was a radio hit in Italy, receiving multiple plays on national radio stations.

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"All Night" is a song written by Lynsey de Paul and Ron Roker. De Paul released her version of the song on 27 April 1973 as her third single released on MAM Records, with arrangements by Martyn Ford and John Bell and produced by de Paul. The song is listed in the U.S. Library of Congress Catalog of Copyright Entries and in the "The Directory of American 45 R.p.m. Records" It features an uncredited male vocal. A slinky, sexy song, it compares a love relationship to that of the spider and a fly. The single is backed by the more socially aware song "Blind Leading the Blind", composed and produced by de Paul. The song was an unusual release since neither the A-side or the B-side featured as tracks on her debut album. "Surprise" had been released a little more than a month earlier - presumably it was not included since "All Night" has a very different style than the tracks on Surprise.

<i>Sugar and Beyond</i> 2013 double compilation album by Lynsey de Paul

Sugar and Beyond is a double compilation album by the British singer-songwriter Lynsey de Paul released on 18 March 2013, together with a second double album, Into My Music. De Paul personally oversaw the project and was involved in the digital remastering of the tracks from the original tapes. The CD includes all her hits as well as the two LPs released in the period between 1972 and 1974.

"Rock 'n' Roll Winter " was a song written by Roy Wood. It was released by the British rock band Wizzard, as their first single on the Warner Bros label in 1974. It was originally meant to be issued early in 1974 but the date was pushed back to 29 March 1974, before it was finally released on 19 April that year. Nevertheless, it sold well and reached number 6 on the UK Singles Chart, and number 13 on the Irish Singles Chart.

References

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  3. Bob Stanley. "Lynsey de Paul 'Stood Out Like a Cut-Glass Decanter Among Milk Bottles' | Music". The Guardian . Retrieved 16 November 2016.
  4. Timeline: Top of the Pops by Tom Vine, 12 September 2002, The Guardian
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  19. "GML – Video Killed The Radio Star (1996, CD)". Discogs.com.