"Ride on Time" | ||||
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Single by Black Box | ||||
from the album Dreamland | ||||
Released | 31 July 1989 [1] | |||
Genre | ||||
Length |
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Label | Discomagic | |||
Songwriter(s) |
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Producer(s) | Groove Groove Melody | |||
Black Box singles chronology | ||||
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Music video | ||||
"Ride on Time" on YouTube |
"Ride on Time" is a song by the Italian house music group Black Box. It was released as a single in July 1989 and included on Black Box's debut album, Dreamland (1990).
The Black Box member Daniele Davioli described "Ride on Time" as an attempt to create a dance track with the power of a rock song. The first version used an unlicensed vocal sample from the 1980 single "Love Sensation" by Loleatta Holloway. After the copyright owners took legal action, the single was reissued with rerecorded vocals by Heather Small, who later became famous as the vocalist of M People. For television appearances, Black Box hired the model Katrin Quinol to mime the vocals.
In Italy, "Ride on Time" was released by Discomagic Records. In the UK, it was released by Deconstruction and popularised by the DJs Paul Oakenfold and Danny Rampling. It topped the UK Singles Chart for six weeks and became the UK's bestselling single of 1989. It also topped the charts in Iceland and Ireland, and entered the top 10 of several other European countries. "Ride on Time" has appeared in critics' lists of the best house tracks, and in 2020 the Guardian named it one of the greatest UK number ones.
"Ride on Time" was written and produced by the Italian production team Groove Groove Melody, comprising Daniele Davoli, Mirko Limoni and Valerio Semplici. [7] Davoli said that as Italian rock music was not taken seriously, "Ride on Time" was the group's attempt to create a song with the power of Led Zeppelin and Deep Purple with a dance beat. [8]
In New York City, Davoli bought a 12-inch a cappella copy of "Love Sensation", a 1980 single by Loleatta Holloway, planning to use it to create mashups. [7] In Italy, he was introduced to samplers and persuaded the club where he worked to buy an Akai S900 sampler. He created the first version of "Ride on Time" using the S900 to sample the "Love Sensation" vocals. [7] Limoni added piano chords and additional vocal samples. [7] The group also added a sample of the 1973 single "Love's Theme" by the Love Unlimited Orchestra. [9] The basic backing track was finished in less than an hour, but it took weeks to finalise the ordering of the samples. [8] The song title derives from the sampled lyric "right on time", which the group mistook as "ride on time". [10]
Davoli tested "Ride on Time" in a club, but the audience responded poorly: "It was heartbreaking. The floor had 1,000 people dancing, and it cleared it." [7] However, his bandmates assured him that it was "the wrong club". [7] Black Box showed "Ride on Time" to numerous Italian record labels, but none were interested, feeling it did not match their markets. [8] Davoli said the labels were more interested in hi-NRG records in the style of the British producers Stock Aitken Waterman, which they felt was dated. [10] "Ride on Time" was eventually signed by Discomagic Records, who Davoli said "would release almost anything". [8]
Shortly after the track was finished, the British DJs Paul Oakenfold and Danny Rampling visited Italy looking for Italo house music. They heard an early pressing of "Ride on Time" in a record shop, purchased all the copies and brought them to England. [7] [10] Around the same time, the UK record label Deconstruction contacted Discomagic to enquire about licensing Black Box's earlier track "Numero Uno", but it had been licensed to Beggars Banquet. Instead, Deconstruction licensed "Ride on Time" and released it with no promotion, competing with the imported copies arriving in UK record stores. [7]
"Ride on Time" was included on Black Box's debut album, Dreamland (1990). [11] In 2019, for the song's 30th anniversary, Black Box created a new mix in the style of a 1970s disco track. [8]
Deconstruction was concerned about clearing the "Love Sensation" sample, which was owned by Salsoul Records. [7] Davoli mistakenly believed Holloway was dead and that sampling less than two seconds of copyrighted music without permission was legal. [7] [12] Dan Hartman, who wrote "Love Sensation", asked for a third of the royalties. [7] Although Black Box initially baulked at the offer, they later learnt Hartman could have asked for 100% and Davoli said he had been "a true gentleman". [7]
After negotiations worsened with Salsoul, BMG, which owned Deconstruction, had Black Box record a replacement vocal. [7] The new vocalist was Heather Small, who later became famous as the singer of M People. [13] Small was not told what the purpose of the recording was, and recorded her vocals within an hour for a flat fee. [14] According to Davoli, BMG were secretive about her identity even with Black Box, saying it was "a singer doing them a favour, someone who hadn't released any music yet but was a big priority for BMG for the future". [8] BMG refused to confirm Small had provided the vocal even after M People became successful. [8]
Within a week of Small recording the vocal, Deconstruction withdrew the single and released a new version on the Ride on Time (Remix) EP. [7] The EP counted towards sales of the song. [14] Radio stations continued to play the original version, [14] and it continued to appear on some versions of Dreamland and compilation albums. [14]
According to several sources, Holloway reached a settlement for the use of the sample and was paid damages. [14] [15] [16] However, Davoli said in 2018 that BMG had only paid Salsoul, the owner of the master. [7] Holloway resented the episode, and said: "I've been around for years trying to get this one hit record. It annoyed me knowing that Black Box were number one and I was not getting any credit for it." [14] She also expressed frustration that Black Box were paid more for performances than her, even after she was billed as "the voice of Black Box". [16] Davoli said he regretted not meeting Holloway before her death in 2011, and would have liked to apologise. [7] Black Box bought the rights to the "Love Sensation" sample in 2018. [8]
For their performance on the British music series Top of the Pops , Black Box hired the model Katrin Quinol to mime the vocals, as "none of us three blokes from Italy would be convincing replacements for Loleatta Holloway". [8] Quinol also appeared in the music video and other performances. [7] Davoli said, "You could tell those vocals didn't come from a slim girl like her. But she had a great influence on the public – she had the moves on stage and looked great and of the time." [12]
The miming drew criticism, which surprised the group, as it was normal on Italian television. Davoli said he regretted using Quinol: "It was wrong. But in Italy, a lot of people used to sing on a record and labels would ask young people to become the image ... We looked at American and English artists and realised they don't do that." [7] The group allowed Quinol to perform in Europe under the Black Box name. [8]
"Ride on Time" entered the UK Singles Chart at number 28 in the week of 12 August 1989. [14] Boosted by demand for the import, it reached number one in its fifth week, on 3 September 1989. [7] It topped the chart for six weeks and became the UK's bestselling single of 1989. [7] Black Box were surprised at the success; Limoni said they had expected at best to sell 1,000 copies to be played in clubs. [10]
"Ride on Time" reached number one in Iceland and Ireland, number two in Sweden and Greece, and entered the top ten in Austria, Belgium, Finland, France, Italy, Norway, Spain, Switzerland and West Germany. It reached number four on the Eurochart Hot 100, a chart based on the singles charts of 17 European countries. In Australia and New Zealand, "Ride on Time" reached number two. In the United States, it reached number 39 on the Hot Dance Club Play chart. [17]
As of 2018, "Ride on Time" had been streamed over nine million times on Spotify. [7] It is certified gold in Sweden, [18] silver in France [19] and platinum in Australia and the UK. [20] [21]
Reviewing "Ride on Time" in 1989, Bill Coleman from Billboard remarked that it was "creating a big stir in Europe", describing the song as "a blatant melange of 'Theme from S-Express', and a real healthy uncredited sampling of Loleatta Holloway's classic 'Love Sensation'." [22] Phil Cheeseman of Record Mirror wrote that it was "splendid and instantly catchy ... Black Box have understood perfectly the piano-driven rhythms of Chicago and moulded them into a Euro-shape. This is dance music's answer to SAW." [23] Reviewing Dreamland for Melody Maker in 1990, Andrew Smith wrote that the sampled vocals of "Ride on Time" were irritating and that it was inferior to the 1988 single "Theme from S-Express", which he alleged the bassline was taken from. [24] Chris Heath from Smash Hits declared it as "quite brilliant". [25] In 1993, NME ranked the song number three in their list of the best "Euro-hits", describing it as the "ultimate Italian house shouter" and "quintessential Europop". [26] In 1994, Peter Paphides and Simon Price from Melody Maker named "Ride on Time" a modern classic [27] and acknowledged it as "the day Hi-NRG's influence on modern dance became official". [28]
The Daily Vault reviewer Michael R. Smith wrote in his 2009 review of Dreamland that he did not like "Ride on Time" when it became a hit, but now felt it was "effective and timeless" and that it sounded "fresher and fuller of life than ever". [11] In 2010, Tom Ewing of Freaky Trigger described "Ride On Time" as "a series of peaks, with the union of 'Right on time!' and the piano riff the highest and most thrilling". He added that Holloway "isn't doing all the work. The trappings of Italo house – light, sequenced keyboard lines, bouncy bass, endless hi-hat all working in unison to give that gorgeous piano its lift – seemed to be on a hundred hits that summer, and the vocal hooks made this the biggest." [29] In 2011, the music journalist James Masterton wrote that Small's replacement vocal was "almost comically bad", with a noticeable Manchester accent. He lamented that Holloway was remembered for a track that did not feature her vocals on most copies. [14]
Fact included "Ride on Time" in its 2014 list of "Diva-House Belters That Still Sound Incredible", writing: "Some people see this as a guilty pleasure now. Those people are fools. Banging piano + Loleatta Holloway = world changing greatness." [6] Mixmag included it in their 2019 list of "The 20 Best Diva House Tracks", writing that its "overall feel and wailing vocal accompaniment still bangs to this day and it is considered one of the first high-profile examples of italo house". [30] In 2020, The Guardian named it the 67th-greatest UK number one, writing: "Heather Small blows the house down ... This is a Terminator of a song, unstoppably delivering a payload of pure euphoria as Chicago house is spliced with Italo disco to create perfect pop." [13]
Year | Publisher | Country | Accolade | Rank |
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1993 | NME | United Kingdom | "Top Five Euro-Hits of All Time" [26] | 3 |
2005 | Bruce Pollock | United States | "The 7,500 Most Important Songs of 1944-2000" [31] | * |
2010 | Robert Dimery | United States | "1,001 Songs You Must Hear Before You Die" [32] | * |
2011 | The Guardian | United Kingdom | "A History of Modern Music: Dance" [33] | * |
2012 | Max | Australia | "1000 Greatest Songs of All Time" [34] | 539 |
2014 | Fact | United Kingdom | "21 Diva-House Belters That Still Sound Incredible" [6] | 4 |
2016 | Vice | United States | "The Ten Best Samples in the History of House Music" [35] | 2 |
2019 | Mixmag | United Kingdom | "The 20 Best Diva House Tracks" [30] | * |
2020 | The Guardian | United Kingdom | "The 100 Greatest UK No 1s" [13] | 67 |
2020 | NME | United Kingdom | "The Best Samples in Music… Ever!" [36] | * |
2023 | Official UK Chart | United Kingdom | "The Best-Selling Singles of All Time" [37] | 129 |
2024 | Classic Pop | United Kingdom | "Top 20 80s House Hits" [38] | 2 |
(*) indicates the list is unordered.
Weekly charts
| Year-end charts
|
Region | Certification | Certified units/sales |
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Australia (ARIA) [20] | Platinum | 70,000^ |
France (SNEP) [19] | Silver | 200,000* |
Sweden (GLF) [18] | Gold | 25,000^ |
United Kingdom (BPI) [21] | Platinum | 1,092,718 [69] |
* Sales figures based on certification alone. |
Black Box is an Italian house music group popular in the late 1980s and early 1990s. The group is currently made up of DJ Daniele Davoli, classically trained clarinet teacher Valerio Semplici, keyboardist and electronic musician Mirko Limoni, and vocalist Celestine Walcott-Gordon. French fashion model Katrin Quinol joined the act in 1989 and became the official face of Black Box, appearing on the cover of their single and album releases as well as in music videos, including the hit "Ride on Time", which was the highest-selling single of 1989 in the UK. The following year, it was revealed that Quinol was lip-syncing and had not performed on the recording. American singer Martha Wash performed the majority of the songs on the group's debut album, Dreamland, while being uncredited.
Daniel Earl Hartman was an American pop rock musician, multi-instrumentalist, producer, singer, and songwriter and original frontman for several bands, including The Soploids, Mak and the Turnarounds, Our Wringer, Last Wing, and Orion. Among songs he wrote and recorded were "Free Ride" as a member of the Edgar Winter Group, and the solo hits "Relight My Fire", "Instant Replay", "I Can Dream About You", "We Are the Young" and "Second Nature". "I Can Dream About You", his most successful US hit, reached No. 6 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1984 in 1985. The James Brown song "Living in America", which Hartman co-wrote and produced, reached No. 4 on March 1, 1986.
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"Good Vibrations" is a song by American group Marky Mark and the Funky Bunch featuring Loleatta Holloway. It was released in July 1991 as the lead single from their debut album, Music for the People (1991). The song became a number-one hit in the United States, Denmark, Sweden and Switzerland.
Loleatta Holloway was an American singer known for disco songs such as "Hit and Run" and "Love Sensation". In December 2016, Billboard named her the 95th-most successful dance artist of all time. According to the Independent, Holloway is the most sampled female singer in popular music, used in house and dance tracks such as the 1989 Black Box single "Ride on Time".
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This is a summary of 1989 in music in the United Kingdom, including the official charts from that year.
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"Love Sensation" is a 1980 song performed by American R&B singer Loleatta Holloway, taken from her album of the same name. The song was produced and written by Dan Hartman, arranged by Norman Harris, and mixed by Tom Moulton. It was a hit on the U.S. Hot Dance Club Play chart, where the song spent a week at No. 1 in September 1980. Vocals from the song have been widely sampled, particularly in electronic dance music, such as in the 1989 Black Box song "Ride on Time".
"Move (You Make Me Feel So Good)" is a song by American electronic musician Moby, with a chorus sampling from Loleatta Holloway's 1980 song "Love Sensation". It was first released as the title track on Moby's extended play Move, which was issued on August 31, 1993, as his first release on Mute Records in the United Kingdom and on Elektra Records in the United States. It hit number one on the US Billboard Hot Dance Music/Club Play chart and number 21 on the UK Singles Chart.
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Dreamland is the debut studio album by the Italian music group Black Box. It was released on May 8, 1990 through RCA Records, and was preceded in 1989 by the international hit single "Ride on Time". The album was certified Gold in both the United States and the United Kingdom. It is noted for "Ride on Time" and the ensuing lawsuits by Loleatta Holloway and Martha Wash over their lack of proper credit and payment for their vocal contributions to the album.
"Everybody Everybody" is a song by the Italian house music group Black Box, from their debut studio album, Dreamland (1990). The song was written by Daniele Davoli, Mirko Limoni, and Valerio Semplici, while produced by Groove Groove Melody. It was released by RCA Records as the third single from the album. The house, pop and Eurodisco song consists of an organ, drums, horns, and strings. "Everybody Everybody" contains a sample of Larry Blackmon's vocals and a drum loop from Bobby Byrd's 1987 remix of James Brown's song "Hot Pants" (1971).
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"Strike It Up" is a song by Italian music group Black Box. It was the fifth single from their debut studio album, Dreamland (1990), and was released on 6 February 1991 in many countries worldwide by Polydor and Deconstruction. The single was a success on many charts, including the Billboard Hot 100 in the United States, where it peaked at number eight. It also topped the Billboard Dance Club Songs chart in June 1991 for one week. In the United Kingdom, it peaked at number 16 on the UK Singles Chart. "Strike It Up" also was a top-10 hit in Denmark, Greece, Ireland, and the Netherlands. And on the Eurochart Hot 100, the track reached number 38. The accompanying music video was directed by Neil Thompson.
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This in turn predicted the wave of Italo-house hits (Black Box's 'Ride on Time', Starlight's 'Numero Uno', Mixmaster's 'Grand Piano') that dominated the 1989 dance scene.
Italo house largely relied on diva disco samples, cut up and rearranged by Italian producers to create new vocal tracks, such as Black Box's "Ride on Time."