Back in My Arms Again

Last updated
"Back in My Arms Again"
The-supremes-back-in-my-arms-again-1965-US-vinyl.jpg
Picture sleeve for US vinyl single, similar to German vinyl release with different font and layout
Single by The Supremes
from the album More Hits by The Supremes
B-side "Whisper You Love Me Boy"
ReleasedApril 15, 1965 (U.S.)
Recorded Hitsville U.S.A. (Studio A);
December 1, 1964 and February 24, 1965
Genre Pop, rhythm and blues
Length2:52
Label Motown
M 1075
Songwriter(s) Holland–Dozier–Holland
Producer(s)
The Supremes singles chronology
"Stop! In the Name of Love"
(1965)
"Back in My Arms Again"
(1965)
"Nothing but Heartaches"
(1965)
Audio sample

Certifications

RegionCertification Certified units/sales
United States1,000,000 [22] [23]

Later versions

"Back in My Arms Again" returned to the Billboard Hot 100 in 1978 with a remake by Genya Ravan on a single (taken from the singer's album Urban Desire) which was Ravan's only Hot 100 entry, peaking at #92. [24] [25]

The song almost made the Hot 100 in 1983 via a remake on Motown's Gordy label by female vocal group High Inergy, whose 1977 debut album Turnin' On had yielded a Top 20 hit in ("You Can't Turn Me Off") and elicited numerous comparisons with the Supremes. [26] [27] [28] [29] [30] High Inergy remained a one hit wonder despite the release of seven more albums and 27 more singles. In 1983, the group released what would be their last album, Groove Patrol , from which a near note-for-note remake of "Back in My Arms Again" was released as a single [31] (the group's last) and reached #105 on the Billboard Bubbling Under Hot 100 chart (without ranking on the magazine's R&B chart). [32]

"Back in My Arms Again" has also been remade by the Michael Stanley Band (on Greatest Hints, 1979), [33] Nicolette Larson (as "Back in My Arms" on In the Nick of Time in 1980), by Michael Bolton (on his eponymous 1983 album), by The Forester Sisters (on Perfume, Ribbons & Pearls in 1986), and by Colin James (on the American Boyfriends soundtrack album in 1989). [34]

The song was recorded by the all-female American rock group Fanny in early 1973 but their version, produced by Todd Rundgren, remained unreleased until 2002, when it appeared on Rhino Handmade's limited-edition Fanny anthology First Time In A Long Time: The Reprise Recordings. [35] The outtake was later included on the 2016 reissue of 1973's Mothers Pride . The song was also covered by The Jam live at the 100 Club on 11 September 1977, a version released on the six-CD set Fire and Skill – The Jam Live in 2015.

See also

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