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"Stay" is a doo-wop song written by Maurice Williams and first recorded in 1960 by Williams with his group the Zodiacs.[1] Commercially successful versions were later also issued by the Hollies, the Four Seasons and Jackson Browne.

Maurice Williams original version

Leer más

Singles chronology

Stay
Stay
0/0/1963
Lucille
Lucille
0/0/1964

Stay

The Hollies

1963 Single
  • Fecha Lanzamiento: 1963 · Fecha Grabación: 1963 -
    Discográfica: Herald · · Productor: Phil Gernhard
    1
    Stay
    The HolliesThe Hollies • w: Maurice Williams and the Zodiacs • v: All • 1963
    2:13
  • 2
    Now's The Time (From Film
    The Hollies • 1963
    0:00
  • Album


    Here I Go Again

    Here I Go Again

    Fecha Lanzamiento: Enero 1964 · Fecha Grabación: 15 Mayo 1963 - 11 Diciembre 1963
    Discográfica: Parlophone · Estudio de Grabación: EMI, London · Productor: Ron Richards
    1
    Here I Go Again
    The HolliesThe Hollies • 1964 /01
    2:19
  • 2
    Stay
    The HolliesThe Hollies • w: Maurice Williams and the Zodiacs • v: All • 1964 /01
    2:13
  • 3
    Memphis
    The HolliesThe Hollies • w: Chuck Berry • v: Clarke and Nash • 1964 /01
    2:33
  • 4
    Lucille
    The HolliesThe Hollies • w: Al Collins, Little Richard • v: Clarke and Nash • 1964 /01
    2:26
  • 5
    You Better Move On
    The HolliesThe Hollies • w: Arthur Alexander • v: Clarke and Nash • 1964 /01
    2:46
  • 6
    Talkin' 'bout You
    The HolliesThe Hollies • 1964 /01
    2:07
  • 7
    Just One Look
    The HolliesThe Hollies • w: Gregory Carroll, Doris Payne • 1964 /01
    2:33
  • 8
    Keep Off That Friend Of Mine
    The HolliesThe Hollies • 1964 /01
    2:10
  • 9
    Rockin' Robin
    The HolliesThe Hollies • w: Jimmie Thomas • v: Clarke • 1964 /01
    2:17
  • 10
    Do You Love Me
    The HolliesThe Hollies • w: Berry Gordy • v: Clarke • 1964 /01
    2:13
  • 11
    What Kind Of Girl Are You
    The HolliesThe Hollies • w: Ray Charles • v: Clarke and Nash • 1964 /01
    3:06
  • 12
    It's Only Make Believe
    The HolliesThe Hollies • w: Conway Twitty, Jack Nance • v: Clarke and Nash • 1964 /01
    3:17
  • Album

    Stay
    Stay
    0/0/1963
    Lucille
    Lucille
    0/0/1964
    "Stay"
    Single by Maurice Williams and the Zodiacs
    B-side"Do You Believe"
    Written1953
    ReleasedAugust 1960
    Recorded1960
    GenreDoo-wop
    Length1:36
    LabelHerald
    Songwriter(s)Maurice Williams
    Producer(s)Phil Gernhard

    Review

    "Stay" is a doo-wop song written by Maurice Williams and first recorded in 1960 by Williams with his group the Zodiacs.[1] Commercially successful versions were later also issued by the Hollies, the Four Seasons and Jackson Browne.

    Maurice Williams original version

    Leer más

    The song was written by Williams in 1953 when he was 15 years old. He had been trying to convince his date not to go home at 10 o`clock as she was supposed to. He lost the argument, but as he was to relate years later, "Like a flood, the words just came to me."

    In 1960, the song was put on a demo by Williams and his band, the Zodiacs, but it attracted no interest until an eight-year-old heard it and impressed the band members with her positive reaction to the tune.[2] The band`s producer, Phil Gernhard, took it along with some other demos to New York City and played them for all the major record producers that they could access. Finally, Al Silver of Herald Records became interested, but insisted that the song be re-recorded as the demo`s recording levels were too low. They also said that one line, "Let`s have another smoke" would have to be removed in order for the song to be played on commercial radio. After the group recorded the tune again, it was released by Herald Records and was picked up by CKLW radio. It entered the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 on October 3, 1960, and reached the number one spot on November 21, 1960. It was dislodged a week later by Elvis Presley`s "Are You Lonesome Tonight?". On the Herald recording, Williams sang lead and Henry Gaston sang the falsetto chorus.

    The original recording of "Stay" was the shortest single ever to reach the top of the American record charts at that time, at 1 minute 36 seconds. (According to the record label, the Four Seasons` version (see below) was even shorter, at 1:30, and remains the shortest charting record of all time, although it did not reach #1.)

    By 1990, it had sold more than 8 million copies. Its popularity revived when the Dirty Dancing soundtrack included it.

    Chart history

    The Hollies version

    In November 1963, the song was released by British band the Hollies, whose version reached No. 8 on the UK Singles Chart. It remained on the chart for a total of 16 weeks.[11] The song is from their debut album Stay with The Hollies.

    The Four Seasons version

    "Stay"
    Single by the Four Seasons
    B-side"Goodnight My Love" (from the album Big Girls Don`t Cry and 12 Others) (second release)
    ReleasedDecember 1963
    Recorded1963
    GenreRock, doo-wop
    Length1:52
    LabelVee-Jay
    Songwriter(s)Maurice Williams
    Producer(s)Bob Crewe
    The Four Seasons singles chronology

    "Dawn (Go Away)"
    (1963)

    "Stay"
    (1963)

    "Ronnie"
    (1964)

    The Four Seasons` version was first released on their June 1963 album The 4 Seasons Sing Ain`t That a Shame and 11 Others; it was later released as a single in December 1963. Vee Jay originally released it as the B-side of "Peanuts" in December, but when disc jockeys started to "turn the single over" to play "Stay" on the air, the record company superseded the single with a new one with "Stay" as the A-side and "Goodnight My Love" as the new B-side.[12] It peaked at number 16 on the US Billboard Hot 100[13][14] in April 1964. In Canada it reached number 12.[15]

    Jackson Browne version

    "Stay"
    Single by Jackson Browne
    from the album Running on Empty
    B-side"Rosie"
    Released1978
    Recorded1977
    VenueMerriweather Post Pavilion, Columbia, Maryland
    GenreSoft rock[16]
    Length3:28
    LabelAsylum
    Songwriter(s)Maurice Williams
    Producer(s)Jackson Browne
    Jackson Browne singles chronology

    "Running on Empty"
    (1978)

    "Stay"
    (1978)

    "You Love the Thunder"
    (1978)

    A version of the song with revised lyrics is the last track on Jackson Browne`s 1977 album Running on Empty. The song, which follows on the heels of Browne`s "The Load-Out" begs the audience to stay for an encore and includes an extensive playout. It includes backing contributions from David Lindley and Rosemary Butler. Billboard described this version as "spirited and gospel-like".[17] Cash Box said that it has "effective guitar and keyboard solos and an easy beat" and "pleasing lead vocals", and that "David Lindley draws appreciation from the audience with his teasing falsetto".[18] Record World said that "David Lindley`s falsetto vocals and guitar lend an able hand, and the live quality is appealing."[19]

    Browne, Butler and Lindley each contribute a similar verse in turn in ascending vocal ranges. It was released as a single and reached number 20 in the U.S. as well as number 12 in the UK.

    Charts

    Chart (1978)

    Peak
    position

    Australia (Kent Music Report)

    58

    Canada RPM Top Singles[20]

    19

    New Zealand (RIANZ)[21]

    10

    UK[22]

    12

    US Billboard Hot 100[6]

    20

    US Billboard Adult Contemporary

    47

    US Cash Box Top 100

    22

    Dreamhouse version

    "Stay"
    Single by Dreamhouse
    from the album Sha-La-La and Dreamhouse
    Released1995 (UK/Europe), 1998 (US)
    GenreReggae fusion, dance-pop
    Length3:25
    LabelChase Records, Ariola, Trauma
    Songwriter(s)Maurice Williams
    Producer(s)Gary Miller
    Dreamhouse singles chronology

    "Stay"
    (1995)

    "Hay Que Linda"
    (1996)

    British reggae fusion pop/dance trio Dreamhouse released their version of "Stay" as their debut single in 1995, which reached No. 62 on the UK Singles Chart.[23] In the United States, it was released in 1998 as the lead single from the U.S. album Dreamhouse.[24] In a positive review for the 13 June 1998 issue of Billboard magazine, the song was featured in the "New & Noteworthy" section, saying "This wildly appealing working-class UK trio is poised to seriously penetrate the stateside market with an instantly infectious dance rendition of Maurice Williams` pop chestnut... Pop music doesn`t get much more obvious than this single, which is destined to become the guilty top 40 pleasure of the summer season."[25]

    Cyndi Lauper version

    "Stay"
    Single by Cyndi Lauper
    from the album At Last
    Released2004
    GenrePop
    Length3:15
    LabelSony
    Songwriter(s)Maurice Williams
    Cyndi Lauper singles chronology

    "Until You Come Back to Me (That`s What I`m Gonna Do)"
    (2004)

    "Stay"
    (2004)

    "Time After Time"
    (2005)

    "Stay" was the third and final single from Cyndi Lauper`s 2003 album At Last. It was a promo-only single, released only in the U.S., Australia and France. The video that accompanied it is rarely seen but is commercially available as a special feature on the DVD, Live at Last. The single peaked at No. 64 on the French Singles Chart.[26]

    Other versions

    • In 1960, the song was covered by Little Joe and the Thrillers.
    • In 1964, the song was recorded by the Dave Clark Five on their studio album Glad All Over.
    • In 1966, the Virginia Wolves released a soul version of the song.
    • The song was recorded in 1968 by Jan & Dean for release on their album Carnival of Sound but the album was not released until 2010.
    • Singer-songwriter Andrew Gold recorded a version of "Stay" for his 1976 album What`s Wrong with This Picture?.
    • Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band recorded a version with Jackson Browne, Tom Petty and Rosemary Butler for the No Nukes album in September 1979.[27]
    • In 1980, Austrian singer Georg Danzer wrote a German text to the Jackson Browne medley "The Load Out"/"Stay". It was performed live on the album Direkt as "Roadie Song".
    • Italo disco duo Marx & Spencer released their version in 1983.
    • In 1984, P.D.Q. Bach (a.k.a. Peter Schickele) lampooned the song in his opera The Abduction of Figaro in the aria "Stay with Me".[28]
    • Lyrics from the song were interpolated on reggae artist Buju Banton`s song "Hush Baby Hush" on his 1995 album `Til Shiloh.
    • Australian group Human Nature included their version of the song on the 2014 album Jukebox.

    See also

    • List of Billboard Hot 100 number-one singles of 1960

    "Stay" is a doo-wop song written by Maurice Williams and first recorded in 1960 by Williams with his group the Zodiacs.[1] Commercially successful versions were later also issued by the Hollies, the Four Seasons and Jackson Browne.

    Maurice Williams original version

    The song was written by Williams in 1953 when he was 15 years old. He had been trying to convince his date not to go home at 10 o`clock as she was supposed to. He lost the argument, but as he was to relate years later, "Like a flood, the words just came to me."

    In 1960, the song was put on a demo by Williams and his band, the Zodiacs, but it attracted no interest until an eight-year-old heard it and impressed the band members with her positive reaction to the tune.[2] The band`s producer, Phil Gernhard, took it along with some other demos to New York City and played them for all the major record producers that they could access. Finally, Al Silver of Herald Records became interested, but insisted that the song be re-recorded as the demo`s recording levels were too low. They also said that one line, "Let`s have another smoke" would have to be removed in order for the song to be played on commercial radio. After the group recorded the tune again, it was released by Herald Records and was picked up by CKLW radio. It entered the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 on October 3, 1960, and reached the number one spot on November 21, 1960. It was dislodged a week later by Elvis Presley`s "Are You Lonesome Tonight?". On the Herald recording, Williams sang lead and Henry Gaston sang the falsetto chorus.

    The original recording of "Stay" was the shortest single ever to reach the top of the American record charts at that time, at 1 minute 36 seconds. (According to the record label, the Four Seasons` version (see below) was even shorter, at 1:30, and remains the shortest charting record of all time, although it did not reach #1.)

    By 1990, it had sold more than 8 million copies. Its popularity revived when the Dirty Dancing soundtrack included it.

    Chart history

    The Hollies version

    In November 1963, the song was released by British band the Hollies, whose version reached No. 8 on the UK Singles Chart. It remained on the chart for a total of 16 weeks.[11] The song is from their debut album Stay with The Hollies.

    The Four Seasons version

    "Stay"
    Single by the Four Seasons
    B-side"Goodnight My Love" (from the album Big Girls Don`t Cry and 12 Others) (second release)
    ReleasedDecember 1963
    Recorded1963
    GenreRock, doo-wop
    Length1:52
    LabelVee-Jay
    Songwriter(s)Maurice Williams
    Producer(s)Bob Crewe
    The Four Seasons singles chronology

    "Dawn (Go Away)"
    (1963)

    "Stay"
    (1963)

    "Ronnie"
    (1964)

    The Four Seasons` version was first released on their June 1963 album The 4 Seasons Sing Ain`t That a Shame and 11 Others; it was later released as a single in December 1963. Vee Jay originally released it as the B-side of "Peanuts" in December, but when disc jockeys started to "turn the single over" to play "Stay" on the air, the record company superseded the single with a new one with "Stay" as the A-side and "Goodnight My Love" as the new B-side.[12] It peaked at number 16 on the US Billboard Hot 100[13][14] in April 1964. In Canada it reached number 12.[15]

    Jackson Browne version

    "Stay"
    Single by Jackson Browne
    from the album Running on Empty
    B-side"Rosie"
    Released1978
    Recorded1977
    VenueMerriweather Post Pavilion, Columbia, Maryland
    GenreSoft rock[16]
    Length3:28
    LabelAsylum
    Songwriter(s)Maurice Williams
    Producer(s)Jackson Browne
    Jackson Browne singles chronology

    "Running on Empty"
    (1978)

    "Stay"
    (1978)

    "You Love the Thunder"
    (1978)

    A version of the song with revised lyrics is the last track on Jackson Browne`s 1977 album Running on Empty. The song, which follows on the heels of Browne`s "The Load-Out" begs the audience to stay for an encore and includes an extensive playout. It includes backing contributions from David Lindley and Rosemary Butler. Billboard described this version as "spirited and gospel-like".[17] Cash Box said that it has "effective guitar and keyboard solos and an easy beat" and "pleasing lead vocals", and that "David Lindley draws appreciation from the audience with his teasing falsetto".[18] Record World said that "David Lindley`s falsetto vocals and guitar lend an able hand, and the live quality is appealing."[19]

    Browne, Butler and Lindley each contribute a similar verse in turn in ascending vocal ranges. It was released as a single and reached number 20 in the U.S. as well as number 12 in the UK.

    Charts

    Chart (1978)

    Peak
    position

    Australia (Kent Music Report)

    58

    Canada RPM Top Singles[20]

    19

    New Zealand (RIANZ)[21]

    10

    UK[22]

    12

    US Billboard Hot 100[6]

    20

    US Billboard Adult Contemporary

    47

    US Cash Box Top 100

    22

    Dreamhouse version

    "Stay"
    Single by Dreamhouse
    from the album Sha-La-La and Dreamhouse
    Released1995 (UK/Europe), 1998 (US)
    GenreReggae fusion, dance-pop
    Length3:25
    LabelChase Records, Ariola, Trauma
    Songwriter(s)Maurice Williams
    Producer(s)Gary Miller
    Dreamhouse singles chronology

    "Stay"
    (1995)

    "Hay Que Linda"
    (1996)

    British reggae fusion pop/dance trio Dreamhouse released their version of "Stay" as their debut single in 1995, which reached No. 62 on the UK Singles Chart.[23] In the United States, it was released in 1998 as the lead single from the U.S. album Dreamhouse.[24] In a positive review for the 13 June 1998 issue of Billboard magazine, the song was featured in the "New & Noteworthy" section, saying "This wildly appealing working-class UK trio is poised to seriously penetrate the stateside market with an instantly infectious dance rendition of Maurice Williams` pop chestnut... Pop music doesn`t get much more obvious than this single, which is destined to become the guilty top 40 pleasure of the summer season."[25]

    Cyndi Lauper version

    "Stay"
    Single by Cyndi Lauper
    from the album At Last
    Released2004
    GenrePop
    Length3:15
    LabelSony
    Songwriter(s)Maurice Williams
    Cyndi Lauper singles chronology

    "Until You Come Back to Me (That`s What I`m Gonna Do)"
    (2004)

    "Stay"
    (2004)

    "Time After Time"
    (2005)

    "Stay" was the third and final single from Cyndi Lauper`s 2003 album At Last. It was a promo-only single, released only in the U.S., Australia and France. The video that accompanied it is rarely seen but is commercially available as a special feature on the DVD, Live at Last. The single peaked at No. 64 on the French Singles Chart.[26]

    Other versions

    • In 1960, the song was covered by Little Joe and the Thrillers.
    • In 1964, the song was recorded by the Dave Clark Five on their studio album Glad All Over.
    • In 1966, the Virginia Wolves released a soul version of the song.
    • The song was recorded in 1968 by Jan & Dean for release on their album Carnival of Sound but the album was not released until 2010.
    • Singer-songwriter Andrew Gold recorded a version of "Stay" for his 1976 album What`s Wrong with This Picture?.
    • Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band recorded a version with Jackson Browne, Tom Petty and Rosemary Butler for the No Nukes album in September 1979.[27]
    • In 1980, Austrian singer Georg Danzer wrote a German text to the Jackson Browne medley "The Load Out"/"Stay". It was performed live on the album Direkt as "Roadie Song".
    • Italo disco duo Marx & Spencer released their version in 1983.
    • In 1984, P.D.Q. Bach (a.k.a. Peter Schickele) lampooned the song in his opera The Abduction of Figaro in the aria "Stay with Me".[28]
    • Lyrics from the song were interpolated on reggae artist Buju Banton`s song "Hush Baby Hush" on his 1995 album `Til Shiloh.
    • Australian group Human Nature included their version of the song on the 2014 album Jukebox.

    See also

    • List of Billboard Hot 100 number-one singles of 1960

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