| "Grease" | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
Italian vinyl single picture sleeve | ||||
| Single byFrankie Valli | ||||
| from the albumGrease: The Original Soundtrack from the Motion Picture andFrankie Valli... Is the Word | ||||
| B-side | "Grease" (Instrumental) | |||
| Released | May 1978[1] | |||
| Recorded | 1977–78 | |||
| Studio | Criteria (Miami) | |||
| Genre | ||||
| Length | 3:21 | |||
| Label | ||||
| Songwriter | Barry Gibb | |||
| Producer | Gibb-Galuten-Richardson | |||
| Frankie Valli singles chronology | ||||
| ||||
"Grease" is a song written byBarry Gibb and recorded byFrankie Valli: it was released as a single in May 1978. It is the title song for the musical motion pictureGrease of that year, which was in turn based on the 1971 stage playGrease. The song celebrates thegreaser lifestyle. It sold over seven million copies worldwide[3] and appeared twice on the film'ssoundtrack, first as the opening track and again as the closing track. "Grease" is one of four songs written specifically for the film that had not been in the stage production.[4]
Jim Jacobs andWarren Casey had written a different title track forGrease for its original Chicago production, but the song was discarded when the show was picked up onBroadway.[5]Barry Gibb was commissioned to compose a new title song forRobert Stigwood'sfilm of the stage musical.
The song was recorded separately from, and later than, the rest of those in the film. Shortly after the filming of the 1978 musicalSgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, Gibb invited castmatePeter Frampton to play guitar on theGrease session, while also providingbacking vocals himself. The other musicians were some of those from theAndy Gibb album that was being made around the same time.[6]Frankie Valli was approached to provide the vocals, due to his vocal range being similar to that of Barry Gibb, his being under the management ofAllan Carr at the time,[7] and his status as a popular singer from the pre-British Invasion era thatGrease represented. Gibb had a long-standing respect for Valli as "one of the hallmark voices of our generation".[8] Valli accepted, despite suffering from severeotosclerosis and loss of hearing at the time.[7] When Valli recorded "Grease", he did not have a recording contract, having been contracted toPrivate Stock Records which had folded earlier in 1978.[4] After the single was released on theRSO label, which also issued the soundtrack, Valli quickly landed a deal withWarner Bros., which had Valli's groupthe Four Seasons under contract at the time.[9] Valli did not want to record a full album for RSO because he felt thatRobert Stigwood had too much control over the Bee Gees' career and had too much of aconflict of interest in his numerous job titles.[10]
"Grease" was one of four songs in the film that had not been part of the original musical, and it was the only one not performed by the cast. Valli had been offered the part of the Teen Angel but chose to sing the theme song instead, stating that although that character's song ("Beauty School Dropout") did not chart as a hit, both Valli andFrankie Avalon profited mightily from their respective appearances through album royalties, and thus the choice worked out.[7] The film's director,Randal Kleiser, did not like the added songs because they did not fit the late 1950s/early 1960s style either musically or lyrically, and Kleiser had planned on a different composition byCharles Fox andPaul Williams (Fox having written the theme fromHappy Days) before being overruled by the producers.[11] The anachronism was especially true of "Grease", which useddisco instrumentation and a contemporary 1970s beat but was, nonetheless, left in.[6]
The film's opening title sequence animation, with "Grease" being played, was created by animatorJohn David Wilson'sFine Arts Films studio.[12]
"Grease" became a number-one single in the United States in 1978 and also reached number forty on the R&B charts in the same year.[13][14] Later in 1978, Valli released a follow-up album, the title of which,Frankie Valli... Is the Word, echoes the "grease is the word" lyric contained in the chorus of "Grease".[15] To date, "Grease" is Valli'smost recent Top 40 hit as a solo artist.[16]
Record World said that it has "a hot, seventies dance beat that is far from the fifties" and that "Valli sings it well."[17]
As of 2019, "Grease" ranked 220th inairplay among songs played onclassic hits stations in the United States. By 2024, it had fallen out of the top 500 most-played songs in the format, a casualty of the format's shift toward 1990s music.[18]
TheBee Gees never recorded a studio version of this song; however, they later performed the song in theirOne Night Only tour from 1997 until 1999[19] and included a performance (as a virtual duet with Valli's original 1978 studio vocal) on their live albumOne Night Only (1998).
Weekly charts[edit]
| Year-end charts[edit]
|
| Region | Certification | Certified units/sales |
|---|---|---|
| Canada (Music Canada)[47] | Platinum | 150,000^ |
| New Zealand (RMNZ)[48] | Platinum | 30,000‡ |
| United Kingdom (BPI)[49] | Gold | 500,000^ |
| United States (RIAA)[50] | Platinum | 2,000,000^ |
^ Shipments figures based on certification alone. | ||