"5,6,7,8" | ||||
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Single bySteps | ||||
from the albumStep One | ||||
B-side | "Words of Wisdom" | |||
Released | 10 November 1997 (1997-11-10) | |||
Recorded | 1997 | |||
Studio | PWL (Manchester, England) | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 3:22 | |||
Label | ||||
Songwriter(s) |
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Producer(s) |
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Steps singles chronology | ||||
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Music video | ||||
"5,6,7,8" onYouTube | ||||
"5,6,7,8" is a song by British groupSteps from their debutstudio album,Step One (1998). Written byBarry Upton andSteve Crosby and produced by Karl Twigg, Mark Topham andPete Waterman, the song blendstechno-pop andcountry pop styles. Released as their debut single in November 1997 byJive andEBUL, it followed the group's formation, which came after each group member responded to a magazine advertisement seeking auditions for a pop band.
"5,6,7,8" peaked at number 14 on theUK Singles Chart (one of Steps' lowest chart positions) but has become the third-best-selling single of their career in the United Kingdom, selling 365,000 copies and receiving 3,440,000 streams as of March 2017. "5,6,7,8" peaked at number-one in Australia and reached the top five in Belgium and New Zealand. Its accompanying music video was shot on a beach and features the group driving quad bikes and dancing in a bar. "5,6,7,8" was performed onThe Ultimate Tour in 2012,Party on the Dancefloor Tour in 2017 and What the Future Holds Tour in 2021.
Steps were put together in 1997 following an advert inThe Stage magazine asking for applicants to audition for a place in a pop band. Out of the thousands who applied,Lee Latchford-Evans,Lisa Scott-Lee,Faye Tozer,Claire Richards andIan "H" Watkins successfully secured a place in the band.[1] Latchford-Evans performs the majority of the song, while Scott-Lee sings themiddle 8, or bridge.[2] It was recorded at PWL Studios in Manchester, England, andmixed by Lee Sharma at the same venue. Upton alsoarranged the track and played the guitar, while the banjo, violin, drums and keyboards were played by Sean Lyon, Chris Haigh, Chris McDonnell and Twigg, respectively.[3]
Al Unsworth and Bradlee Spreadborough served as the assistant engineers and it wasmastered at Transfermation Studios in London, England. "5,6,7,8" features all of the band members on lead vocals except forIan "H" Watkins, who only performs background vocals.[3] Various versions of the song were included on theCD single in the United Kingdom, Europe and Japan, including an extended version, an instrumental and a remix by W.I.P.;[4] the CD single in the United Kingdom and Europe also included the B-side, "Words of Wisdom", also written by Upton and Crosby.[5] It was released in the United Kingdom in November 1997, and it was later included on their first greatest hits album,Gold: Greatest Hits (2001), the W.I.P. remix on their first compilation albumThe Last Dance (2002) and their second greatest hits album,The Ultimate Collection (2011).[6][7][8]
Lucas Villa fromAXS said that "5,6,7,8" "was the beginning of Steps' campy, feel good sounds."[9] Andy Coleman fromBirmingham Evening Mail described it as a "line dancing ditty".[10] Gary James from Entertainment Focus noted that the song "stands out from the rest of their catalogue for being somewhat a novelty single." He added, "It’s blend ofcountry,techno andpop had us reaching for our lassos and thinking perhapsRednex had returned with a 'Cotton Eyed Joe' for 1997."[11] Sophie McCoid fromLiverpool Echo called it an "epic tune".[12] Mark Beaumont fromNME described it as a "more traditional hoedown".[13] Peter Robinson ofNME gave the song a negative review in 2001. In his review ofGold: Greatest Hits, he wrote "Steps were only signed for one single – with good reason, for '5,6,7,8' was shit of the very highest order."[14] Similarly,Digital Spy writer Robert Copsey wrote that retrospectively, the track was a "bizarre" choice of lead single in his review ofThe Ultimate Collection in 2011.[15] In a review of Steps' best-selling songs for theOfficial Charts Company in March 2017, Copsey noted how "5,6,7,8" distinctly differs from the rest of their discography in terms of itstechno-pop genre,line dancing lyrics and lack of lead vocals solely fromClaire Richards.[16]
Commercially, "5,6,7,8" debuted at number 18 on theUK Singles Chart on 16 November 1997,[17] and peaked at number 14 in its eighth week on 10 January 1998.[18] It spent a further nine weeks on the chart from January through to March, and re-entered the chart for one week at number 100 on 18 April 1998.[18] Altogether, "5,6,7,8" spent 18 non-consecutive weeks on the UK Singles Chart, 10 of which were in the top 20.[18] Their first top 40 hit, "5,6,7,8" was the only song of the singles they released (prior to their initial split in late December 2001) not to chart within the top 10.[19] By July 2012, it had become it their fourth-best selling single in their career in the United Kingdom;[20] but by March 2017 it had switched positions with one of their subsequent singles "Better Best Forgotten" to become their third-highest selling song, with sales of 365,000 copies, and is their most streamed track with 37,952,032 plays as of March 2021.[21][16] It was certified platinum on 11 December 2020 for sales and streams exceeding 600,000.[22] Copsey added that it is very rare for a pop band to be given a second opportunity to release more music following a top 20 debut.[16]
Set primarily on a beach inMarbella,Spain, the accompanying music video for "5,6,7,8", filmed on 9 September 1997 and directed by Phil Griffin,[23] opens with Latchford-Evans and Watkins ridingquad bikes along the beach while Scott-Lee, Tozer and Richards drive a car on the road next to them, with close-ups of each of the female singers performing the chorus outside bathroom stalls. It is followed by a repetition of the chorus during which all of the members perform the song's associated line dancing routine, which was very popular at the time of its release,[2] to the music outside a bar on the beach, attracting a crowd of beachgoers. Latchford-Evans performs the first verse, with Watkins walking slightly behind him from the beach to the bar. Afterwards, the chorus and dance routine is once again repeated, during which Watkins and Richards pull two beachgoers out of the bar to dance with the group, which attracts other beachgoers to the group's performance. Latchford-Evans then performs the second verse while playing a game of snooker with Watkins while the ladies playtable football nearby. For the final chorus, the group members, now wearing red and black outfits, perform the dance routine in front of a crowd for a final time; however, the setting has changed to night time and inside aTiki bar.
"5,6,7,8" was included on the group's sixth concert tour,The Ultimate Tour, in 2012.[24] Latchford-Evans stated in March 2017 that although the band does not like performing the song, they find new ways of performing it live as they know that it is a fan-favourite.[2] It is also included on the set list of their eighth concert tour, theParty on the Dancefloor Tour.[25]
Album version –Step One[26]
CD single – UK/Europe/Australia[27][5]
| CD single – Japan[4]
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A-side: "5,6,7,8"[edit]Credits are adapted from the liner notes ofStep One.[3] Recording
Vocals
Personnel
| B-side: "Words of Wisdom"[edit]Credits are adapted from the liner notes of "5,6,7,8".[28] Recording
Vocals
Personnel
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Weekly charts[edit]
| Year-end charts[edit]
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Region | Certification | Certified units/sales |
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Australia (ARIA)[42] | Platinum | 70,000^ |
Belgium (BRMA)[43] | Gold | 25,000* |
New Zealand (RMNZ)[44] | Gold | 5,000* |
United Kingdom (BPI)[22] | Platinum | 600,000‡ |
* Sales figures based on certification alone. |
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