| "Say I'm Your Number One" | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Single byPrincess | ||||
| from the albumPrincess | ||||
| Released | 26 July 1985 | |||
| Genre | ||||
| Length | 3:38 | |||
| Label | Supreme | |||
| Songwriter | Stock Aitken Waterman | |||
| Producer | Stock Aitken Waterman | |||
| Princess singles chronology | ||||
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| Music video | ||||
| "Say I'm Your Number One" onYouTube | ||||
"Say I'm Your Number One" (also formatted as "Say I'm Your No. 1") is a song by English singerPrincess, released in 1985 as the lead single from herself-titled debut studio album (1986).[1] Written and produced byStock Aitken Waterman (SAW), the song peaked at number seven on theUK Singles Chart. In the United States, it reached number 20 onBillboard'sHot Black Singles chart,[2] while it reached the top ten in the UK and several of European and Oceanian countries.
Session singer Desiree Heslop – later to take the stage name Princess – was hired by SAW to workshop some "credible" soul-pop tracks, after distinguishing herself as a backing vocalist on theBrilliant albumKiss The Lips of Life.[1] "I was a singer who had come in to do a job, and had differentiated myself on a part that the other singer wasn't getting", the vocalist remembered of winning over SAW. "So they sent the other lady home."[1]
According to Princess and her brother/manager Don Heslop, SAW provided them with a number of basic, unfinished tracks for them to choose from and to help develop, including one that later became "Say I'm Your Number One".[1]Mike Stock remembers specifically choosing the track for the vocalist, writing "I thought it would be fine for Desiree."[3]
After a conversation between Don Heslop and producerPete Waterman, the manager says a plan was floated to collaborate on material between them that could potentially garner a record deal. "What he wanted to do, and what I wanted to do seemed to be written by the same author," said Heslop. "We talked about doing something amazing and taking it to the majors."[1]
Waterman recalled of the conversation: "... I'd said that Desiree was only a session singer and has just been paid to sing on something we were working on forDee C Lee."[4]
Matt Aitken says the track is a very rare example of a song written by SAW that first came together without a particular artist or project in mind.[5] He also added that the song was offered to manyA&R representatives and artists, but was rejected as they "hated" it.[6]
When the Princess-fronted version of the record was finished, no major label would pick up it up, and the snub helped inspire the creation ofSupreme Records, which released the track and then became an ongoing vehicle for SAW's output.[3] Initial buzz around the track was created by servicing it topirate radio, and pressingwhite label copies to create the impression it was an American import.[4]
Speaking on the genesis of the track, Waterman stated he gave Mike Stock andMatt Aitken a brief to write a song that women could mime to men they were attracted to, as the song was played in nightclubs.[4] Among the guide tracks that influenced production was "Genie" byB.B. & Q. Band.[1][7] The track marked the first appearance of the fictitious drummer A.Linn, aka Waterman, in the credits.[8]
While Stock Aitken Waterman are solely credited as the writers of the song, Princess says she contributed to the lyrics and structure of the song during the demo process.[1] Despite the track initially being intended for Lee,[4] Princess felt the evolution of the song under her guidance meant it was effectively always hers. "It was always mine because I did the sensibility and the feeling of the song, and how it morphed from the demo," she said. "I was almost entwined in the song – we co-wrote the bridge, and all theBVs were mine, and to a certain extent, Don’s influence."[1]
The video for the song, which featured the singer journeying around London, was designed to highlight the Britishness of the record by including cultural icons such asdouble-decker buses, and the singer'sbowler hat.[1]
Retrospectively, in 2020, Daniel Griffiths ofmusicradar.com considered "Say I'm Your Number One" as one of the five songs by SAW that producers need to hear, adding that at the time, the trio was "still malleable to whatever new style was arriving in the clubs" and "this US-influenced R'n'B electro groove might come as a SAW surprise".[8] In 2021, British magazineClassic Pop ranked the song number eight in their list of "Top 40 Stock Aitken Waterman songs".[9] In 2023, Alexis Petridis ofThe Guardian listed the song at number 9 in his "Stock Aitken Waterman's 20 greatest songs – ranked!", describing it as a "mid-tempo electro pop-soul, heavily influenced by the Brooklyn Bronx & Queens Band".[10]
"Say I'm Your Number One" was Princess' biggest hit single, and although it was the first of a run of fourhit singles that the artist released with SAW, it proved to be her only top ten entry in her home-country. In the UK, it debuted at number 54 on 3 August 1985 and climbed every week until reaching a peak of number seven for consecutive two weeks; it fell out of the chart after 12 weeks, of which four were spent in the top ten.[11] In Continental Europe, it achieved its highest position in West Germany where it debuted at number 52 on 23 September 1985, rose to number 16 the next week, attained number two in its fifth week, being only beaten byModern Talking's "Cheri Cheri Lady"; it spent seven weeks in the top ten and 15 weeks on the chart.[12] On the 1985 national year-end chart, it ranked at number 47.[13] "Say I'm Your Number One" also peaked within the top ten in Switzerland and the Netherlands, where it reached number four and number six, respectively,[14][15] and barely missed the top ten in Ireland and the Flanders region of Belgium where it stalled at numbers 11 and 12.[16][17] In addition, it was a top 20 hit in Italy,[18] and a top 30 hit in Finland and Austria.[19][20] On the Pan-European Hot 100 chart established by theEurotipsheet magazine, it culminated at number ten in its ninth week.[21]
In North America, "Say I'm Your Number One" reached number 20 on theBillboard'sHot Black Singles chart and number 22 on theDance Club Play chart.[22][23] It was a hit in Oceanian countries, peaking at number two in New Zealand where it ranked for ten weeks in the top 50,[24] and at number eight in Australia.[25]
The music of "Say I'm Your Number One" was interpolated withBananarama's "A Trick of the Night" for the latter song's Number One Mix, the U.K. single remix, and related variations.
Weekly charts[edit]
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