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Do Me, Baby - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Do Me, Baby

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

“Do Me, Baby”
“Do Me, Baby” cover
U.S. promotional 7" single
Single by Prince
from the album Controversy
B-side "Private Joy"
Released 16 July 1982
Format 7" promo single
Recorded Uptown, Sunset Sound, Hollywood Sound, 1981
Genre Soul, Ballad
Length 7" edit: 3:57
Album: 7:47
Label Warner Bros. Records
Writer(s) Prince
Producer Prince
Prince singles chronology
"Let's Work"
(1982)
"Do Me, Baby"
(1982)
"1999"
(1982)
Prince (UK) singles chronology
"Let's Work"
(1982)
"1999"
(1982)

"Do Me, Baby" is a classic Prince ballad, and the third and final U.S. single from his 1981 album, Controversy. With a running time of almost eight minutes, it is the longest track on the album. Sung in Prince's falsetto vocals, the soulful track has a distinctive bass guitar line, and is dominated by heavy keyboards and piano. The song is a seductive romp, and honed the artist's signature style with slow-burning numbers. The song features screams and yells of passion by Prince, and a spoken seduction at the end. It would become a standard of many tours and would often be extended to "tease" the audience. The B-side was fellow Controversy track, "Private Joy." Despite improving upon the hugely popular slow jam approach of Barry White, Teddy Pendergrass and others, the single didn't chart until a remake of the song by R&B singer Meli'sa Morgan went to No. 1 on the R&B charts in 1986. The main reason for Prince's version not charting is because it was a promotional airplay single and was not for sale; this was probably one the earliest examples of an airplay single, a kind of single that would prove very popular in the 1990s. "Do Me Baby" received moderate airplay on R&B stations, but since there were no airplay charts at the time, it was ineligible to chart.

The song was later used in the 2007 motion picture Rush Hour 3.


Preceded by
"That's What Friends Are For" by Dionne & Friends
Billboard's Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs number one single (Meli'sa Morgan version)
February 15 - March 1, 1986
Succeeded by
"How Will I Know" by Whitney Houston

[edit] External links


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