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Since the song was sung by Russell Hitchcock, a man, the gender roles were reversed in the lyrics ("I'm your lady and you are my man" became "You are my lady and I am your man"). It was released as a single in July 1985 by Arista Records in the United States, and later in Canada and New Zealand.
You're a Lady" is the debut single by British singer-songwriter Peter Skellern. The song became Skellern's first and biggest hit, reaching #3 on the UK Singles Chart, #7 on the Irish Singles Chart and #50 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100. [2] Skellern performed the song live on many occasions prior to his retirement in 2001. [3]
Alain Delon said in 2006 that by the end of the song, as he repeated the lyrics "que tu es belle" (how beautiful you are), Dalida was constantly laughing. He recalled telling her: "I'm not telling you 'how beautiful you are' because those are the lyrics, but because you are beautiful!" [9] Mastering was led by Jean-Pierre Dupuy. [11]
Backed by percussion-heavy instrumentation, it is a retro-pop song, with the lyrics discussing loving oneself and empowerment. The song received mostly positive reviews from music critics, who noted its anthemic nature and praised the message. "I'm a Lady" reached number 40 on the US Adult Top 40 chart in 2017.
"Say I'm Your Number One" (also formatted as "Say I'm Your No. 1") is a song by English singer Princess, released in 1985 as the lead single from her self-titled debut studio album (1986). [1] Written and produced by Stock Aitken Waterman (SAW), the song peaked at number seven on the UK Singles Chart .
The track begins with the lyrics "I drink tequila straight / Haven't brushed my hair in days / And I'll kiss on the first date if I'm really feeling it / I don't even own a dress / Bite my nails when I get stressed / Do whatever for attention if I'm needing it", which have been described by Jael Goldfine of Paper as "unapologetic non ...
"Sorry, I'm a Lady" is a song co-written by Rolf Soja and Frank Dostal, and performed by Spanish duo Baccara. It was released in 1977 as the second single from their ...
[9] Michel Paoletta, editor for Billboard magazine, declared "I Am Your Woman" an "anthem single [...] which features very confrontational lyrics along with a jazzy beat." [ 10 ] Impressed about the song, NME editor Diana Evans wrote that the song is "preceded by a mesmeric, orchestral intro that seems to lift like a veil onto the LP's troubled ...