Don't You Want Me

"Don't You Want Me" is a single by British synthpop group The Human League. released on 27 November 1981 as the fourth single from their third studio album Dare (1981). The band's best known and most commercially successful song, it was the 1981 Christmas number one in the UK, where it has since sold over 1,560,000 copies, making it the 23rd-most successful single in UK Singles Chart history.[1] It topped the Billboard Hot 100 in the US on 3 July 1982, where it stayed for three weeks.

"Don't You Want Me"
Single by The Human League
from the album Dare
B-side"Seconds"
Released27 November 1981
Recorded1981
Genre
Length3:57
LabelVirgin
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)Martin Rushent
The Human League singles chronology
"Open Your Heart"
(1981)
"Don't You Want Me"
(1981)
"Being Boiled"
(1982)
Audio sample
  • file
  • help

In November 1983, Rolling Stone named it the "breakthrough song" of the Second British Invasion of the US.[2] In 2015, the song was voted by the British public as the nation's seventh-favourite 1980s number one in a poll for ITV.[3]

Background

The lyrics were inspired after lead singer Philip Oakey read a photo-story in a teen-girl's magazine. Though the song had been conceived and recorded in the studio as a male solo, Oakey was inspired by the film A Star Is Born and decided to turn the song into a conflicting duet with one of the band's two teenage female vocalists. Susan Ann Sulley was then asked to take on the role. Until then, she and the other female vocalist, Joanne Catherall, had only been assigned backing vocals; Sulley says she was chosen only through "luck of the draw".[4] Musicians Jo Callis and Philip Adrian Wright created a synthesizer score to accompany the lyrics that was much harsher than the version that was actually released. Initial versions of the song were recorded but Virgin Records-appointed producer Martin Rushent was unhappy with them. He and Callis remixed the track, giving it a softer, and in Oakey's opinion, "poppy" sound. Oakey hated the new version and thought it would be the weakest track on Dare, resulting in one of his infamous rows with Rushent.[5] Oakey disliked it so much that it was relegated to the last track on side two of the album.

Before the release of Dare, three of its tracks—"The Sound of the Crowd", "Love Action (I Believe in Love)", and "Open Your Heart"—had already been released as successful singles. With a hit album and three hit singles in a row, Virgin's chief executive Simon Draper decided to release one more single from the album before the end of 1981. His choice, "Don't You Want Me", instantly caused a row with Oakey, who did not want another single to be released because he was convinced that "the public were now sick of hearing The Human League" and the choice of the "poor quality filler track" would almost certainly be a disaster, wrecking the group's new-found popularity. The band felt the track was "our sort of Des O'Connor song."[6] Virgin were adamant that a fourth single would be released and Oakey finally agreed on the condition that a large colour poster accompany the 7" single, because he felt fans would "feel ripped off" by the 'substandard' single alone.[7]

The Human League often added cryptic references to their productions and the record sleeve of "Don't You Want Me" featured the suffix of "100". This was a reference to The 100 Club, a restaurant/bar in Sheffield.[8]

Today, the song is widely considered a classic of its era. In a retrospective review, Stephen Thomas Erlewine, senior editor for AllMusic, described the song as "a devastating chronicle of a frayed romance wrapped in the greatest pop hooks and production of its year."[9] Fellow new wave musician Graham Parker praised the song, saying, "I just love that catchy chorus."[10] Oakey still describes it as overrated, but acknowledges his initial dismissal was misguided and claims pride in the track. Oakey is also at pains to point out another misconception: that it is not a love song, but "a nasty song about sexual power politics."[11]

Chart performance and sales

"Don't You Want Me" was released in the UK on 27 November 1981. The B-side was "Seconds", another track lifted straight from the Dare album. As with previous singles, a 12" version was also issued featuring the original version of "Don't You Want Me" and "Seconds" on the A-side and an "extended dance mix" lasting seven and a half minutes on the B-side. This mix is also featured on the Love and Dancing album that was released under the name of the League Unlimited Orchestra in 1982.

To the amazement of the band (and especially Oakey),[12] the song entered the UK Singles Chart at #9 and shot to #1 the following week, remaining there over the Christmas period for a total of five weeks. It ultimately became the biggest-selling single to be released in 1981, and the fifth biggest-selling single of the entire decade. Its success was repeated six months later in the US, with "Don't You Want Me" hitting #1 on the Billboard Hot 100 for three weeks. Billboard magazine ranked it as the sixth-biggest hit of 1982. The single was certified Gold by the RIAA the same year for sales of a million copies. "Don't You Want Me" is notable as the first song featuring the revolutionary Linn LM-1 drum machine to hit #1 on the UK charts and also the first LM-1 track to top the Billboard Hot 100.

The song was re-released in October 1995 as a CD, cassette and 12" single featuring new remixes by Snap! and Red Jerry, peaking at #16 on the UK chart.[13] The release coincided with the issue of the group's second "Greatest Hits" compilation album shortly afterwards, which featured the Snap 7" remix.

As of November 2012, "Don't You Want Me" was the 23rd best-selling single in the UK, with 1.55 million copies sold.[1] On 23 March 2014, the song re-entered the UK Singles Chart at #19 and debuted at #1 in the Scottish singles charts thanks to a social media campaign by fans of Aberdeen Football Club.[14] In 2017 it was reported to be the 43rd most successful single in UK chart history with sales and streams combined.[15]

Music video

Susan Ann Sulley in the 1981 "Don't You Want Me" video, December 1981.

In 1981, record company Virgin were becoming aware that the promotional music video was evolving into an important marketing tool, with MTV being launched that year. Because it was agreed that the video for "Open Your Heart" had looked "cheap and nasty", Virgin commissioned a much more elaborate and expensive promotional video for "Don't You Want Me".

The video for the song was filmed near Slough, Berkshire, during November 1981 and has the theme of the filming and editing of a murder-mystery film, featuring the band members as characters and production staff. Because it is a "making-of" video, both crew and camera apparatus appear throughout. The video was conceived and directed by filmmaker Steve Barron, and has at its core the interaction between a successful actress (also a second negative cutter) played by Susan Ann Sulley walking out on "film director" Philip Oakey on a film set. It is loosely based on the film A Star Is Born. Near the end of the video, Wright, who also plays a film editor, has an expression on his face while the camera pulls back to reveal that the negative room where Oakey, Wright and Sulley were working is yet another set (the camera can be seen in the mirror's reflection).

Filmed on a cold, wet winter night, the video was shot on 35mm film instead of the cheaper videotape prevalent at the time. Sulley claims that Barron was heavily influenced by the cinematography in Ultravox's video for "Vienna" (directed by Russell Mulcahy earlier that year). Barron was also influenced by François Truffaut and his film Day for Night, and, because of that, the clapperboard seen in the video bears the inscription "Le League Humaine" as a tribute to Truffaut.

The video is credited for making Oakey, Sulley and Catherall visual icons of the early 1980s, but it became controversial later for a scene involving the murder-mystery film subplot in which Jo Callis appears to shoot Catherall (and later in the video repeated with Oakey shooting Sulley) with a pistol from a car window (a Saab 99 turbo). The scene is cut out of the DVD version and usually when shown on music television, replaced with a montage of other shots from the video edited in slow motion. The other car used in the video is a gold W-reg (1981–82) Rover SD1 carrying the registration plate "GCK 68W". DVLA records show that this car's last period of Vehicle Excise Duty expired on 24th April 1992. In a 1995 interview, Catherall mentioned that the car Callis was driving had to be pushed into shot as he could not drive at the time, to which Sulley added "he still can't!"[16]

The video was released in December 1981.

Charts and certifications

In 2001, Virgin Records allowed the song to be used in a Fiat Punto commercial, starring Myfanwy Waring and James Daffern, where the latter actor spoke lyrics from the first verse and chorus over the accompanying background music. Fiat's use of the song prompted legal action from The Human League, who lost the case to Virgin. Susan Sulley later complained: "Now even if we wanted to use the song for a more worthy company, we can't because it will always be associated with a particular brand."[48]

A campaign was started by Aberdeen F.C. fans in March 2014 to get the song to number one on the UK Singles Chart after their Scottish League Cup final victory against Inverness CT.[49] The song peaked at No. 4 in the iTunes Download chart on 19 March 2014.[50] The following Sunday, 23 March, the song re-entered at number nineteen on the UK Singles Chart.[51]

A Foster Farms commercial in the United States features a choir of animatronic chickens singing the song as part of the poultry producer's "Amazing Chicken" campaign.[52]

The Human League's version appears in a 2018 ad for Walmart.[53]

In 2020, a YouTube user by the name of “FreedomToons” made a parody of the song for the Presidential Debates in the US that year. The parody was titled “Why Won’t You Debate Me?” and features parodies/impressions of both Then-President Donald Trump and Joe Biden singing.

Track listing

7" version

  1. "Don't You Want Me" – 3:57
  2. "Seconds" – 4:59

12" version

  1. "Don't You Want Me" – 3:57
  2. "Seconds" – 4:59
  3. "Don't You Want Me (Extended Dance Mix)" – 7:30

Covers

Mandy Smith version

"Don't You Want Me Baby"
Single by Mandy Smith
B-side"If It Makes You Feel Good"
ReleasedMay 1989
Recorded1989
GenrePop
Length3:44
LabelPWL
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)Pete Hammond
Mandy Smith singles chronology
"Victim of Pleasure"
(1988)
"Don't You Want Me Baby"
(1989)
"I Just Can't Wait (92' Remixes)"
(1992)

In 1989 English pop singer Mandy covered this song under the title of "Don't You Want Me Baby". Released as a standalone single after her only album Mandy, it was also Smith's final single and became her only single to hit the UK top 75, peaking at #59. The B-side, "If It Makes You Feel Good", featured on the album. The song was included as a bonus track on the 2009 reissue of her album.

Formats and track listings

CD single

  1. "Don't You Want Me Baby"
  2. "If It Makes You Feel Good"
  3. "Don't You Want Me Baby" (Cocktail Mix)
  4. "If It Makes You Feel Good" (Extended Version)

7" single

  1. "Don't You Want Me Baby"
  2. "If It Makes You Feel Good"

12" single

  1. "Don't You Want Me Baby" (Cocktail Mix)
  2. "If It Makes You Feel Good" (Extended Version)

Charts

Chart (1989) Peak
Position
UK Singles Chart[54] 59
Irish Singles Chart[55] 30
Italian Singles Chart[56] 13

The Farm version

"Don't You Want Me"
Single by The Farm
from the album Love See No Colour
B-side"Obviously"
ReleasedOctober 1992
Recorded1992
Length4:12
LabelEnd Product
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)Mark Saunders
The Farm singles chronology
"Rising Sun"
(1992)
"Don't You Want Me"
(1992)
"Love See No Colour" (re-mix)"
(1992)

British band the Farm released a cover of "Don't You Want Me" in October 1992 that reached #18 in the UK charts, making it their third most successful single after 1990's "All Together Now" and "Groovy Train". It was originally recorded for the NME charity album Ruby Trax.

An uncredited female singer sings lead vocal on the second verse, as sung by Susanne Sulley in the original version.

Formats and track listings

CD single

  1. "Don't You Want Me"
  2. "Don't You Want Me" (Premier Mix)
  3. "Obviously"
  4. "Groovy Train" (Alternative Mix)

7" single

  1. "Don't You Want Me"
  2. "Obviously"

12" single

  1. "Don't You Want Me" (Premier Mix)
  2. "Don't You Want Me" (20K Mix)
  3. "Don't You Want Me" (Pickles Keef Mix)
  4. "Groovy Train" (Alternative Mix)

Alcazar version

"Don't You Want Me"
Single by Alcazar
from the album Casino
ReleasedMay 2002
Recorded2001
GenreEurodance
Length3:27
Label
Songwriter(s)
Alcazar singles chronology
"Sexual Guarantee"
(2001)
"Don't You Want Me"
(2002)
"Not a Sinner Nor a Saint"
(2003)

"Don't You Want Me" was recorded a Eurodance song by Swedish band Alcazar, released internationally in 2002. The song was included in the European version of Casino together with a few others. It was recorded in Stockholm at first, but when the band wanted it for a new pan-European single, a new version was made.

The single was released in Australia as a follow-up to the successful single "Crying at the Discoteque". The white 12-inch was released in Europe and distributed to DJs to get maximum airplay at the disco arenas.

"Don't You Want Me" is Alcazar's biggest hit in the United States with 15 weeks on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, peaking at #30.

Music video

The video was filmed at Filmhuset in Stockholm, and was directed by Jesper Ganslandt. The video takes place in "Circus Alcazar" and is filled with horses, ducks, an evil parrot, acrobats, the Alcazar ballet (including a dog in a pink ballerina dress) and Annikafiore's boyfriend juggling with fire in the background. The video shoot took almost 23 hours.

CD single track listing

  1. "Almighty Radio Edit" – 3:27
  2. "Almighty Club Mix" – 7:25
  3. "Project Eden Remix" – 7:34
  4. "Earth Club Anthem" – 10:24
  5. "Wild Cowboys Radio Mix" – 3:38

Chart performance

Chart (2002) Peak
position
Australian ARIA Singles Chart[57] 37
Belgian Singles Chart (Flanders)[58] 21
Dutch Singles Chart[59] 83
Finnish Singles Chart[60] 18
Swedish Singles Chart[61] 30
Swiss Singles Chart[62] 76
Hot Dance Club Play[63] 30
Japan 3

Other versions

See also

  • List of Billboard Hot 100 number-one singles of 1982

References

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  2. "Anglomania: The Second British Invasion". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 29 April 2019.
  3. Westbrook, Caroline (25 July 2015). "The Nation's Favourite 80s Number One: 12 more classic 80s chart-toppers which didn't make the cut". Metro. Retrieved 27 July 2015.
  4. Interview – Smash Hits Magazine – December 1981
  5. Martin Rushent speaking on UK Channel 4 Documentary "Top 10 Electro Pioneers" BBC – 27 November 2001
  6. TOP OF THE POPS ( THE STORY OF 1981 ), retrieved 24 December 2019
  7. "Human League Biography". League-online.com. Archived from the original on 9 August 2007. Retrieved 18 September 2010.
  8. Smash Hits Magazine December 1981
  9. Stephen Thomas Erlewine. "Dare! – The Human League | Songs, Reviews, Credits, Awards". AllMusic. Retrieved 29 March 2014.
  10. Himes, Geoffrey. ""GP: Rock's Last Angry Man Reflects on Life after the Rumour," by Geoffrey Himes". homepages.uni-regensburg.de. Retrieved 24 June 2020.
  11. Human League Interview – Eamon Holmes GMTV 2001
  12. "Rolling Stone 1983". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 21 February 2011.
  13. British Hit Singles and Albums (Guinness 19th Edition) Guinness World Records Limited; 20Rev Ed edition ISBN 978-1904994107 (2 June 2007)
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  15. The UK's Official Chart 'millionaires' revealed Official Charts 19 september 2017
  16. The Beatbox, RTE Television, February 1995 (promotion for "Tell Me When")
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  47. "American single certifications – Human League – Don't You Want Me". Recording Industry Association of America. Retrieved 2 June 2015. If necessary, click Advanced, then click Format, then select Single, then click SEARCH. 
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  52. "Foster Farms' Harmonic Choir of 'Amazing Chickens'". Little Black Book. Retrieved 19 January 2016.
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