Downtown (song)

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"Downtown"
"Downtown" cover
Single by Petula Clark
from the album Downtown
B-side "You'd Better Love Me"
Released November 1964
Recorded 1964
Label Warner Bros. Records (US)
Pye Records (UK)
Writer Tony Hatch
Producer Tony Hatch
Petula Clark singles chronology
"True Love Never Runs Smooth"
(1964)
"Downtown"
(1964)
"I Know a Place"
(1965)
Audio sample
Info (help·info)

"Downtown" is a pop song composed by Tony Hatch following a first-time visit to New York City. It was his original intention to present it to The Drifters, but when British singer Petula Clark heard the incomplete tune, she proposed that if he could write lyrics to match the quality of the melody, she would be interested in recording it.

Thirty minutes before the song was scheduled to be recorded, Hatch was completing the lyrics in the studio toilet. "Downtown" was released in late 1964 and became a best seller in English, French, Italian, and German versions, topping music charts worldwide (with 3 million copies sold in the US alone)[1] and introducing Clark, who had been a popular recording artist and actress in Europe for nearly 20 years, to the American record-buying public. She continued her success in the United States with a string of fifteen consecutive Top 40 hits.

"Downtown" was the first song by a British female artist to top the Billboard Hot 100 chart[2] and went on to win a Grammy Award for "Best Rock and Roll Song".

Clark re-recorded the song three times, in 1976 (with a disco beat), in 1984 (with a new piano and trumpet intro that leads into the song's original opening), and in 1996. In addition, the original 1964 recording was remixed and re-released in 1988, 1999, and 2003. Clark, who in the early 1960s maintained a concurrent non-English musical career in France and Germany, also recorded French, German and Italian versions in 1964. While the German version retained the original title, the French version was retitled Dans le Temps and the Italian version was called Ciao Ciao.

Following 9/11, New York City adopted Clark's version of "Downtown" as the theme song for a series of commercials encouraging tourism to Lower Manhattan. The song has been used by other metropolitan areas — including Chicago, Indianapolis, and Singapore — for promotional purposes as well.

Contents

"Downtown"
"Downtown" cover
Single by Dolly Parton
from the album The Great Pretender
B-side "The Great Pretender"
Released April 1984
Recorded December 1983
Genre Country
Label RCA Records
Writer Tony Hatch
Producer Val Garay
Dolly Parton singles chronology
"Save the Last Dance for Me"
(1983)
"Downtown"
(1984)
"Tennessee Homesick Blues"
(1984)

"Downtown" has been covered numerous times by other artists since Clark's original recording, notably by Dolly Parton in 1984. After recording the track in December 1983, "Downtown" appeared on Parton's album of cover versions, The Great Pretender. It was followed by a single release of the track on RCA Records in April 1984 and proved to be a moderate success peaking at number eighty-seven on the Billboard Hot 100 pop chart and number twenty-seven on the Hot Country Songs chart in the United States. Parton's version altered some of the lyrics: "Listen to the rhythm of a gentle bossa nova" became "Listen to the rhythm of the music that they're playing".

Clark's fellow British songbird Sandie Shaw covered the song on her debut 1965 album Sandie. Allan Sherman's 1965 parody (same melody, comedy lyrics) called "Crazy Downtown" was his second-biggest selling single. Frank Sinatra covered the song on his 1966 album Strangers in the Night.

The B-52's recorded a revamped version for their 1978 debut album The B-52's.

Skinny Puppy vocalist Nivek Ogre and Invisible Records owner Martin Atkin's one-off collaboration project Rx (aka Ritalin) covered the song on their album Bedside Toxicology. In the mid-1990s, jazz group the Holly Cole Trio recorded a version with updated lyrics. The song was also covered by Icelandic singer Björk and the Brodsky Quartet in a concert at London's Union Chapel.

The Killer Barbies released their version of "Downtown" in 2000. In 2007, Canadian singer-songwriter Jann Arden covered the song for her album, Uncover Me.

"Downtown"
"Downtown" cover
Single by Emma Bunton
from the album Life in Mono
B-side "Something Tells Me (Something's Going to Happen)"
"Perhaps Perhaps Perhaps"
Released 13 November 2006
Format CD single, digital download
Recorded 2006
Genre Pop
Label Universal
Writer Tony Hatch
Emma Bunton singles chronology
"Crickets Sing for Anamaria"
(2004)
"Downtown"
(2006)
"All I Need to Know"
(2007)
Alternate cover
UK CD 2 cover
UK CD 2 cover
Audio sample
Info "Downtown" (help·info)

English singer Emma Bunton released "Downtown" in November 2006. The single was selected as the 2006 BBC Children in Need single, with all proceeds from the release going to the charity. It is the lead single from Bunton's third studio album entitled Life in Mono.

Emma and her dancers dancing the song.
Emma and her dancers dancing the song.

Directed by Harvey & Carolyn, (the directors who also directed her video for her single "Maybe") the sexually-suggestive music video for the single is set in a hotel bedroom featuring Bunton as a maid. It includes appearances from contestants from the BBC's reality television show Strictly Come Dancing (the format to which has been sold worldwide under the name Dancing with the Stars) and features cameos from Matt Dawson, Louisa Lytton, Carol Smillie, Spoony, Mark Ramprakash, Claire King, Peter Schmeichel, Craig Revel Horwood, Anton du Beke, Brendan Cole, Erin Boag, Lilia Kopylova, Karen Hardy, and Darren Bennett. Though the lyrics are innocuous, in the video Bunton's body language clearly twists the song title into a euphemism for sexual activity. Bunton, however, has denied this repeatedly, for example in this interview with online music magazine Popjustice:[4]

Popjustice: "The dancers in the 'Downtown' video seem to know you very well indeed. So well that they are all pointing at your fanny. Was this your idea?"
Bunton: "I don't understand where this has come from. It is a dance routine and it is nothing to do with anything like that. It is everyone else's dirty little minds. Especially yours. It worries me because it is a classic and you can't make classics rude."

These are the formats and track listings of major single releases of "Downtown".

  • UK CD 1
  1. "Downtown"
  2. "Downtown" (Elements Club Radio Edit)
  • UK CD 2
  1. "Downtown"
  2. "Something Tells Me"
  3. "Perhaps, Perhaps, Perhaps"
  4. "Downtown" (video)

Upon release, "Downtown" entered the UK Singles Chart at number twenty-four on digital sales only; it rose to number three the following week when it received its full release, making the song Bunton's highest-charting single since "What Took You So Long?" in 2001.[5]

Chart (2006) Peak
position
UK Singles Chart 3
Eurochart Hot 100 Singles 32
Irish Singles Chart 36

  1. ^ Jim Beckerman (March 23, 2007). "Petula Clark brings bevy of tunes to Bergen". North Jersey Media Group Inc. Retrieved May 2, 2007
  2. ^ Ankeny, Jason. Biography taken from Billboard.com. All Music Guide. Retrieved December 1, 2006
  3. ^ RIAA. American sales certificate database. Recording Industry Association of America. Retrieved December 1, 2006.
  4. ^ Michael Baggs (6 December 2006). Emma Bunton interview. Popjustice. Retrieved 2 May 2007
  5. ^ Sexton, Paul. Article confirming Bunton's 2006 UK chart position. Billboard. Retrieved December 1, 2006.
  6. ^ Jack Broughton, Going Downtown: The War Against Hanoi and Washington


Preceded by
"I Feel Fine" by The Beatles
Billboard Hot 100 number one single
January 23, 1965
Succeeded by
"You've Lost That Lovin' Feelin'" by The Righteous Brothers
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