"Call Me" is a song composed by Tony Hatch for an original recording for Petula Clark. It was later an easy listening standard via a hit version by Chris Montez.
| Call Me | |
|---|---|
| EP by | |
| Released | November 1965 |
| Recorded | 1965, London, UK |
| Genre | Pop |
| Length | 9:06 |
| Language | English |
| Label | Pye Records NEP 24237 (UK) Vogue CPV 8343 (France) |
| Producer | Tony Hatch |
| Side One: "Call Me" (Tony Hatch) - 2:43 "Heart" (Tony Hatch-Petula Clark-George Aber) - 2:37 Side Two: "Everything in the Garden" (Roger Greenaway) - 2:55 "Strangers and Lovers (Tony Hatch) - 2:51 | |
| "Call Me" | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Single by Chris Montez | ||||
| from the album The More I See You/Call Me | ||||
| B-side | "Go Head On" | |||
| Released | 1965 | |||
| Recorded | 1965 | |||
| Genre | Easy listening | |||
| Length | 2:33 | |||
| Label | A&M | |||
| Songwriter(s) | Tony Hatch | |||
| Producer(s) | Herb Alpert | |||
| Chris Montez singles chronology | ||||
| ||||
"Call Me" first appeared as the title cut on a Petula Clark EP released in 1965 by Pye in the UK. "Call Me" and the three other tracks on the EP: "Heart", "Everything in the Garden" and "Strangers and Lovers" were also released on Clark's album I Know a Place (a.k.a. The New Petula Clark Album).[1]
Also in 1965 Chris Montez, who had scored the hit "Let's Dance" in 1962 and subsequently dropped out of the music business, was invited to resume recording by A&M Records' founder Herb Alpert. Alpert was unhappy when Montez began recording for A&M in his previous Chicano rock style and personally suggested Montez shift to easy listening choosing "Call Me" as the song to be Montez's debut single on A&M.[2] Released in November 1965, "Call Me" entered the Easy Listening Top 40 in Billboard that December entering the Billboard Hot 100 in January 1966; that March "Call Me" peaked on the Easy Listening chart at #2 and on the Hot 100 at #22.[3]
Montez's version of "Call Me" was released as a single in the UK on the Pye label in January 1966 but failed to chart.
| Chart (1965-66) | Peak position |
|---|---|
| U.S. Billboard Easy Listening | 2 |
| US Billboard Hot 100 | 22 |
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