music.wikisort.org - Composition"We've Got Tonite" is a song written by American rock music artist Bob Seger, from his album Stranger in Town (1978). The single record charted twice for Seger, and was developed from a prior song that he had written. Further versions charted in 1983 for Kenny Rogers as a duet with Sheena Easton, and again in 2002 for Ronan Keating.
1978 single by Bob Seger & the Silver Bullet Band
"We've Got Tonite" |
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 Picture sleeve for the US single |
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B-side | "Aint Got No Money" |
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Released | October 1978 |
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Recorded | 1976 |
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Genre |
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Length |
- 4:38 (album version)
- 3:40 (single edit)
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Label | Capitol |
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Songwriter(s) | Bob Seger |
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Producer(s) |
- Bob Seger
- Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section
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Original version
Dave Marsh (Rolling Stone) on "We've Got Tonite" |
Seger's melodic sense has never been better than on "We've Got Tonite," a grand seduction song in the tradition of Rod Stewart's "Tonight's the Night".[1] |
Background
The song developed from an earlier Seger composition titled "This Old House" which featured the same chords as "We've Got Tonite" although the earlier song had a slightly different melody. Seger overhauled "This Old House" into "We've Got Tonite" the day after seeing the film The Sting (1973) which features a conversation between the Robert Redford character and a woman he is attracted to, played by Dimitra Arliss, who says: "I don't even know you": Redford's response: "You know me. It's two in the morning and I don't know nobody", caused an emotional response in Seger manifested in the overhauled song lyrics.[2][3]
"We've Got Tonite" was not recorded until the 1976 sessions for Seger's album Night Moves and was held off that album as Seger felt it was not a thematic fit.[4] It was one of five Stranger... tracks recorded at Muscle Shoals Sound Studios with the Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section, and Venetta Fields, Clydie King and Shirley Matthews provided the backing vocals.[5]
"We've Got Tonite" served as the album's third single, reaching No. 13 on the US pop charts in 1978. It also played in the background of Melissa Sue Anderson's television film Survival of Dana (1979), in a scene where Anderson's character was in Los Angeles visiting one of her new friends' homes and was in a room with co-star Robert Carradine's character 'Donny Davis', whom she was falling for. In the UK, the original version would chart twice, reaching No. 41 in 1979, and then reaching No. 22 as a 1995 re-release—as "We've Got Tonight"—to promote a Greatest Hits album: in 1982, a live version—titled "We've Got Tonite"—from the in-concert album Nine Tonight reached No. 60 in the UK.[6]
Since the death of his mother Charlotte, Seger has made a point of always including "We've Got Tonite" in his live setlist, as it was her favorite of Seger's compositions.[7]
Personnel
Credits are adapted from the liner notes of Seger's 1994 Greatest Hits compilation.[8]
Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section
Additional musicians
Reception
Billboard described "We've Got Tonite" as a "melodic ballad featuring Seger's smokey and tender vocal" and said that the structure of the melody was similar to Rod Stewart's "Tonight's the Night."[9] Cash Box called it a "sensitive ballad" with "stark opening tambourine beat, strings and strong upward swell" and praised Seger's vocals as well as the "brightness" provided by the backing vocals.[10]
Charts
Weekly charts
Chart (1979) |
Peak position |
Australia (Kent Music Report)[11] |
31 |
Canada Top Singles (RPM)[12] |
9 |
Canada Adult Contemporary (RPM)[13] |
6 |
New Zealand (Recorded Music NZ)[14] |
12 |
South Africa (Springbok Radio)[15] |
11 |
UK Singles (OCC)[16] |
41 |
US Billboard Hot 100[17] |
13 |
US Adult Contemporary (Billboard)[18] |
29 |
US Cash Box Top 100[19] |
11 |
Chart (1982) |
Peak position |
UK Singles (OCC)[20] |
60 |
Chart (1995) |
Peak position |
Ireland (IRMA)[21] |
29 |
UK Singles (OCC)[22] |
22 |
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Year-end charts
Chart (1979) |
Rank |
Canada Top Singles (RPM)[23] |
89 |
US Billboard Hot 100[24] |
94 |
US Cash Box Top 100[25] |
91 |
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Kenny Rogers and Sheena Easton version
"We've Got Tonight" |
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 Picture sleeve for the UK single |
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B-side | "You Are So Beautiful" |
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Released | January 24, 1983 |
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Recorded | December 31, 1982–January 9, 1983 |
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Genre | Pop |
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Length | 3:49 |
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Label | Liberty |
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Songwriter(s) | Bob Seger |
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Producer(s) | David Foster |
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Background
In 1983, American country-pop star Kenny Rogers recorded the song as a duet with Scottish pop star Sheena Easton, and made it the title track of his album We've Got Tonight. Both Rogers and Easton were on the roster of EMI America-Liberty Records and their collaboration on "We've Got Tonight" was at the firm suggestion of label chairman Larry Mazza who hoped to restore Easton to chart ascendancy.[26] Mazza was also the president of Capitol Records the label of release for the Bob Seger original.[27] Rogers stated: "I liked the idea of recording with Sheena. I thought the contrast in styles--I'm so throaty and she's so trained and pure--would really work well."[27] Rogers himself phoned Easton to pitch their duet on December 23, 1982. The two singers then met up on Christmas Eve to rehearse the song with a piano, six days later going into the studio, with the completed track going to radio nine days after that.[28]
Easton would assert that it was the song choice which appealed to her, while allowing Rogers to be "a good singer with a distinctive voice" who she found "always helpful and co-operative" in the studio, debunking insider reports that the ten-day recording session for the track was a stormy one with Rogers overtly disliking Easton's high-pitched vocals.[26] Easton's contribution to the track would prove a bone of critical contention: whereas Rolling Stone critic Chris Connelly would dismiss the Easton/Rogers duet of "We've Got Tonight" as "shrieking [and] insensitive",[29] and Jerseyite critic Jim Bohen would lament how Rogers "who usually sounds good duetting with women" was defeated by "Easton's nails-across-the-blackboard voice",[30] Dennis Hunt (Los Angeles Times) would prefer the Rogers/Easton take to the Seger original due to a "very appealing" "blend of sharply contrasting voices, his deep and hers very high" adding that "Rogers, never known for his vocal power, stretches to match Easton, [attaining] his finest vocal performance",[31] and AllMusic critic Joe Viglione would opine that Easton's "splendid voice reaching the high registers over Kenny's familiar monotone...really makes [the track] special."[32]
A number one hit on the Billboard Country Singles chart, "We've Got Tonight" reached number six on the Billboard Hot 100 pop singles chart, and number two on the Billboard Adult Contemporary chart, also reaching the top 30 in the United Kingdom.[33] Rebranded as a country & western song due to the Rogers/Easton duet, "We've Got Tonight" would be honored by ASCAP as the Most Performed Country Song of 1983, with Seger, an iconic Detroit rocker, personally acknowledging the honor by attending the October 1984 ASCAP Country Music Awards fête held at the Opryland Hotel in Nashville.[34][35]
In Brazil the single has exceeded 100,000 copies.[36]
Personnel
Charts
Weekly charts
Chart (1983) |
Peak position |
Australia (Kent Music Report)[37] |
11 |
Austria (Ö3 Austria Top 40)[38] |
11 |
Belgium (Ultratop 50 Flanders)[39] |
20 |
Canada Top Singles (RPM)[40] |
4 |
Canada Adult Contemporary (RPM)[41] |
1 |
Canada Country Tracks (RPM)[42] |
1 |
France (IFOP)[43] |
71 |
Germany (Official German Charts)[44] |
56 |
Ireland (IRMA)[45] |
18 |
Netherlands (Single Top 100)[46] |
24 |
Netherlands (Dutch Top 40)[47] |
21 |
New Zealand (Recorded Music NZ)[48] |
13 |
Norway (VG-lista)[49] |
10 |
UK Singles (OCC)[50] |
28 |
US Billboard Hot 100[51] |
6 |
US Hot Country Songs (Billboard)[52] |
1 |
US Adult Contemporary (Billboard)[53] |
2 |
US Cash Box Top 100[54] |
10 |
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Year-end charts
Chart (1983) |
Rank |
Australia (Kent Music Report)[55] |
68 |
Canada Top Singles (RPM)[56] |
42 |
Canada Country Tracks (RPM)[57] |
7 |
US Billboard Hot 100[58] |
40 |
US Hot Country Songs (Billboard)[59] |
32 |
US Adult Contemporary (Billboard)[60] |
25 |
US Cash Box Top 100[61] |
54 |
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Ronan Keating duet version
"We've Got Tonight" |
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Released | November 25, 2002 (2002-11-25) |
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Length | 3:39 |
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Label | Polydor |
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Songwriter(s) | Bob Seger |
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Producer(s) | Bill Padley |
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"Phunk Phoolin'" (2002) |
"We've Got Tonight" (2002) |
"All the Love in the World" (2003) |
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Background
"We've Got Tonight" was remade by Irish singer Ronan Keating and Scottish singer Lulu for Lulu's twelfth studio album, Together (2002), with the track also appearing on Keating's second studio album, Destination (2002). The Together album, consisting of tracks pairing Lulu with a variety of "name" duet partners, was a comeback vehicle for Lulu designed by top entertainment impresario Louis Walsh, whom the singer had signed on with in 2000.[62] Three of the acts the album paired Lulu with—Samantha Mumba, Westlife, and Keating—were protégées of Walsh; however, Keating has said that Lulu herself recruited him to duet with her, stating, "I said 'Yeah, as long as you let me pick the song!' I picked...one of my all-time favorite love songs".[63]
Both the Together and Destination albums were released in the spring of 2002; it was decided to forego any single releases of off Together,[64] but after two earlier singles, Keating's label Polydor issued "We've Got Tonight"—credited to Ronan Keating featuring Lulu—on November 25, 2002, and it debuted at its No. 4 peak on the UK Singles Chart on December 1, 2002. The track was also an international hit, reaching No. 7 in the Netherlands, No. 10 in Ireland, No. 12 in Australia, and No. 14 in Flanders.
Polydor Records decided to release a reformatted version of the track that replaced Lulu's vocal with that of Jeanette Biedermann, a Polydor artist who had enjoyed considerable success with English-language releases in her native Germany and also Austria and Switzerland. This version of the duet was issued in those three nations with resultant top-ten peaks in Austria and Germany and a No. 25 peak in Switzerland. In Italy, the track was issued with Italian soul singer Giorgia Todrani and published as the B-side of Giorgia's single "Gocce di memoria", and in the Philippines, Keating performed the song with Kyla.[citation needed]
Track listings
UK single
- "We've Got Tonight" (featuring Lulu) – 3:39
- "All I Have Is My Heart" – 3:50
- "In the Ghetto" (Live) – 3:13
- "We've Got Tonight" (Video) – 4:15
German single
- "We've Got Tonight" (featuring Jeanette) – 3:39
- "Sea of Love" – 3:14
- "All I Have Is My Heart" – 3:50
- "In the Ghetto" (Live) – 3:13
Italian single
- "We've Got Tonight" (featuring Giorgia) – 3:39
- "All I Have Is My Heart" – 3:50
Charts
Ronan Keating and Lulu
Weekly charts
Chart (2002–2003) |
Peak position |
Australia (ARIA)[65] |
12 |
Belgium (Ultratop 50 Flanders)[66] |
14 |
Belgium (Ultratip Wallonia)[67] |
14 |
Europe (Eurochart Hot 100)[68] |
20 |
Ireland (IRMA)[69] |
10 |
Netherlands (Dutch Top 40)[70] |
11 |
Netherlands (Single Top 100)[71] |
7 |
New Zealand (Recorded Music NZ)[72] |
46 |
Romania (Romanian Top 100)[73] |
9 |
Scotland (OCC)[74] |
1 |
Sweden (Sverigetopplistan)[75] |
25 |
UK Singles (OCC)[76] |
4 |
Year-end charts
Chart (2002) |
Position |
Ireland (IRMA)[77] |
95 |
UK Singles (OCC)[78] |
78 |
Chart (2003) |
Position |
Australia (ARIA)[79] |
83 |
Netherlands (Single Top 100)[80] |
77 |
Romania (Romanian Top 100)[73] |
32 |
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Ronan Keating and Jeanette
Weekly charts
Chart (2002–2003) |
Peak position |
Austria (Ö3 Austria Top 40)[81] |
6 |
Czech Republic (IFPI)[82] |
30 |
Europe (Eurochart Hot 100)[83] |
30 |
Germany (Official German Charts)[84] |
7 |
Switzerland (Schweizer Hitparade)[85] |
25 |
Year-end charts
Chart (2003) |
Position |
Austria (Ö3 Austria Top 40)[86] |
47 |
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Certifications
Release history
Other versions
"We've Got Tonight" also played in the background of Melissa Sue Anderson's television film Survival of Dana (1979), in a scene where Anderson's character was in Los Angeles visiting one of her new friends' homes and was in a room with co-star Robert Carradine's character Donny Davis, whom she was falling for.[92] In Season 4, episode 4 of the television series Ray Donovan, Liev Schreiber sings a karaoke version of the song, then a reprise to his wife as the episode ends.
The song has also been recorded by Rein Alexander (no) (duet with Trine Rein) (album Song For You, 2007), Bill Anderson (album Nashville Mirrors, 1980), Anne Lise (album First Dance, 2006), Patti Austin (album Body Language, 1980), Shirley Bassey (album, The Show Must Go On 1996), Elkie Brooks (album Nor More the Fool, 1986: 1987 UK chart single@No. 67), Rhonda Burchmore (album Midnight Rendezvous, 2001), Rita Coolidge (as "Tonite": duet with Jermaine Jackson) (album Never Let You Go, 1983), Dozi (af) & Nianell (album It Takes Two, 2009), Allison Durbin (album Country Love Songs, 1983), Ray Dylan (duet with Charlize Berg (af)) (album Goeie Ou Country in Duet, 2013), Adam Harvey & Beccy Cole (album The Great Country Song Book Volume II, 2017), (album Richie Havens (album Connections, 1980), Steven Houghton (album Steven Houghton, 1997), Tom Jones (album Mr Jones, 2002), Reg Livermore (album Livermore's Firing Squad, 1983), Barry Manilow (album Summer of '78, 1996), Jane McDonald (album The Singer of Your Song, 2014), Melanie (album Moments From My Life, 2002), Angelika Milster (de (duet with Steve Barton) (album Ich bin wie ich bin, 1984), Chord Overstreet (multi-artist album Muscle Shoals...Small Town, Big Sound, 2018),[93] Marti Pellow (album Love to Love, 2011), Tex Perkins & His Ladyboyz (album No.1's & No.2's, 2008), Lee Towers & Anita Meyer (album Run to Me, 1985), Conway Twitty (as "Tonite") (album Heart & Soul, 1980), and Dottie West (as "Tonite") (album Special Delivery, 1980)[94] Michael McDonald also performed a cover of this song, according to Debby and Tony.
American Idol Season 11 contestant and eventual winner Phillip Phillips performed "We've Got Tonight" on the series episode broadcast May 16, 2012: his studio recording of the song appeared on the Billboard Hot 100 at number 97.
Sheena Easton also recorded a Spanish-language version of "We've Got Tonight" entitled "La Noche Y Tú"Spanish on her 1984 Spanish-language album Todo Me Recuerda A Ti, the track being a duet with Dyango. The song has also been rendered as "Grazie perché" Italian which as recorded by Amii Stewart and Gianni Morandi was a No. 5 hit in Italy in 1984 and as "Všímej si víc"Czech recorded in 1983 by Věra Špinarová and Karel Černoch (cs): another Czech rendering of the song: "Čas dál nech spát", was recorded in 2012 by David Deyl (cs) and Helena Vondráčková, being a new track included on Vondráčková's 3-CD compilation Helena (nejen) o lásce.[95]
References
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- Detroit Free Press 18 October 1994 "Rocker Tells the Stories Behind the Hits" by Gary Graff p.3C
- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette 21 November 2011 "Bob Seger Makes a Joyful Noise at Consol" by Scott Mervis p.C-4
- Moline Dispatch November 22, 2009 "Bob Seger Opens the Vaults for Disc of '70s Rarities" p.G1
- Harrison, Ed (June 10, 1978). "Closeup" (PDF). Billboard Magazine. p. 80. Retrieved July 9, 2020.
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- Graff, Gary. "Reviews: Bob Seger delivers news as well as old time rock and roll at DTE". The Oakland Press. Retrieved June 1, 2021.
- Greatest Hits (CD). Bob Seger. Capitol Records. 1994. CDP 7243 8 30334 2 3.
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- Bob Seger
- Craig Frost
- Chris Campbell
- Alto Reed
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The System albums | |
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Seger solo albums | |
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The Silver Bullet Band albums | |
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Live albums | |
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Compilation albums | |
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Singles | |
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Related articles |
- Discography
- Gibson/Miller Band
- Punch Andrews
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Studio albums | |
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Collaboration albums | |
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Christmas albums | |
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Compilations | |
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Notable singles | |
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Guest singles | |
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Other songs | |
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Related articles |
- Discography
- The First Edition
- Kenny Rogers Roasters
- The Real West
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Studio albums | |
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Singles | |
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Related articles | |
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- Discography
- Loggins and Messina
- Blue Sky Riders
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Discography |
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Compilation albums | |
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