Leave Me Alone (Ruby Red Dress)

"Leave Me Alone (Ruby Red Dress)"
Single by Helen Reddy
from the album Long Hard Climb
B-side "The Old Fashioned Way" (US)
"Don't You Mess With a Woman" (Aus)
Released October, 1973 (US)
Format 7"
Recorded 1973
Genre Pop
Length 3:26
Label Capitol
Writer(s) Linda Laurie
Producer(s) Tom Catalano
Certification Gold
Helen Reddy singles chronology
"Delta Dawn"
(1973)
Leave Me Alone (Ruby Red Dress)
(1973)
"Keep On Singing"
(1974)

"Leave Me Alone (Ruby Red Dress)" was a million-selling, Gold-certified hit single for Helen Reddy in 1973 .

The song was written by Linda Laurie. In the summer of 1973 Laurie recorded "Leave Me Alone (Ruby Red Dress)" for MCA Records; the song was shopped to Helen Reddy who recorded it for her Long Hard Climb album which was released August 1973 and the track was issued as a single that October.[1]

Capitol Records issued "Leave Me Alone" as the follow-up single to Reddy's No. 1 hit "Delta Dawn" despite the misgivings of Reddy herself who felt "Leave Me Alone" was a thematic retread of "Delta Dawn" as both songs concern a Southern woman - alliteratively named - whose reason has been undermined by an ill-fated tryst. Also Reddy found the song's chorus with its repetition of the phrase "leave me alone" monotonous.[2]

Capitol Records was correct in believing the resemblance to Reddy's precedent hit would work in "Leave Me Alone"'s favor as the song reached the American Top Ten chart six weeks after its single release. It hit #1 in Cash Box and rose to #3 on the Billboard Hot 100, marking the only time a Helen Reddy album featured two Top Ten songs. The Cash Box Hot 100 Singles chart ranked "Leave Me Alone" at No. 1 for the week of 4 January 1974. "Leave Me Alone" became Reddy's third US single release to be certified Gold for sales of over one million units and was also the second of Reddy's six consecutive No. 1 songs on the Billboard Easy Listening Chart (she would eventually score eight #1 Billboard Easy Listening/Adult Contemporary songs overall).

In Australia, "Leave Me Alone" followed "Delta Dawn" as Reddy's second consecutive - and final - No. 1 ranked song, topping the charts dated 7 & 14 January 1974. "Leave Me Alone" was the first Helen Reddy single to build momentum in the UK with six weeks in February and March 1974 spent approaching the UK Top 50; however the single ultimately failed to reach the chart.

Country music artist Arlene Harden covered "Leave Me Alone (Ruby Red Dress)" in a Nashville session produced by Frank Jones on 10 May 1974[3] with the track serving as her debut release on Capitol Records that June [4] to fall short of hit status with a No. 72 peak on the Billboard C&W chart in August 1974.[5]

Samantha Sang recorded "Leave Me Alone (Ruby Red Dress)" for her 1975 debut album Samantha Sang and Rocked the World.

The song was the subject of a nationwide contest in America in which listeners would submit to their local radio station their estimation of how many times Reddy sang the phrase "leave me alone" in the song; submissions of the correct answer - which Reddy states is 43 - were eligible for a trip for two to see Helen in concert.[2]

Reddy sang this song as a skit on The Carol Burnett Show, with the show's cast (Vicki Lawrence, the late Harvey Korman, and Tim Conway) singing the chorus, which gets interrupted by Reddy, who tells the guests that they all sounded "TERRIBLE".

When Reddy came out of retirement in 2013 playing US club dates with an act focused on songs she'd recorded which were not released as singles, she cited "Leave Me Alone (Ruby Red Dress)" as "one song I will never ever sing again" disparaging its lyrical repetitiveness: "that sort of songwriting doesn’t do much for me, but it was a hit. However, I don’t have to sing it anymore if I don’t want to, and I don’t want to." [6]

See also

References

  1. Billboard vol 85 No. 40 (6 October 1973) p.33.
  2. 1 2 Reddy, Helen (2006). The Woman I Am: a memoir. New York: The Penguin Group. p. 156. ISBN 1-58542-489-7.
  3. "Arlen Hardin". Praguefrank's Country Music Discography. Retrieved 14 September 2012.
  4. Billboard vol. 86 No. 25 (22 June 1974) p.58
  5. Billboard vol. 86 No. 38 (24 August 1974) p.58
  6. http://troyrecord.com/articles/2013/03/20/entertainment/doc5149fe242b84f433622385.txt

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, May 05, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.