Stay (Maurice Williams song)

"Stay"
Single by Maurice Williams and the Zodiacs
B-side "Do You Believe"
Released 1960
Genre Doo-wop
Length 1:36
Label Herald
Writer(s) Maurice Williams
"Stay"
Single by The Four Seasons
B-side "Goodnight My Love" (from the album Big Girls Don't Cry and 12 Others) (second release)
Released February 1964
Genre Rock
Length 1:52
Label Vee-Jay
Writer(s) Maurice Williams
Producer(s) Bob Crewe
The Four Seasons singles chronology
"Dawn (Go Away)"
(1963)
"Stay"
(1964)
"Ronnie"
(1964)
"Stay"
Single by Jackson Browne
from the album Running on Empty
B-side "Rosie"
Released 1978
Recorded Merriweather Post Pavilion, Columbia, Maryland, 1977
Length 3:28
Label Asylum
Writer(s) Maurice Williams
Producer(s) Jackson Browne
Jackson Browne singles chronology
"Running on Empty"
(1978)
"Stay"
(1978)
"You Love the Thunder"
(1978)
"Stay"
Single by Cyndi Lauper
from the album At Last
Released 2004
Genre Pop
Length 3:15
Label Sony
Writer(s) Maurice Williams
Cyndi Lauper singles chronology
"Until You Come Back to Me (That's What I'm Gonna Do)"
(2004)
"Stay"
(2004)
"Time After Time"
(2005)

"Stay" is a doo-wop song written by Maurice Williams and first recorded in 1960 by Williams with his group the Zodiacs.[1] Commercially successful recordings were later also issued by both the Hollies and the Four Seasons.

Writing and original recording

The song was written by Williams in 1953 when he was 15 years old. He had been trying to convince his date not to go home at 10 o'clock as she was supposed to. He lost the argument, but as he was to relate years later, "Like a flood, the words just came to me."

In 1960, the song was put on a demo by Williams and his band, the Zodiacs, but it attracted no interest until a ten-year-old heard it and impressed the band members with her positive reaction to the tune. The band's producers took it along with some other demos to New York City and played them for all the major record producers that they could access. Finally, Al Silver of Herald Records became interested, but insisted that the song be re-recorded as the demo's recording levels were too low. They also said that one line, "Let's have another smoke" would have to be removed in order for the song to be played on commercial radio. After the group recorded the tune again, it was released by Herald Records and was picked up by CKLW. It entered the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 on October 9, 1960 and reached the number one spot on November 21, 1960. It was dislodged a week later by Elvis Presley's "Are You Lonesome Tonight?".

The original recording of "Stay" remains the shortest single ever to reach the top of the American record charts, at 1 minute 36 seconds in length. By 1990, it had sold more than 8 million copies. It received a new lease of popularity after being featured on the Dirty Dancing soundtrack.

Beatles and Lennon cover versions

According to eminent author Mark Lewisohn in "The Complete Beatles Chronicles" (p. 364) the Beatles performed "Stay" live from 1960 till 1962 (in Hamburg and Liverpool and elsewhere). It is unclear whether the lead vocal was by John Lennon or Paul McCartney or possibly both. No recorded version is known to survive. However while in the recording studio in late 1980 Lennon and band recorded a brief version. Brief because when Lennon missed the high crescendo note he embarrassedly forced the band to quit, explaining that if he could not hit the note then they had to stop. Needless to say, it has never been officially released.

Other versions

See also

References

  1. "Maurice Williams & The Zodiacs - Stay / Do You Believe at Discogs". Discogs.com. Retrieved 2016-09-26.
  2. Whitburn, Joel (2004). The Billboard Book of Top 40 Hits: Eighth Edition. Record Research. p. 238.
  3. Tom Neely, Goldmine Price Guide to 45 RPM Records, 5th edition (KP Books, 2005) ISBN 0-87349-840-2
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