Angie Baby

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"Angie Baby"
Angie Baby - Helen Reddy.jpg
Single by Helen Reddy
from the album Free and Easy
B-side"I Think I'll Write a Song"
ReleasedOctober 7, 1974
Genre
Length3:29
LabelCapitol
Songwriter(s)Alan O'Day
Producer(s)Joe Wissert
Helen Reddy singles chronology
"You and Me Against the World"
(1974)
"Angie Baby"
(1974)
"Emotion"
(1974)

"Angie Baby" is a song that was written by American singer-songwriter Alan O'Day, and became a hit for Australian singer Helen Reddy. The song reached #1 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 chart at the end of December 1974 and became one of Reddy's biggest-selling singles. The song also topped the U.S. adult contemporary chart, Reddy's fifth #1 on this chart.[1]

The song's cryptic lyrics have inspired a number of listener theories as to what the song is really about. Reddy never said what her interpretation of the storyline was, partly because she said she enjoyed hearing listeners' interpretations. Reddy also said that "Angie Baby" was the one song she never had to push radio stations into playing.

Lyrics story[]

The song tells the story of Angie, a young girl who "lives [her] life in the songs" she hears on "rock and roll radio", her mental disturbances led to her being removed from school and having no friends, leaving her to spend most of her time listening to the radio, imagining lovers entering her room and then disappearing when her father knocks on the door. One day, a young man arrives at Angie's house with intent to do her harm, but once he enters Angie's room he is disoriented by the loud music. The song then takes a decidedly surrealistic turn when, as Angie turns the volume of the radio down, the boy begins to disappear. The closing verse describes the disappearance of the boy and the townsfolk's speculation that he was dead, but nobody asks Angie for an explanation.[2]

Though not an official video, John D. Wilson of Fine Arts Films made an accompanying animated short film for the song when it appeared on The Sonny & Cher Show in the mid-1970s (Wilson made many other animated shorts for various hit records of the era and his work became a prominent regular feature of the show).[3] The film does not feature Reddy herself but is a literal interpretation of the song's lyrics.

Background[]

In an article he wrote in 2006, Alan O'Day said the song took three months to write. Originally it was loosely based on the character in the Beatles’ "Lady Madonna". In order to make the character more interesting, O'Day decided to make her abnormal, and he thought of a young next door neighbor girl he had known who had seemed "socially retarded". O'Day said he also thought of his own childhood. As an only child who was often ill, many of his days were spent in bed with a radio to keep him company. He named the character Angie, possibly inspired by the Rolling Stones' song "Angie". Originally the character was portrayed as mentally "slow", but while writing the song, O'Day showed it to his therapist, who pointed out that the character's reactions in the song were not those of a mentally disabled person, so O'Day changed the lyric from "slow" to "touched," and the character's image changed from being mentally disabled to being "crazy". This expanded to her living in a dream world of lovers, inspired by the songs on her radio. When a "neighbor boy with evil on his mind" tries to enter her room to take advantage of the girl, he is instead drawn into her reality, with weird and unexpected consequences. The intent was to show that the Angie character had more power than he or the listener expected; she shrank him down into her radio, where he remained as her slave whenever she desired him to come out.[4]

Interpretation of lyrics[]

O'Day's lyrics inspired a great deal of speculation about their meaning. The song was compared to Bobbie Gentry’s "Ode to Billie Joe" (which had a mystery about "something" thrown off the Tallahatchie Bridge). Some also thought of it as a "Women's Lib" song along the line of Reddy's other hits, like her other #1's, "I Am Woman" and "Delta Dawn", though O'Day says that that was not his intent, and that he was not consciously making a public statement.[4]

O'Day revealed in 1998 that the "crazy" heroine in the song had "magic power" and "special abilities", and that he had deliberately blurred the lines between fantasy and reality.[5] Reddy joked that the boy had become "a sound wave",[6] an explanation that O'Day later denied.

Recording history[]

Jeff Wald, who at the time was Reddy's husband and manager, would recall being bowled over upon first hearing the demo of "Angie Baby": "I heard 'Angie...' at 11 am...By noon, Helen had heard it. By three, we were beginning to put an arrangement together. Eight days later it was on the street. Her biggest hit. It had story, melody, everything."[7]

"Angie Baby" became Helen Reddy's first charting single in the British Isles reaching #5 in both the UK and Ireland in February 1975; Reddy would chart again once in both nations with "I Can't Say Goodbye to You" - (#43 UK/ #16 Ireland) - in 1981.[8] "Angie Baby" was also Reddy's final major hit in her native Australia at #13 while affording Reddy her sole charting single in Italy at #36.

Chart history[]

Later uses[]

The song was also featured as the sole Helen Reddy track as part of a promotional-only compilation album issued by Capitol Records entitled "The Greatest Music Ever Sold" (Capitol SPRO-8511/8512), which was distributed to record stores during the 1976 Holiday season as part of Capitol's "Greatest Music Ever Sold" campaign, promoting 15 "Best Of" albums that were released by the record label.

Covers and sampling[]

In 1975 a Finnish rendering of the song retaining the English title was recorded by Cascade and also by Päivi Paunu while Zandra - the duo of Örjan Englund and Liza Öhman - recorded a Swedish version which renamed the title character "Carolina". Alan O' Day recorded his composition for his 1977 album Appetizers. "Angie Baby" has also been recorded by Barbara Dickson.

The song was covered by Robin Fox on her 2000 album I See Stars.

The song was sampled in the song "Radio" by Backini. It was covered by The Uncle Devil Show for their record A Terrible Beauty.

Title Artist Year Album
Angie Baby Laurie Bower Singers 1974
Angie Baby (Finnish version) Cascade 1975
Angie Baby Ray Conniff 1975 Laughter in the rain
Angie Baby Anne Lise Gjostel 1975
Angie Baby Tombstones 1975
Angie Baby Top Hits International 1975
Angie Baby Lin Yang & Prinstar Punchers 1975
Carolina (Swedish version) Zandra 1975
Angie Baby Marx 1976
Angie baby (Finnish version) Paivi Paunu 1976 Maailmalla Soi 13
Angie Baby Jennifer Florence 1977 The hits of Helen Reddy
Angie Baby Alan O'Day 1977 Appetizers
Angie baby (live in london) Helen Reddy 1978 Live in London
Rare Lina (Norwegian version) Hanne Krogh 1978 Hanne Krogh
Angie Baby Reg Livermore 1979 Sacred cow
Angie Baby Barbara Dickson 1986 The right moment/the essential
Angie Baby 6 volts 1991 Stretch
Angie Baby Siobhan Pettit 1999 Don't try to cushion the blow
Angie Baby Laini Risto 2000 where I belong
Angie Baby Syd Dale Orchestra 2001 love isnt just for the young
Angie Baby Robin Fox 2001 I see stars
Angie Baby Dick Heckstall-Smith 2001 blues and beyond
Hip hop Radio Erick Sermon 2002 react
Angie Baby Melissa Langton 2002 when the rain falls up
Angie Baby Mary Callanan and Brian Patton 2003 How I spent my summer vacation
Angie Baby Uncle devil show 2004 A terrible beauty
Radio (Angie baby sample) Backini 2005 re:Creation
Angie Baby Paul Mauriat 2007
Angie Baby Morrismovies 2007
Angie Baby Rain 910 2008 American Dreamin'
Angie Baby 1970's karaoke band 2009
Angie Baby Backtrack Professional Karaoke 2009 In style of helen reddy
Angie Baby John & Linda 2009
Angie Baby perilousRelish 2009
Angie Baby Nicky Kurta 2011
Angie Baby Popettes 2011 cheesy guilty pleasures
Angie baby (rerecording) Helen Reddy 2011 Very best of Helen Reddy rerecorded
Angie Baby Ron Goodwin 2012
Angie Baby Graham Blvd 2012
Angie Baby Helen Reddy & Alan O'Day 2012
Angie Baby Richard Hildebrand 2012
Angie Baby Ameritz karaoke hits 2013
Angie Baby Charmaine 2013 The Beginning
Angie Baby Hit crew 2013 best pop hits of 70s, vol 2
Angie Baby Wahl Collins 2013
Angie Baby angela 2014 is this love
Angie Baby Careysingsjustforyou 2014
Angie Baby Corey Farrell 2014
Angie Baby Memory Lane 2014 remember 1974
Angie Baby Lisa Azzolino 2015
Angie Baby Jenni Rudolph 2015
Angie Baby Danny McEvoy 2015
Angie Baby Tracey Roberts Quartet 2015
Angie Baby Karafun Karaoke 2016
Angie Baby Christine Pflueger 2016
Angie Baby Terri B. 2017
Angie Baby Sara Collins 2017
Angie Baby Jenny Daniels 2017
Angie Baby Karaoke Diamonds 2017 chart songs vol 1
Angie Baby Loveydoves 2017
Angie Baby Zerabio 2017
Angie Baby AngeLofLourdes 2018
Angie Baby Maya and Robin 2018
Angie Baby Party Tyme Karaoke 2018
Angie Baby Some Other Band 2018
Angie Baby Chancellorpink 2019
Angie Baby Countdown Singers 2019 Throwback Thursday 70s hits
Angie Baby Ceri Justice 2019 justified
Angie Baby Electric Parrot 2019
Angie Baby Haysweed Lannett 2019
Angie Baby Cyrus Vesuvala 2019
Angie Baby Mark Anderson 2020
Angie Baby Bettina sings 2020
Angie Baby Shruti Chakravarti 2020
Angie baby Chelsea Cullen 2020 I am woman soundtrack
Angie Baby Dave's Guitar Channel 2020
Angie Baby Paul Gaspot 2020
Angie Baby Angie Gray 2020
Angie Baby Idaho Muscle 2020
Angie Baby Kim n Dennis 2020
Angie Baby M454b 2020
Angie Baby Margaret 2020
Angie Baby Mel 2020
Angie Baby Barbie Milliard 2020
Angie Baby Mrj 2020
Angie Baby Piano Nuts 2020
Angie Baby Pickin Mix Diary 2020
Angie Baby Sharta Rae 2020
Angie Baby C.R. Sherman 2020
Angie Baby Brenna Stage 2020
Angie Baby Charlee Tea 2020
Angie Baby Andy Watmore 2020
Angie Baby John Wurzer 2020
Angie Baby Zoom Karaoke 2020
Angie Baby Darkraven93 2021
Angie Baby Trisha Gaffey-buck 2021
Angie Baby Chris H. 2021
Angie Baby Homebirds 2021
Angie Baby Sarah Jones 2021
Angie Baby La tribe university society 2021
Angie Baby Scott Lenz 2021
Angie Baby Isobel Martin 2021
Angie Baby Stuart Pendrill 2021
Angie Baby Lisa Rosey 2021
Angie Baby Suze Singer 2021
Angie Baby Rhonda Swindell 2021
Angie Babe j.ezzer and co. Noise machine
Angie Baby 70s greatest hits
Angie Baby To Ada
Angie Baby Latcho Drum
Angie Baby John Gregory
Angie Baby Knightsbridge
Angie Baby Dave Major and the Minors Our 3rd record
Angie Baby Sarah Moore Women of Folk
Angie Baby Anne Murray, Judy collins & Helen Reddy
Angie Baby Pmc all-stars
Angie Baby Queen Beaver
Mo Wei Ai Shang Be!  (Cantonese version) Stephanie Lai Ming Sze
Angie Baby George Greeley
Angie Baby Seeburg
Angie Baby Pete Moore Orch.

References[]

  1. ^ Whitburn, Joel (1996). The Billboard Book of Top 40 Hits, 6th Edition (Billboard Publications)
  2. ^ "Angie Baby". Song Facts.
  3. ^ "John D. Wilson credits". Fine Arts Films.
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b O'Day, Alan (2006). "The Story Of Angie Baby". Forgotten Hits.
  5. ^ "The Story Behind the #1 Hit: Alan O'Day and Angie Baby". Just Plain Folks. Archived from the original on 2012-02-05. Retrieved 7 February 2013.
  6. ^ Fred Bronson's Book of Number One Hits, (2003 edition).
  7. ^ Los Angeles Times 21 February 1977 View section p. 12
  8. ^ "Official Charts Company". Retrieved 7 February 2013.
  9. ^ Jump up to: a b Kent, David (1993). Australian Chart Book 1970–1992 (doc). Australian Chart Book, St Ives, N.S.W. ISBN 0-646-11917-6.
  10. ^ "Item Display - RPM - Library and Archives Canada". Collectionscanada.gc.ca. 1974-12-21. Retrieved 2019-02-25.
  11. ^ "Top Singles" (PDF). Collectionscanada.gc.ca. RPM. January 25, 1975. Retrieved December 19, 2018.
  12. ^ "The Irish Charts – Search Results – Angie Baby". Irish Singles Chart. Retrieved August 1, 2017.
  13. ^ Joel Whitburn's Top Pop Singles 1955-1990 - ISBN 0-89820-089-X
  14. ^ "Cash Box Top 100 Singles, December 21, 1974". Archived from the original on August 2, 2017. Retrieved August 1, 2017.
  15. ^ "1974 Wrap Up" (PDF). collectionscanada.gc.ca. RPM. December 28, 1974. Retrieved December 19, 2018.
  16. ^ "Cash Box Year-End Charts: Top 100 Pop Singles, December 27, 1974". Archived from the original on July 22, 2019. Retrieved August 1, 2017.
  17. ^ Lyttle, Brendan (December 27, 1975). "Top 200 singles of 1975" (PDF). collectionscanada.gc.ca. RPM. Retrieved December 19, 2018.
  18. ^ Musicoutfitters.com

External links[]

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