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He Will Break Your Heart

"He Don't Love You (Like I Love You)"
He Don't Love You (Like I Love You) - Tony Orlando & Dawn.jpg
Single by Tony Orlando and Dawn
from the album He Don't Love You, Like I Love You
B-side "Pick It Up"
Released March 1975 (1975)
Format 7" single
Length 3:29
Label Elektra
Writer(s) Jerry Butler, Curtis Mayfield, Calvin Carter
Producer(s) Dave Appell, Hank Medress
Tony Orlando and Dawn singles chronology
"You Say The Sweetest Things"
(1974)
"He Don't Love You (Like I Love You)"
(1975)
"You're All I Need To Get By"
(1975)

"He Don't Love You (Like I Love You)" is a 1975 No. 1 song in the United States sung by Tony Orlando and Dawn. It topped the Billboard Hot 100 chart on May 3, 1975, and remained there for three weeks. The song also went to No. 1 on the US adult contemporary chart for one week in 1975. It was later certified Gold by the RIAA.

The original title of the song was "He Will Break Your Heart". It was written by Jerry Butler, Calvin Carter, and Curtis Mayfield. The song was recorded by Butler and released as a single in 1960, where it peaked at No. 7 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. In addition, Butler's recording spent seven non-consecutive weeks at No. 1 on the U.S. R&B chart. Subsequent cover versions of "He Will Break Your Heart" were released by artists such as The Righteous Brothers and Freddie Scott.

In the Jerry Butler version, before he connects the second verse into the third verse, he says "BUT WAIT."

When Orlando and the other members of Dawn (Telma Hopkins and Joyce Vincent Wilson) were waiting in the lobby to go on at a Golden Globes award ceremony, Orlando spoke with Faye Dunaway and her then-husband, Peter Wolf, lead singer for The J. Geils Band. To pass the time, the two began singing various R&B songs from the `60s, including Butler's "He Will Break Your Heart", which the couple recommended that the group record on an upcoming album. Orlando contacted Mayfield requesting permission to do a remake, but to change the song's title to the opening lines, and Mayfield gave his permission.Billboard ranked it as the No. 18 song for 1975.


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