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I Wanna Be Your Lover

"I Wanna Be Your Lover"
I Wanna Be Your Lover by Prince US vinyl 1979.jpg
U.S. 7-inch vinyl single
Single by Prince
from the album Prince
B-side
Released August 24, 1979
Format
Recorded Alpha Studios, Burbank, California, April–June 1979
Genre Funk
Length
  • 7" edit: 2:57
  • 12" album: 5:57
Label Warner Bros.
Writer(s) Prince
Producer(s) Prince
Prince singles chronology
"Just as Long as We're Together"
(1978)
"I Wanna Be Your Lover"
(1979)
"Why You Wanna Treat Me So Bad?"
(1980)
Prince (UK) chronology
"I Wanna Be Your Lover"
(1979)
"Sexy Dancer"
(1980)

"I Wanna Be Your Lover" is a song by American recording artist Prince. It was released on August 24, 1979 as the lead single from his second album, Prince. The song was Prince's first hit single in the United States, reaching number eleven on the Billboard Hot 100 and peaking at number one on the Billboard Hot Soul Singles chart for two weeks.

"I Wanna Be Your Lover" was written after Warner Bros. requested a follow-up to Prince's debut album For You, which had underperformed commercially and neither of its singles crossed over to the pop charts. In response, Prince recorded "I Wanna Be Your Lover." Musically, it is a funk song sung exclusively in falsetto, detailing Prince's love for a woman and how he would treat her better than the men she is with, and frustration that she thinks of him as "a child". The single edit stops after 2:57, but the album version goes off on a jam of keyboards and synthesizers, including a Polymoog, played by Prince. It was later revealed that the song concerned a crush Prince had at the time on pianist and singer Patrice Rushen.

Prince promoted the song by lip-syncing it with his band on The Midnight Special and American Bandstand, where he gave host Dick Clark an awkward interview, answering his questions with one-word answers. Prince claimed to be 19 but was 21 at the time. Clark later said, "That was one of the most difficult interviews I've ever conducted, and I've done 10,000 musician interviews."

The song was also Prince's debut single released in the UK; it was successful, reaching No. 41 on the UK Singles Chart. However, when Prince tried to promote it with shows in London, he was forced to cancel due to poor attendance. It wouldn't be until Purple Rain (1984) that Prince would break big in Europe.

The song additionally reached No. 2 on the Hot Dance Club Play chart and No. 2 in New Zealand.

Prince included a sample of this song in the opening of his 1992 hit single "My Name is Prince".


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