"I Want a Guy" | |||||||||||||||
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Single by The Supremes | |||||||||||||||
from the album Meet The Supremes | |||||||||||||||
B-side | "Never Again" | ||||||||||||||
Released | March 9, 1961 | ||||||||||||||
Format | 7" single | ||||||||||||||
Recorded | Hitsville U.S.A.; December, 1960 | ||||||||||||||
Genre | Doo-wop | ||||||||||||||
Length | 3:03 | ||||||||||||||
Label |
Tamla T 54038 |
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Writer(s) |
Berry Gordy Brian Holland Freddie Gorman |
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Producer(s) | Berry Gordy, Jr. | ||||||||||||||
The Supremes singles chronology | |||||||||||||||
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11 tracks |
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"I Want a Guy" is a song written by Freddie Gorman, Berry Gordy and Brian Holland and was the debuting single for Motown girl group The Supremes in 1961. It was also recorded by The Marvelettes. Featuring Diana Ross, going by her given name, Diane Ross, in lead, the song was a doo-wop ballad similar to what the Supremes had been recording since forming as "The Primettes" two years earlier.
The songs lyrics tell about a lonely woman who wants a new lover who won't mistreat her and always be loyal to her.
When issued, the song failed to chart forcing Berry Gordy to find other options for the teenage quartet - its full lineup included Barbara Martin alongside Ross, Florence Ballard and Mary Wilson. Three members of the group (Ross, Wilson and Ballard), in fact, had already recorded a single, "Tears of Sorrow"/"Pretty Baby", in their previous quartet, "The Primettes". In between the two singles the teenaged girls would replace Betty McGlown with Martin, and the new quartet would be recording under a new name (and under a new record deal). This song would be issued as a b-side of a Marvelettes hit ("Twistin' Postman") later that year and would be led by Wanda Rogers, one of her first with the group. Their version, more up-tempo then the original, also would not chart nationally, but became a regional hit.
The Marvelettes version is a prototype for The Beatles' "There's a Place" on their 1963 album, Please Please Me.