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Looking for a New Love

"Looking for a New Love"
LookingForANewLove.jpg
Single by Jody Watley
from the album Jody Watley
Released January 6, 1987
Recorded 1986
Genre Pop, Freestyle
Length 5:07 (album)
3:58 (single)
7:31 (extended)
Label MCA
Writer(s) André Cymone, Jody Watley
Producer(s) André Cymone, David Z.
Jody Watley singles chronology
"Looking for a New Love"
(1987)
"Still a Thrill"
(1987)
"Looking for a New Love '05"
Looking For New 05.jpg
Single by Jody Watley
Released February 14, 2005
Genre House, dance-pop
Label Avitone/Water Music Records
Producer(s) Jody Watley, Bill Coleman, Vinny Troia
Jody Watley singles chronology
"Whenever"
(2003)
"Looking for New Love" '05 "Borderline"
(2006)

"Looking for a New Love" is a song by American dance-pop singer Jody Watley. It was released in January 1987 as the first single from her eponymous debut album. The song became one of the biggest pop and R&B singles of 1987.

The single hit number two for four weeks on the Billboard Hot 100 in May 1987 and spent four weeks at number-one on the Billboard R&B chart. The single was kept out of the top spot of the Hot 100 by Cutting Crew's "(I Just) Died in Your Arms" and U2's "With or Without You", and would itself keep Club Nouveau's Hot 100 number-one single "Lean on Me" out of the top spot of the R&B chart. It ranked number 16 on Billboard's year-end chart for 1987.

The song also reached number-one on the RPM Singles Chart in Canada.

In 1988 the song was nominated for two Soul Train Music Awards for Best R&B/Soul or Rap Music Video, and Best R&B/Soul Single, Female. She was also nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Female R&B Vocal Performance.

While listening to a tape of instrumental tracks given to her by producer André Cymone, Watley reflected on a recent sour romantic breakup. Fusing her own feelings of "I'll show you" with the feel of the track, Watley came up with the basic premise of "Looking for a New Love." The released record is the eight-track demo of the song; that way the emotional urgency of Watley's vocal was still intact. One of the song's key phrases became a popular saying: "Hasta la vista, baby." It wound up on innumerable answering machines and was used by Arnold Schwarzenegger in the 1991 film Terminator 2: Judgment Day (see Hasta la vista, baby).


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