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Stay with Me till Dawn

"Stay with Me till Dawn"
Judie-tzuke-stay-with-me-till-dawn-1979.jpg
Single by Judie Tzuke
from the album Welcome to the Cruise
Released 1979 (1979)
Recorded 1977
Length 3:54
Label Rocket Records
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)
Judie Tzuke singles chronology
"For You"
(1978)
"Stay with Me till Dawn"
(1979)
"Living on the Coast"
(1980)
"For You"
(1978)
"Stay with Me till Dawn"
(1979)
"Living on the Coast"
(1980)

"Stay with Me till Dawn" is a 1979 single by Judie Tzuke from her début album Welcome to the Cruise. Written by Tzuke and Mike Paxman and produced by John Punter, the song was Tzuke's only UK top 40 single, charting at number 16 on the UK Singles Chart.

"Stay with Me till Dawn" was written by Mike Paxman, who Tzuke had met in 1975 and had released a Tony Visconti-produced single called "These are The Laws" with (as "Tzuke and Paxo") on Visconti's label, Good Earth Records. In 1977, Tzuke saw Rocket Records (Elton John's label)' David Croker, played him a few songs including "Stay with Me till Dawn" and was promptly signed by the label. The pair proceeded to spend around six months or so recording her début album at Air Studios in London and "Stay with Me till Dawn"'s John Punter-produced parent album Welcome to the Cruise.

The song charted at number 16 on the UK Singles Chart, and Tzuke appeared on Top of the Pops on 12 July, 26 July and 9 August 1979 to promote the track. All four of her subsequent chart entries failed to peak higher than number 92 on the UK Singles Chart, rendering her a one-hit wonder.

The song was rerecorded for her 1991 album Left Hand Talking; the album came out on Columbia Records, and it would not be until December 1999 that Elton John would return the copyrights of the albums she released on his label. In 2002, "Stay with Me till Dawn" was chosen by the British public as the thirty-ninth best song to have come out of Britain over the previous fifty years (between 1952 and 2002). The song has also appeared on the live albums Road Noise, and Over the Moon and on the compilation album Seventies Power Ballads. In addition, Mylo sampled the track for the song Need You Tonite from his début album Destroy Rock & Roll.


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