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Take Me Home (Cher song)

"Take Me Home"
A woman dressed in a Viking warrior resemblant outfit, a winged bikini bottom, wings and a gold scabbard attached to her hip.
Japanese pressing with the Cher image used internationally; also used for the 1979 album of the same name.
Single by Cher
from the album Take Me Home
B-side "Wasn't It Good"
"My Song (Far Too Gone)
Released January 1979 (1979-01)
Format 12"
Recorded 1978
Genre Disco
Length 6:45
Label Casablanca
Writer(s)
  • Michele Aller
  • Bob Esty
Producer(s) Bob Esty
Cher singles chronology
"Pirate"
(1977)
"Take Me Home"
(1979)
"Wasn't It Good"
(1979)
"Take Me Home"
Take Me Home (Sophie Ellis-Bextor single - cover art).jpg
Single by Sophie Ellis-Bextor
from the album Read My Lips
B-side "Sparkle"
Released August 13, 2001 (2001-08-13)
Format
  • CD single
  • Digital download
Length 4:06
Label Polydor Records
Writer(s)
  • Esty
  • Aller
  • Sophie Ellis-Bextor
Producer(s) Damian LeGassick
Sophie Ellis-Bextor singles chronology
"Groovejet (If This Ain't Love)"
(2000)
"Take Me Home"
(2001)
"Murder on the Dancefloor"
(2002)

"Take Me Home" is a song by American singer Cher from her 1979 fifteenth studio album of the same name. A disco song, it was conceived after Cher was recommended to venture into said genre, after the commercial failure of her previous albums. The lyrics center around the request of a woman to be taken home by her lover. It was released as the lead single from the Take Me Home album on January 1979 through Casablanca Records, pressed as a 12-inch single.

Music critics gave positive reviews of "Take Me Home", who highlighted its sound and melody. The single fared well in the United States charts, peaking at number eight on the Billboard Hot 100 and entering three of its component charts. In Oceania, it entered the singles chart of New Zealand at number 49. It was also a hit in Canada, reaching the top-ten of the singles chart.

In 2001, English singer Sophie Ellis-Bextor covered the song for her debut studio album Read My Lips. It served as her debut solo single after being signed by Polydor Records. Her version contains new lyrics and a disco-tinged instrumental, and elicited a mostly positive response from critics; it also enjoyed commercial success. However, Cher's management was reportedly critical of this version.

After releasing the studio albums Stars (1975), I'd Rather Believe in You (1976), Cherished and Two the Hard Way (1977), which became commercial failures, Cher went to the headquarters of Casablanca Records, in order to start recording for a new full-length record. She was hoping to record rock and roll-tinged music, though she was quickly advised by Neil Bogart to delve into disco music before recording with a genre that, according to him, she was not very good at. She was reluctant to take his advice, as she regarded disco as a "superficial" genre and did not believe it was "serious music". However, she took his advice, and started working with Bob Esty, who arranged and produced records for Donna Summer and Barbra Streisand. Esty was skeptical of Cher's decision to record disco music, although he changed his mind after he began recording with her. The first song he played her was a demo of "Take Me Home", which Cher said she liked.


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