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What a Man (song)

"What a Man"
Linda Lyndell's single "What a Man".jpg
2002 UK vinyl re-release
Single by Linda Lyndell
from the album What a Man
Released 1968 (United States)
Format 7-inch single
Genre Soul
Label Volt
VOA-4001
Writer(s) David Crawford
"Whatta Man"
Whatta Man.jpg
Single by Salt-n-Pepa with En Vogue
from the album Very Necessary and Runaway Love
Released December 2, 1993
Format
Recorded August 1993
Genre Hip hop, R&B, funk
Length 4:42
Label Next Plateau/London
Writer(s) Cheryl James, Dave Crawford, Hurby "Luv Bug" Azor
Salt-n-Pepa chronology
"Shoop"
(1993)
"Whatta Man"
(1993)
"None of Your Business"
(1994)
En Vogue chronology
"What Is Love"
(1993)
"Whatta Man"
(1993)
"Don't Let Go (Love)"
(1996)
"What a Man"
WhataMan.jpg
Single by Lena
from the album Good News Platinum edition
Released 2 September 2011
Format
Recorded 2011
Genre Pop
Length 2:54
Label Universal Music
Writer(s) David Crawford
Lena singles chronology
"Taken by a Stranger"
(2011)
"What a Man"
(2011)
"Stardust"
(2012)

"What a Man" is a song written by Dave Crawford, and originally recorded for Stax Records' Volt imprint by Linda Lyndell, whose recording reached No. 50 on the Billboard R&B chart in 1968. The song was sampled and reinterpreted as "Whatta Man" in 1993 by Salt-n-Pepa with En Vogue; the version became a commercial success. In 2011, the German singer Lena Meyer-Landrut (credited as Lena) covered the song while retaining the original title and lyrics.

Linda Lyndell, a white singer who had been a support act with James Brown and Ike & Tina Turner and then recommended to Stax Records by Otis Redding, recorded "What a Man" for her album of the same name. The song was essentially improvised by Lyndell, record producer Dave Crawford, and the Stax studio musicians in Memphis, Tennessee. It was released as a single in 1968 with the B-side track "I Don't Know"; both songs were credited to and produced by Dave Crawford. The single entered the Billboard Hot Rhythm & Blues Singles chart on August 24, 1968 and then peaked at number 50. The record came to the attention of white supremacists in the Ku Klux Klan, who threatened Lyndell for associating with black musicians; as a result, she largely withdrew from the music business for the next 25 years.

Laura Lee covered the song, released in 1970 as a single by the Cotillion Records with "Separation Line" as the B-side track. Lee's version earned poor sales.


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