"Yes, I'm Ready" | |
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Single by Barbara Mason | |
from the album Yes, I'm Ready | |
B-side | "Keep Him" |
Released | May 1965 |
Format | 7" (45 rpm) |
Recorded | March 1965 |
Genre | Soul, R&B, Pop |
Length | 3:06 |
Label | Arctic Records |
Songwriter(s) | Barbara Mason |
"Yes, I'm Ready" | |
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Single by Teri DeSario with K.C. | |
from the album Moonlight Madness (by Teri DeSario) |
|
B-side | "With Your Love" |
Released | December 3, 1979 |
Format | 7" (45 rpm) |
Genre | Pop |
Length | 3:19 |
Label | Casablanca Records |
Songwriter(s) | Barbara Mason |
Producer(s) | Harry Wayne Casey |
"Yes, I'm Ready" a song by Barbara Mason from her album Yes, I'm Ready (1965). It has been covered by numerous artists, and was a hit single for Teri DeSario and K.C. when they recorded a duet version in 1980.
Mason, a soul / R&B singer from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, had released a few singles while she was a teenager in the mid-1960s. "Yes, I'm Ready" became Mason's first big hit on the music charts, peaking at #2 on the Billboard R&B chart, and No. 5 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in the summer of 1965. While Mason would continue recording into the 1980s, this song has been her highest charting hit. Mason later re-recorded the song for her 1973 album, Give Me Your Love. The key personnel who helped bring this hit recording to life later became the important creators of the "Philly Sound". These people include: Kenny Gamble as a backup singer, Bobby Eli and Norman Harris on guitar, Ronnie Baker on bass and Earl Young on drums (Eli, Harris and Baker later on became principal members of MFSB and Kenny Gamble would co-found Philadelphia International Records with Leon Huff).
DeSario, a vocalist from Miami, Florida, was a high school classmate of Harry Wayne Casey, best known as the lead vocalist and songwriter for KC and the Sunshine Band. Casey liked the original recording and wanted to record a cover version of the song, and he was producing DeSario's second studio album, Moonlight Madness, for Casablanca Records. Neil Bogart, president of the record label, had an idea to record the song as a duet, and it was the first single released from the album in late 1979. Their version of the song spent two weeks at No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in March 1980, kept from the summit by "Crazy Little Thing Called Love" by the rock group Queen. It also spent two weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard adult contemporary chart and reached No. 20 on the Billboard R&B chart, earning Gold Record certification from the RIAA.