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Breakfast in Bed
1969 single by Dusty Springfield From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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"Breakfast in Bed" is a soul–R&B song written by Muscle Shoals songwriters Eddie Hinton and Donnie Fritts for Dusty Springfield. It takes a knowing spin on the line "You Don't Have to Say You Love Me", the title of a song that had previously been a number one hit for her in the UK. After being released on her 1969 album Dusty in Memphis, it was recorded and popularized the same year by Baby Washington. Harry J produced three reggae versions in 1972, by Lorna Bennett, Scotty, and Bongo Herman.
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UB40 and Chrissie Hynde version
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English reggae and pop band UB40 collaborated with Chrissie Hynde of the English-American band the Pretenders for a cover version of "Breakfast in Bed", included on the band's self-titled eighth album (1988). This was the group's second time recording with Hynde for a single release, after "I Got You Babe", in 1985. UB40 chose to record the song after hearing Lorna Bennett's rendition.[2] Released as a single in 1988, this version peaked at number six on the UK Singles Chart and entered the top ten in Belgium, Ireland, the Netherlands, and New Zealand. In the United States, the song reached number four on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart.
Track listings
Non-US 7-inch single[3]
- A. "Breakfast in Bed"
- B. "Breakfast in Bed" (instrumental)
Non-US 12-inch single and UK CD single[4][5]
- "Breakfast in Bed" (extended mix) – 5:34
- "Breakfast in Bed" (12-inch dub mix parts I and II) – 7:42
US 7-inch and cassette single[6][7]
- A. "Breakfast in Bed" (7-inch edit) – 4:08
- B. "Breakfast in Bed" (LP version) – 3:17
US 12-inch single[8]
- A1. "Breakfast in Bed" (extended version) – 5:34
- B1. "Breakfast in Bed" (dub part 1) – 3:28
- B2. "Breakfast in Bed" (dub part 2) – 4:17
Japanese mini-CD single[9]
- "Breakfast in Bed"
- "Breakfast in Bed" (extended mix)
Charts
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Other cover versions
- 1969 Dusty Springfield on the album Dusty in Memphis
- 1979 Sheila Hylton; reached number 57 in the UK Singles Chart in 1979[27]
- 2004 Nicole Scherzinger of the Pussycat Dolls on the soundtrack of the film 50 First Dates
References
External links
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