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Chocolate Girl (Deacon Blue song)
1988 single by Deacon Blue From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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"Chocolate Girl" is the fourth song released as a single from the 1987 album Raintown by the Scottish group Deacon Blue. The single version differed from the album version of the song. It is a remix by the American mixer Michael Brauer, which adds a longer musical interlude in the middle of the song and gives greater emphasis to B.J. Cole's pedal steel guitar in parts of the song.[citation needed]
This article needs additional citations for verification. (September 2017) |
The track reached No. 43 in the UK Singles Chart in July 1988, spending seven weeks in the listing.[2][3]
In an interview given to the Daily Record in 2012, songwriter Ricky Ross explained that "Chocolate Girl" was "about someone’s relationship which sounded bad. I don’t really like sexist love songs, that awful song by Eric Clapton, "Wonderful Tonight". There’s a song by Prefab Sprout which says the same thing, called "Cruel", which I love".[4] The Herald also spotted "Chocolate Girl’s dysfunctional Don Juan" running through the lyrics.[5] Paddy McAloon claimed in a 1990 interview that the band approached him to contribute vocals to the song.[6]
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Track listing
All songs written by Ricky Ross, except where noted:
7" single (deac 6)
- "Chocolate Girl (Brauer Remix)" – 3:28
- "S.H.A.R.O.N." – 4:13[7]
7" limited edition single (deac ep6)
12" single (deac t6)
CD single (CDDeac 6)
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References
External links
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