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I Love Saturday
1994 single by Erasure From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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"I Love Saturday" is a song and extended play (EP) by English synth-pop duo Erasure, released as the third single from their sixth studio album, I Say I Say I Say (1994), on 18 November 1994 in Japan. The track was written by Vince Clarke and Andy Bell and produced by Martyn Ware. In the United Kingdom, Mute Records credited the first CD single as the I Love Saturday EP, which contains several new tracks; it was released on 21 November 1994.
"I Love Saturday" was issued via Mute Records in the UK and Elektra Records in the US. The single peaked at number 20 on both the UK Singles Chart and the US Billboard Dance Club Play chart. The song also reached number 34 in Sweden and number 69 in Germany. Its accompanying music video was directed by Caz Gorham and Francis Dickenson, filmed in the home of Andy Bell.
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Critical reception
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AllMusic editor Ned Raggett wrote that "I Love Saturday" "neatly balances pepped up energy on Clarke's part with a lower-key delivery from Bell", and called it a "striking combination".[3] Upon the release, Larry Flick from Billboard magazine described it as a "bouncy foray into trance-colored hi-NRG waters." He complimented Bell's "always striking voice".[2] Ross Jones from The Guardian commented, "Every melancholic pop hook from the last 10 years lovingly stitched together with asphyxiating grace."[4] Chris Gerard from Metro Weekly said the song is "great" and "infectious", adding that it "features Bell showing off his falsetto in the verses."[5]
Mario Tarradell for The Miami Herald called it "bouncy fun" and "ideal summer fare – light, bubbly and innocuous."[6] A reviewer from Music & Media wrote, "Saturday night fever is ruling again. Only the musical format has changed from disco to camp electro pop with, as ever, a high sing-along quotient."[1] John Kilgo from The Network Forty named it "another fun pop hit".[7] Johnny Cigarettes from NME viewed it as "a low-calorie, caffeine-free, dilute-to-taste slush about some non-existent lost love, set to a Bontempi automatic beat."[8] Dejan Kovacevic from Pittsburgh Post-Gazette praised the song as "an instant Erasure classic",[9] while David Sinclair from The Times named it the best number of the album.[10]
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Music video
A music video was produced to promote the single. It was directed by Caz Gorham and Francis Dickenson and was released on November 21, 1994. The video is made as a jaunty holiday clip shot in Bell's Majorcan home.[11]
Track listings
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Charts
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Release history
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References
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