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Please Mr. Please

1975 single by Olivia Newton-John From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Please Mr. Please
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"Please Mr. Please" is a song written by Bruce Welch and John Rostill, both members of British pop singer Cliff Richard's backing band, The Shadows.[1] Welch had originally recorded the song himself in 1974[2] with no commercial success.

Quick Facts Single by Olivia Newton-John, from the album Have You Never Been Mellow ...

In 1975, British-Australian singer Olivia Newton-John recorded and released a version of the song as the second and final single from her fifth studio album, Have You Never Been Mellow.

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Song story

The song begins as an apparent tribute to the jukebox and how one can listen to a lot of great music for a small price. But instead of continuing along those lines, the song picks up on how some songs on the jukebox can trigger bad memories. This happens when the protagonist—at a tavern with friends, trying to get over a just-broken relationship—sees another customer at the jukebox, trying to play "B-17," which is coded to a song the woman does not want to hear.

The song, she cries, was special to the now-broken relationship. It now triggers sorrowful memories to the point that she never wants to hear the song again. The refrain sees the woman begging the "button-pushin' cowboy" (the ‘Mister’ of the song’s title) not to play the evocative song.

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Reception

Record World said that the song is "Olivia's most country-oriented outing yet will also speak as sweetly to her total audience for '. . Please' pleases pop just as perfectly!"[3]

Chart performance

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Released as a single in 1975, "Please Mr. Please" reached the Top 10 on three major Billboard charts in the US that year. On the pop chart, the song peaked at #3 August 9, 1975, remaining in the Top 40 for 12 weeks: Newton-John's fifth consecutive Top Ten hit, "Please Mr. Please" would also mark Newton-John's last appearance in the top ten for a three-year period.[4] On the country chart, the song reached #5 August 23rd, while on the adult contemporary chart, the song spent three weeks at #1 beginning July 12, 1975.[1] The single was a certified Gold record by the RIAA.[5]

More information Chart (1975), Peak position ...

Cover versions

  • Juliana Hatfield covered the song on her album Juliana Hatfield Sings Olivia Newton-John.[17]
  • Claude François covered the song in a French language version titled "Pourquoi Pleurer (Sur Un Succès D'Été)," which was released as a single in France in 1975, and became the opener and title track of that year's album release by the singer.
  • Venezuelan singer Nancy Ramos covered the song on her 1976 LP "Poderosa" in a Spanish language version titled "Dime Que Si".
  • Salvadoran singer Evangelina Sol covered the song in a Spanish language version titled "Por favor Señor, por favor" on her 1975 album "Evangelina."
  • Dickie Goodman used a sound-alike version of the chorus for his 1975 parody hit single, "Mr. Jaws."
  • Bluegrass artist Rhonda Vincent covered the song in 2024.


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References

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