Smooth Operator

This article is about the song by Sade. For other uses, see Smooth operator (disambiguation).
"Smooth Operator"
Single by Sade
from the album Diamond Life
B-side "Spirit", "Red Eye"
Released 15 September 1984 (UK)
2 March 1985 (U.S.)
Format 7" single, 12" maxi single
Genre
Length 4:59 (album version)
4:15 (radio edit)
Label Epic, Portrait
Writer(s) Sade Adu, Ray St. John
Producer(s) Robin Millar
Sade singles chronology
"Hang On to Your Love"
(1984)
"Smooth Operator"
(1984)
"The Sweetest Taboo"
(1985)
Sade US singles chronology
"Hang On to Your Love"
(1984)
"Smooth Operator"
(1985)
"Your Love Is King"
(1985)

"Smooth Operator" is a song by the English group Sade, released as the fourth and final single from their debut album Diamond Life (1984). It was released (in both the US and the UK) as a 7-inch single with "Spirit" as its B-side, and as a 12-inch maxi single with "Smooth Operator" and "Red Eye" on side A and "Spirit" on side B. In the US it was the follow-up to "Hang on to Your Love".

This was Sade's first Top Ten hit in the US, peaking at number five on the Billboard Hot 100 chart for two weeks in May 1985. The song spent 13 weeks in the Top 40, and also topped the Billboard Adult Contemporary chart for two weeks. Although "Your Love Is King" remains Sade's biggest hit in the UK to date, "Smooth Operator" is the band's breakthrough hit on the US charts, and their most successful single internationally.

Ray St. John, who co-wrote "Smooth Operator" with Sade Adu, was previously a member of Adu's former band Pride, although he was not a member of the band Sade. The pair co-wrote the song in 1982 while still members of Pride, yet did not get around to recording it because St. John left Pride shortly after Sade joined. St. John later went on to play guitar with the band Halo James, which scored a UK Top Ten hit with "Could Have Told You So" in February 1990.

"Smooth Operator" is about a fashionable man who lives a jet-set lifestyle. He is popular with women and breaks many hearts. The lyrics "Coast to Coast/LA to Chicago/Western Male/Across the North and South to Key Largo/Love for sale" imply that he is used by women to obtain his income. It is also clear that he does not hold affection for these women, as Adu sings near the end, "his heart is cold."

This song is noted for Sade's spoken recitation in the song's introduction. Some radio edits have omitted the spoken introduction, and proceeded with the opening sung line of the title of the album, "Diamond Life". Some radio edits have shortened the instrumental saxophone solo, as well as the first repeat of the lines that come after the Chorus portions.

Sony Music Entertainment holds the license to this ballad.

Music video

The video for "Smooth Operator", directed by Julien Temple, was nominated for two MTV Video Music Awards in 1985, Best Female Video and Best New Artist.[1] The full-length version runs around eight and a half minutes, and shows the entire story of the song (the video features a then-unknown pre-Max Headroom Amanda Pays portraying a hostess/moll).

In popular culture

Cover versions

Track listings and formats

UK, US, Dutch, and Australian 7-inch single
  • Side A:
  1. "Smooth Operator" – 4:15
  • Side B:
  1. "Spirit" – 5:28

UK, US, Canadian, Dutch, and Japanese 12-inch maxi single
  • Side A:
  1. "Smooth Operator" – 5:25
  2. "Red Eye" – 3:18
  • Side B:
  1. "Spirit" – 5:28

Charts

Chart (1984) Peak
position
Austrian Singles Chart[3] 12
Dutch Top 40[4] 19
German Singles Chart[5] 11
Irish Singles Chart[6] 17
South African Top 20 [7] 6
Swiss Singles Chart[3] 14
UK Singles Chart[8] 19
Chart (1985) Peak
position
French Singles Chart[3] 9
US Billboard Hot 100[9] 5
US Billboard Hot Black Singles[9] 5
US Billboard Adult Contemporary[9] 1
US Billboard Hot Dance Club Play[9] 11

See also

References

  1. Stage6 · Diva Channel · Videos
  2. Paloma Faith: Upside Down / Smooth Operator
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 "Sade – Smooth Operator – swisscharts.com". SwissCharts.com. Retrieved 2009-01-09.
  4. "Nederlandse Top 40 – week 42 – 1984". Top 40 (in Dutch). Retrieved 2009-01-09.
  5. "Musicline.de – Sade – Smooth Operator". Musicline.de (in German). Retrieved 2009-01-09.
  6. "The Irish Charts". IRMA. Retrieved 2009-01-09.
  7. http://rock.co.za/files/springbok_top_20_(S).html Retrieved 7 April 2014
  8. "Chart Stats – Sade – Smooth Operator". Chart Stats. Archived from the original on 2012-08-14. Retrieved 2009-01-09.
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.3 "Sade > Charts & Awards > Billboard Singles". Allmusic. Retrieved 2009-01-09.

External links