Don't Call Us, We'll Call You

"Don't Call Us, We'll Call You"
Single by Sugarloaf
from the album Don't Call Us, We'll Call You
B-side "Texas Two-Lane"
Released November 1974
Format Blues rock, pop rock
Length 3:25
Label Claridge Records
Writer(s) Jerry Corbetta, John Carter, J.C. Phillips
Producer(s) Frank Slay
Sugarloaf singles chronology
"Green-Eyed Lady"
(1970)
"Don't Call Us, We'll Call You"
(1974)
"Mother Nature's Wine"
(1975)

"Don't Call Us, We'll Call You" is a hit song by the 1970s psychedelic rock band Sugarloaf. Co-written by lead vocalist Jerry Corbetta, the song was featured as the title track of the band's fourth and final album. It was the band's fourth single.

The song peaked at number nine on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 in the winter of 1975 and number 12 on the Cash Box Top 100. The song is their second greatest hit. It spent 21 weeks on the chart, four weeks longer than their bigger hit, "Green-Eyed Lady."

In Canada, "Don't Call Us, We'll Call You" was a bigger hit, where it reached number five for two weeks.[1] "Green-Eyed Lady" had also charted better in Canada (number one versus number three U.S.).

The song samples a brief snippet of the Beatles hit, "I Feel Fine," as well as a sample riff of Stevie Wonder's hit, "Superstition." An imitation of Wolfman Jack by disc jockey Ken Griffin also is featured briefly in the song; it states the call sign of a radio station ("Stereo 92" in the nationwide release). Numerous tracks of this line were cut to match local markets.

"Don't Call Us, We'll Call You" was performed on the TV series, Midnight Special.

Lyrical content

The song is a rather cynical view of the music industry. It describes the difficulty of breaking into the business and securing a contract from a record company, as well as the ironic difference in their treatment by the company following the band's initial success after first having been rebuffed by their agent. The references are a practical joke at the expense of CBS Records, which had just turned them down for a recording contract. The song includes the sound of a touch-tone telephone number being dialed near the beginning and ending of the song. Those numbers were an unlisted phone number at CBS Records in Manhattan ("area code 212" stated in the song) – coincidentally a public number at the White House as well (different area code).

Chart performance

Weekly singles charts

Chart (1974–75) Peak
position
Canada RPM 5
New Zealand [2] 27
U.S. Billboard Hot 100 9
U.S. Cash Box Top 100 [3] 12
WLS survey (Chicago) [4] 5

Year-end charts

Chart (1975) Position
Canada [5] 57
U.S. Billboard Hot 100 [6] 55
WLS survey (Chicago) [7] 70

References

External links

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