I Wanna Get Next to You

"I Wanna Get Next To You"
Single by Rose Royce
from the album Car Wash Soundtrack
A-side Sunrise
B-side Put Your Money Where Your Mouth Is
Released December 1976
Format 7" single
Recorded 1975
Genre R&B, soul, Easy listening
Length 3:56
Label MCA/Whitfield
Writer(s) Whitfield
Producer(s) Whitfield
Certification Gold (RIAA)
Rose Royce singles chronology
"Car Wash"
(1976)
"I Wanna Get Next to You"
(1976)
"I'm Going Down"
(1977)

"I Wanna Get Next to You" is a 1976 soul single written, composed and produced by American songwriter and producer Norman Whitfield, and most famously sung by American R&B band Rose Royce. It is the third official single from the Car Wash soundtrack. The song has also become a staple on oldies radio and on adult contemporary stations.

Background

The song talks about how a narrator pleads love for a beautiful woman, except that the young woman is unkind, and does not understand his affection for her, as he wastes his own money calling her, but she does not respond, regardless, he still wants to "get next" to her.

Chart performance

The song became the group's second top ten single on the US Billboard Hot 100, peaking at number ten, and peaking at number three on the Hot Soul Singles chart. The song was also successful worldwide, becoming their second Top 40 hit in the United Kingdom, peaking at number fourteen on the UK Singles Chart.

Charts

Charts (1977) Peak
position
Australian Kent Music Report[1] 53
Canadian RPM Singles Chart 14
New Zealand Singles Chart 6
UK Singles Chart[2] 14
US Easy Listening 9
US Billboard Hot 100 10
US Hot Soul Singles 3

In popular culture

The song was sung on the popular sitcom in 1995, Martin, in the season three episode, "All the Players Came", where Martin Lawrence's character, Jerome, the pimp, sings the song to guest star Pam Grier as part of a competition, facing off with Dolemite and Huggy Bear (played by Rudy Ray Moore and Antonio Fargas) for Detroit's "Player of the Year" award, as part of the competition he sings the song poorly which attracts Pam Grier, which he later in the episode wins unanimously. In the same year, the sound was also featured on the soundtrack to the popular movie Friday. In 1997, this song was covered by R&B singer Cherrelle. The song was also featured on the movie Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle.

References

  1. David Kent (1993). Australian Charts Book 1970—1992. Australian Chart Book Pty Ltd, Turramurra, N.S.W. ISBN 0-646-11917-6.
  2. "Chartstats – Artist – Rose Royce". The Official Charts Company. Archived from the original on 2013-01-02. Retrieved 2010-09-21.

External links

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