Waiting for a Girl Like You

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"Waiting for a Girl like You"

Single cover
Single by Foreigner
from the album 4
B-side "I'm Gonna Win"
Released October 1981
Format 7"
Recorded 1981
Genre Soft rock
Length 4:35 (single)
Label Atlantic
Writer(s) Mick Jones, Lou Gramm
Producer Robert John "Mutt" Lange, Mick Jones
Foreigner singles chronology
"Juke Box Hero"
(1981)
"Waiting for a Girl like You"
(1981)
"Break It Up"
(1982)

"Waiting for a Girl like You" is a song by British-American rock band Foreigner. The distinctive synthesizer theme was performed by the then-unknown Thomas Dolby.

Contents

[edit] Chart performance

It was the second single released from the album 4 (1981) and was co-written by Lou Gramm and Mick Jones. It has become one of the band's most famous songs worldwide, peaking at #2 on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart for ten weeks and #1 on Billboard's Rock Tracks chart for one week.[1] On the Billboard adult contemporary chart, the song topped out at #5.[2] In the UK, the song peaked at #8 on the UK Singles Chart.

"Waiting for a Girl Like You" achieved an odd chart distinction by spending a record-setting 10 weeks in the #2 position of the Billboard Hot 100 chart, without ever reaching the top. Bowing at #42 on the Hot 100 on 10 October 1981, it was held off the #1 spot by Olivia Newton-John's single "Physical" for the first nine of those weeks, and by Hall & Oates' "I Can't Go for That (No Can Do)" for the remaining week.[3] (In 2002, Missy Elliott matched Foreigner's runner-up accomplishment with her single "Work It".) An apparently prescient designer placed the number "2" on the cover for the single.

Prior to the release of this song as a single, Foreigner was considered a hard rock band getting airplay mostly on rock stations and some Top 40 ones. This song gave the group more exposure on top 40 radio stations. Also because the song was soft, most adult contemporary radio stations played it as well, giving the group exposure to an audience they were not really aiming at in general. This song was pivotal in exposing harder rock acts to a broader audience.

[edit] In popular culture

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Whitburn, Joel (2004). The Billboard Book of Top 40 Hits, 8th Edition (Billboard Publications), page 234.
  2. ^ Hyatt, Wesley (1999). The Billboard Book of #1 Adult Contemporary Hits (Billboard Publications), page 333.
  3. ^ Bronson, Fred (2003). The Billboard Book of #1 Hits, 5th Edition (Billboard Publications), page 601.
  4. ^ Billboard Greatest Songs of the Hot 100


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