"Carrie" | ||||
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Single by Cliff Richard | ||||
from the album Rock 'n' Roll Juvenile | ||||
B-side |
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Released | 1 December 1979[1] | |||
Recorded | 7–12 January & 2 February 1979[2] | |||
Studio |
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Genre | ||||
Length |
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Label | EMI | |||
Songwriter(s) | ||||
Producer(s) |
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Cliff Richard singles chronology | ||||
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Cliff Richard (US/Europe/Australia) singles chronology | ||||
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Music video | ||||
"Carrie" on YouTube | ||||
Alternative cover | ||||
"Carrie" is a song performed by Cliff Richard and released in December 1979 as the third single lifted from Richard's album Rock 'n' Roll Juvenile. It reached number 4 in the UK Singles Chart and became an international hit.[3]
"Carrie" was written by the songwriting partnership of Terry Britten and BA Robertson, who had written Richard previous single "Hot Shot" and who also wrote several other songs for Rock 'n' Roll Juvenile. Britten initially came up with the riff and the title, but he "realized that it would take someone who knew what they were doing to make it into a proper song", so he got Robertson to come up with the story.[2] Speaking about the song, Robertson has said:
"The strength of the song comes from the fact that you're never quite sure what it's about. You don't know whether Carrie is homeless or whether she's squatting or what. You don't know whether Cliff, as the narrator, is the husband, boyfriend, lover, brother or father. Nowhere does the song say what the relationship with Carrie is. It's very mysterious and musically it falls in the same groove as 'I Heard It Through The Grapevine'".[4]
The backing track was recorded between 7 and 12 January 1979 at the EMI Pathé-Marconi Studios in Paris and the vocals were later recorded at Abbey Road Studios in London on 2 February. The recording engineers were Tony Clark and Haydn Bendall.[2]
"Carrie" was released in the majority of territories with the B-side "Moving In", which was written and produced by Richard. It was first released as a single in the Netherlands and Germany at the beginning of December 1979, before being released in Australia on 12 December with the B-side "Walking in the Light", written by Britten.[1][5] "Carrie" was later re-released in Australia in March 1980 with "Moving In" as the B-side.[6] In the UK, the single was released on 18 January 1980.[2]
The single release of "Carrie" is an edit of the album version and also actually runs slightly faster.[7] However, the album version was released on the original Australian single and the US and Canadian single. The latter was also released with a different B-side, "Language of Love", also written by Britten and Robertson, in February 1980.[8]
Reviewing for Record Mirror, Simon Ludgate gave it 'Single of the Week', writing that "it's astounding, the hits keep rolling off 'Rock 'n' Roll Juvenile', from which this is taken. To be producing high-pop songs like this after 25 years in the Biz is extraordinary", adding that Richard's "delivery is immaculate and his timing superb. You can't ignore a classic popstar: credit must be given".[9]
In a retrospective review for AllMusic, Dave Thompson described the song as "a deliberately sinister and enthrallingly atmospheric number, revolving around the search for a mysteriously missing friend ("Carrie had a date with her own kind of fate")" and that "in other hands, such lines as "you're just another message on a payphone wall" and "the young wear their freedom like cheap perfume" could sound trite. Richard imbibes them with both pertinence and importance, while the emotion in his voice colors even the title.[10]
7": EMI / EMI 5006
7": EMI / EMI-168 (Australia)
7": EMI / 8035 (US and Canada)
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