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Take Me in Your Arms (Rock Me a Little While)

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B-side
  
"Slat Key Soquel Rag"

Format
  
7" single

Genre
  
Pop, rock, funk

Released
  
April 23, 1975

Recorded
  
1974

Length
  
3:42

"Take Me in Your Arms (Rock Me a Little While)" is a song written by the premier Motown songwriting/production team of the 1960s Holland–Dozier–Holland. The song was most popular in 1975 when it was recorded by the Doobie Brothers.

Contents

Motown versions

Eddie Holland of Holland-Dozier-Holland made the original recording of "Take Me in Your Arms" in 1964. This version was not released commercially until 2005. Holland-Dozier-Holland had Kim Weston record the song in 1965 and her version was released that September. It peaked at number 4 on the R&B chart in Billboard and at number 50 on the Hot 100. In 1967, Holland-Dozier-Holland had the Isley Brothers remake the song. Their version released in March 1968 and reached number 22 on the R&B chart.

Jermaine Jackson covered "Take Me in Your Arms" for his first solo album, Jermaine, released in 1972. The track, produced by Hal Davis, was the B-side for Jackson's record "Daddy's Home".

1975

The Doobie Brothers remade "Take Me in Your Arms" for their 1975 Stampede album. Tom Johnston who was then the Doobies' frontman, later recalled, "I had been a fan of that song since it came out somewhere in the '60s. I just loved that song. So somewhere around '72 I started lobbying to get the band to do a cover of that. And I didn't get anywhere until '75. Then finally in 1975 we actually did it."

Doobies member Jeff Baxter said of their recording, "That song was like a dream come true for us. Every musician I've ever known has at some point wanted to achieve Motown's technically slick soul sound - it's so dynamic. We sat down to try to duplicate it, and to see if our version could emerge as a successful single." According to Doobies member Patrick Simmons, "At first the band sounded like the Grateful Dead doing the Four Tops, but gradually it came together quite accurately." Motown veteran Paul Riser was enlisted to arrange the track.

Released as the lead single of Stampede on April 23, 1975, "Take Me in Your Arms" reached a United States Hot 100 peak of number 11 that June. "Take Me in Your Arms" gave the Doobie Brothers their only chart hit in France, where it reached number 37. The track also charted in the UK at number 29, matching the chart peak of the Doobie Brothers' only other original release Top 30 hit "Listen to the Music" (The Doobie Brothers reached number 7 in the UK in 1993 with a remixed version of their 1973 single "Long Train Runnin'") and in Australia at number 34.

"Take Me in Your Arms" was also remade in 1975 by the Canadian singer Charity Brown whose version, produced by Harry Hinde, was arranged by the Motown veteran Tom Baird. The Charity Brown version reached number 5 in Canada in May 1975. As this version descended the Canadian charts the Doobie Brothers' version moved up to a number 30 peak, the success of Brown's version evidently undercutting that of the Doobies', although the two versions were quite dissimilar. Brown's single was given a May 1975 release in the UK where it failed to chart. The track appeared on Brown's 1975 album Charity Brown.

Also in 1975, a remake of "Take Me in Your Arms" was recorded by the Motown veteran R. Dean Taylor on his self-produced Polydor album,LA Sunset.

Other versions

The song has also been recorded by Blood, Sweat & Tears (on Blood, Sweat & Tears 4, 1971), Claudja Barry (her first solo single, included on the album The Girl Most Likely, 1977), Suzi Quatro (on Oh, Suzi Q., 1990), Marcia Hines (on Hinesight, 2004) and Phil Collins (on Going Back, 2010).

References

Take Me in Your Arms (Rock Me a Little While) Wikipedia