Girish Mahajan (Editor)

The Wanderer (Donna Summer song)

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B-side
  
"Stop Me"

Format
  
7" single 12" single

Genre
  
Dance-rock new wave

Released
  
September 11, 1980

Recorded
  
1980

Length
  
3:47

"The Wanderer" is a song by American singer Donna Summer, released as the lead single from her 1980 eighth studio album of the same name which was the first for her new label Geffen Records, after recording her previous albums with Casablanca Records. Despite the label change, Summer continued to work with Giorgio Moroder and Pete Bellotte who had produced the majority of her disco hits in the late 1970s. However, it marks a change in style for The Queen of Disco, incorporating new wave styled synth riffs and a shuffling beat.

This first 45 from the album became a big hit for Summer in the United States, peaking at number 3 on the Hot 100 singles chart and reaching number 2 in Cash Box magazine as well. It was Summer's eleventh single to sell over a million copies in the US. In Canada, the song spent four weeks at number 4. A 12" promotional single was issued, however, unlike all her Top 40 hits prior to this one, it was not an extended version.

Composition

"The Wanderer" incorporates heavy new wave styled synth riffs and a shuffling beat. Vocally, it was a return to her understated 1975 debut sound - soft, whispery phrases were the norm in this song, taking on an almost Elvis Presley effect, instead of the power belt she had used often since her 1977 album Once Upon a Time and 1978 single "Last Dance".

References

The Wanderer (Donna Summer song) Wikipedia