Playboy (The Marvelettes song) explained

Playboy
Type:single
Artist:The Marvelettes
Album:Playboy
B-Side:All the Love I've Got
Released:April 9, 1962
Recorded:November 22, 1961, Hitsville USA
(Studio A)
(Detroit, Michigan)
Genre:Rhythm and blues
Label:Tamla
T-54060
Producer:Robert Bateman, Brian Holland (aka "Brianbert")
Prev Title:Twistin' Postman
Prev Year:1962
Next Title:Beechwood 4-5789
Next Year:1962

"Playboy" is a song composed by Brian Holland, Robert Bateman, Mickey Stevenson and singer Gladys Horton, lead vocalist of the Motown singing group The Marvelettes, who recorded the song and released it as a single on Motown's Tamla imprint in 1962. The single, led by Horton, is about a man who fools around with a lot of women and the woman who narrates the story warns him to stay away from her due to the stories she heard of him "running around with every woman in town". Horton is helped out in the song by her Marvelettes cohorts Wanda Young, Georgeanna Tillman, Katherine Anderson & Juanita Cowart. This was released as the third single by the Marvelettes and was their second top ten pop hit reaching number seven on the charts while reaching number four on the R&B chart.[1]

The song is sampled in the Dickie Goodman novelty break-in record "Ben Crazy" (1962). A satire on the Television Doctor's show "Ben Casey".

Credits

Notes and References

  1. Book: Whitburn, Joel . Top R&B/Hip-Hop Singles: 1942-2004. Joel Whitburn . 2004 . Record Research . 379.