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"Don't Call Me Baby" is a song by English-American alternative pop rock band Voice of the Beehive. The song was written by lead singer Tracey Bryn with guitarist and keyboardist Mike Jones and was released as the fourth single from the band's debut album, Let It Bee (1988), on May 2, 1988.
Call Me (Blondie song) Call Me (Deee-Lite song) Call Me (Skyy song) Call Me Back Again; Call Me Maybe; Call Me Mr. Telephone (Answering Service) Call Me, Beep Me! The Call (Backstreet Boys song) Callin' Baton Rouge; Chantilly Lace (song) Clouds Across the Moon; Cordelia Malone
"Don't Call Me Baby" is a pop–R&B song performed by Canadian singer Kreesha Turner for her debut studio album, Passion (2008). The track was released as the album's third single in May 2008 in Canada. It has since peaked at #8 on the Canadian Hot 100. [1]
"Don't Call Me Baby" was released in Australia on 18 October 1999 and spent six non-consecutive weeks at number two on the ARIA Singles Chart, achieving triple-platinum status. It was also successful internationally, topping the charts in New Zealand and the United Kingdom in 2000.
Madison Avenue were an Australian electronic music duo consisting of writer-producer Andy Van Dorsselaer and singer-lyricist Cheyne Coates.Madison Avenue is best known for the song "Don't Call Me Baby" (October 1999), which peaked at number two on the ARIA Singles Chart in 1999 and topped the charts in New Zealand and the United Kingdom in 2000.
Recorded at FAME Studios in Muscle Shoals, Washington's "He Called Me Baby" was only a moderate R&B hit (#38) but crossed-over to the Billboard Hot 100 (#77) and earned Washington a Grammy nomination for Best R&B Performance – Female. In its female version, "He Called Me Baby", the song was a Top Ten R&B hit for Candi Staton in 1971.
"Tell Me Baby" incorporates both the old funk rock sound from their Blood Sugar Sex Magik days in the verses of the song, and the chorus focuses on the more melodic sound found on more recent Chili Peppers albums. The song is about the dreams of pilgrims in Los Angeles who want to obtain fame and fortune. [4]
The song has two main verses, a few choruses, with the title repeated throughout the track. Towards the middle he recites the Lord's Prayer in full, which fueled the fire for some to say the song was blasphemous. Toward the end is a repeating chant of "People call me rude / I wish we all were nude / I wish there was no black and white / I wish ...