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"Soap" is a song by Melanie Martinez, featured on her [a] debut studio album, Cry Baby. The song was released July 10, 2015, along with a music video the same day. [citation needed] It was released as the second single of her album Cry Baby, being set to impact Alternative radio outlets according to Warner Music. [1]
Garnet Mimms' 1964 remake of "A Little Bit of Soap", produced by Jerry Ragovoy, reached number 95 on the Billboard Hot 100 in January 1965.; The song's composer Bert Berns (who wrote many hits including The Beatles classic "Twist and Shout"), produced a 1965 redo for the Exciters which reached number 58 on the Billboard Hot 100 in February 1966.
The song was covered by American girl group i5 in 2000 with slightly modified lyrics including more sexual innuendo. Reviewing the i5 version, William Ruhlmann from AllMusic said the song "steps over the line of double entendre with its repeated demand, 'I want to see you come,' only occasionally followed, after a lag, by 'into my life'." [3]
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The song has been recorded by other performers. [4] The song is sometimes known by one of its verses, "Tempie let your hair roll down" [citation needed], and is the basis for the campfire song "I Wish I Was a Little Bar of Soap" [citation needed]. Natalie Wood sings two verses of the song in the 1947 film, Driftwood.
The song was first recorded as a duet by Gloria Loring and Carl Anderson in 1985 for the soap opera Days of Our Lives, produced by Doug Lenier. That recording remained unreleased until the summer of 1986, when it was released shortly after a version by Juice Newton and Eddie Rabbitt hit country radio.
Swift starts the song with the chorus that immediately makes her distaste for the subject of the song clear. “‘Cause, baby, now we got bad blood/ You know it used to be mad love/ So take a ...
"What Have They Done to My Song Ma" is a song written and performed by Melanie (Safka). It was released in 1970 as the B-side of Melanie's "Ruby Tuesday" single and included on the album Candles in the Rain. The single reached the number 39 in the United Kingdom and peaked within the top 20 in Norway and the Wallonia region of Belgium.