"Kiss and Say Goodbye" is a 1976 song by American
R&Bvocal groupThe Manhattans. It was written by group member Winfred Lovett,[1] the bass singer and songwriter of the group, who did the song's spoken introduction. The song was recorded for the album The Manhattans, released in 1976 by
Columbia Records,[2] and was released as a single in March of the same year.[1] "Kiss and Say Goodbye" became a worldwide success, appearing in the musical charts of countless countries, a
Top 10 hit in many countries, including No. 1 in the US,[4]Belgium,[5]Netherlands,[6]New Zealand,[7] and in Europe (
European Hot 100 Singles).[8] With the exception of
Adult Contemporary Chart,[9] "Kiss and Say Goodbye" was ranked number 1 in US on all Pop Singles Charts and on all R&B Singles Charts. The song was one of the biggest hits of 1976 and of the 1970s.
Background and recording
The song was written by Manhattans bass singer Winfred "Blue" Lovett, who also provided the spoken introduction heard in both the full-length LP version and the commercial single (but edited out of the DJ 45). The lyrics and melody came to him late one night. As he later recalled, "Everything was there. I got up about three o'clock in the morning and jotted down the things I wanted to say. I just put the words together on my tape recorder and little piano. I've always thought that when you write slow songs, they have to have meaning. In this case, it's the love triangle situation we've all been through. I figured anyone who's been in love could relate to it. And it seemed to touch home for a lot of folks."[10]
Lovett originally considered the song a country tune more appropriate to be sung by
Glen Campbell or
Charley Pride. He decided to do it with his group.
The Manhattans lead singer
Gerald Alston is featured in the song starting to sing after Lovett's spoken introduction.
The original demo of the song was recorded with The Manhattans backing band, "Little Harlem." After hearing a tape of the recording, producer/arranger
Bobby Martin decided to re-record the song with backing by
MFSB at
Sigma Sound Studios in
Philadelphia.[2] Recorded in early 1975,
Columbia Records officials withheld releasing the song until 14 months later. Winfred "Blue" Lovett had his concerns over when the record came out as well as the record itself. "I was critical, a perfectionist in the studio, and there are still parts of it that make my skin crawl. For example, in one place, the background vocals go off pitch. Somehow, though, that didn't seem to bother anyone else."[10]
The full length of "Kiss and Say Goodbye" on the album The Manhattans is 4:28.[2] The length of 3:29 on the
7" single is an edited version of the song.[1] The Edited version fades out earlier, because it was considered too long and monotonous for airplay, while the full length version ends on a climatic cadenza on the song's title.
B-side
The
B-side of the
7" single contains the song "Wonderful World of Love",[1] which was also recorded by
The Manhattans for the album The Manhattans.[2] It was written by Robert S. Riley Sr.,[1] songwriter and producer/promotion man of the group, who wrote several songs (lyrics) for them.[11] The song was produced by
Bobby Martin and
The Manhattans.[1]
Chart performance
Released as a single, the song became a worldwide hit for the group, ranked number 1 on the US
Billboard Hot 100 for two weeks,[12][13] and also on the
Billboard R&B chart for one week.[14] The single reaching number 4 on the
UK,[15] (where received Silver certification),[16] and number 7 on the
Canada,[17] (where received Gold certification).[18] In the U.S., the song was the 400th #1 hit on the
Billboard Hot 100. It also became just the second single to earn Platinum certification status,[19] after the
RIAA established the designation in 1976. (
Johnnie Taylor's "
Disco Lady" had been the first a few months earlier.) The single ultimately sold 2.5 million copies.[20]Billboard ranked the song as the
No. 6 Pop Singles for 1976 and No. 3 Soul Singles for 1976.[21]
Besides being the first and only No. 1 pop hit for
The Manhattans, "Kiss and Say Goodbye" marked 11 years since the group made their first appearance on the
Billboard in 1965, with the song "I Wanna Be (Your Everything)" (No. 68 on the
Hot 100).[4] "Kiss and Say Goodbye" ended the decade at No. 83 on the
Billboard Top 100 Songs of the 1970s.[22]
This song was also covered on Czech language by Czech singer Karel Gott and actor Jiří Němeček in 1978 y.,the name of Czech version was "Teď už víš, že jsem to já" (You just already know that I am)