"Never Can Say Goodbye" is a song written by
Clifton Davis and originally recorded by
the Jackson 5. The song was originally written and intended for
the Supremes; however, Motown decided it would be better for the Jackson 5. It was the first
single released from the group's 1971 album Maybe Tomorrow, and was one of the group's most successful records. It has been covered numerous times, most notably in 1974 by
Gloria Gaynor and in 1987 by British pop group
the Communards.
The Jackson 5 original version
Recorded in June 1970 and released as a single in March 1971, the song features a young
Michael Jackson singing a serious song about love, with accompaniment from his brothers. Although such a record was unusual for a teenage group, "Never Can Say Goodbye" was a number-two hit for three consecutive weeks on the BillboardPop Singles chart, stuck behind
Three Dog Night's "
Joy to the World" (May 8–22, 1971), and a number-one hit on the BillboardHot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart in the United States.[3] In the United Kingdom, it reached number 33 on the
UK Singles Chart.
Notable televised performances of the song by the Jackson 5 (and their newer incarnation, The Jacksons) include:
Isaac Hayes first recorded the song for his 1971 album Black Moses. Released as a single, this version reached number five on the Billboard R&B chart, number 19 on the Easy Listening chart, and number 22 on the Hot 100. Hayes re-recorded the tune for the soundtrack of the 2008 film Soul Men, in which he appears alongside
Samuel L. Jackson and
Bernie Mac. The film's producers dedicated the 2008 version to Mac and Hayes, who both died before the project was released.
A major version by
Gloria Gaynor, re-imagined as a
disco record in 1974, was a number-nine hit on the U.S. Pop Singles chart and went to number 34 on the Soul Singles chart.[11] The Gloria Gaynor version became one of the defining recordings of the disco era. Indeed, her version peaked at number two in the United Kingdom during January 1975, and number three in Canada, surpassing the Jackson Five's original recording in those nations.
Gaynor's cover, released on MGM records, was produced by the Disco Corporation of America, a production company newly formed by
Meco Monardo and
Tony Bongiovi to which Gaynor was signed. Also working on this production were Jay Ellis and
Harold Wheeler.[12]
Gaynor's cover has the distinction of occupying the number-one spot on the first Dance/Disco chart to appear in
Billboard magazine. Never Can Say Goodbye was also the title of Gaynor's debut album on which the single appeared.
Gaynor has re-recorded the song on more than one occasion, in increasingly fast tempos, and subsequent remixes have hit the dance charts.
In 1987, British
synth-pop band
the Communards had a hit with a
hi-NRG cover of the song, which was featured on their second album, Red.
Their version reached number one in Spain and number two in Ireland, number four on the
UK Singles Chart, number 51 on the U.S.
Billboard Hot 100, and number two on the Billboard Hot Dance/Disco chart in the U.S. The group had reached number one on those charts covering another 1970s song, "
Don't Leave Me This Way", in 1986. The cover was also a top 10 hit in several European countries and New Zealand.
A music video was produced for this version of the song, directed by
Andy Morahan.[35]
The Communards version of the song was used as the signature tune to the 2013 British comedy series Vicious.
Critical reception
Richard Lowe of Smash Hits named "Never Say Goodbye" "Single of the Fortnight" and considered it "a work of such splendour and vigour".[36]
Stevie Wonder, performed a Talkbox medley of the songs "
Close To You" and "Never Can Say Goodbye" on the David Frost Show in 1972. He performed the song again in 2009 as a tribute to Michael Jackson.
Westlife performed the song live in 2001 for BBC Children in Need.
Frank Ocean covered the song as a medley alongside "
Close To You" during his Blonde Tour in Summer 2017, It was inspired by
Stevie Wonder's medley from 1972.
Jack Stratton of
Vulfpeck performed a version of the song with bassist Solomon Dorsey and original guitarist
David T. Walker on the 2022 album Vulf Vault 006: Here We Go Jack. Walker played a chord melody to lead the song.
Dianna Agron covered the song in 2012 during the eleventh episode of the
third season of the American musical television series Glee, entitled "
Michael". The performance received mostly positive reviews. Jen Chaney of The Washington Post gave the song a "B−", and said it "worked much better than every track that preceded it" because it adapted the song to the show "instead of trying to out-Jackson Jackson".[66]Entertainment Weekly's Joseph Brannigan Lynch called it "a nice summation of her character's journey, but not vocally impressive enough to justify listening to outside of the episode" and gave it a "B".[67] Crystal Bell of HuffPost TV described it as a "blah performance", but Kate Stanhope of TV Guide said it was "sweet and reflective".[68][69] Erica Futterman of Rolling Stone wrote that it was "a tune well-suited for Quinn's sultry voice and the flipped meaning she gives the lyrics", and TVLine's Michael Slezak had a similar take: he gave it an "A" and called it a "remarkably lovely fit" for her voice.[70][71]
In 2012,
Wu-Tang Clan rapper
Raekwon released his cover version of the song in which he raps over the instrumental.[73]
In popular culture
While appearing on The Hollywood Squares Clifton Davis sang a bit of the song a capella and then was asked who wrote the song. His answer was "I did" to which the contestant agreed (and was correct).
^
abBillboard Staff (October 19, 2023).
"The 500 Best Pop Songs: Staff List". Billboard. Retrieved February 10, 2024. For another classic gender-flipped disco rendering of a heartaching R&B hit, consult Gloria Gaynor's roof-raising version of the Jackson 5's "Never Can Say Goodbye
^Billboard. December 25, 1971. p. 15. Retrieved October 3, 2016.
^Molanphy, Chris (February 19, 2022).
"We Invented the Remix Edition". Hit Parade | Music History and Music Trivia (Podcast).
Slate. Retrieved March 23, 2024.
^Whitburn, Joel (2004). Top R&B/Hip-Hop Singles: 1942–2004. Record Research. p. 226.
^Betts, Graham (2014). Motown Encyclopedia. Never Can Say Goodbye – The Jackson 5 [Single]: AC Publishing.
ISBN978-1-31144-154-6.{{
cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (
link)