"Baby I Need Your Loving" is a 1964 hit single recorded by the Four Tops for the Motown label. Written and produced by Motown's main production team Holland–Dozier–Holland,[2] the song was the group's first Motown single and their first pop Top 20 hit, making it to number 11 on the US Billboard Hot 100 and number four in Canada in the fall of 1964. It was also their first million-selling hit single.
Cash Box described it as "an intriguing rock-a-cha-cha beat pleader...that [the Four Tops] carve out with solid sales authority."[3]Rolling Stone ranked the Four Tops' original version of the song at No. 400 on their list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.[4]
In Australia on the "Stateside" Label, "Baby I Need Your Loving" reached #50 on the KMR chart[5] and spent just 6 weeks in the chart which it entered on the 30th January 1964.
"Baby I Need Your Lovin'" was covered in 1967 by Johnny Rivers, reaching No. 3 on Billboard Hot 100, topping the original version in chart performance.[7] The song reached #1 in Canada.[8]
As with Rivers' precedent single: the No. 1 hit "Poor Side of Town", his "Baby I Need Your Loving" was performed in an orchestral pop style, being arranged by Marty Paich and featuring the LA Phil musicians who had performed on the Mamas and the Papas inaugural Top Ten hits. The second single from the track's parent album: Rewind, was also an orchestral pop version of a Motown classic, being Rivers' version of "The Tracks of My Tears".
Written by Brian Holland, Lamont Dozier, and Edward Holland Jr.
Cover versions
The Fourmost released their version of this song, reaching No. 24 in the UK in November 1964.[10]
O. C. Smith covered it and took it to No. 52 in 1970 (and No. 21 US AC).[11]
Eric Carmen took "Baby I Need Your Loving" to No. 62 in 1979 (Change of Heart, 1978).[12] His cover also reached the Top 10 on the Canadian Adult Contemporary chart (#8),[13] and No. 50 in the Top 100.[14]
Carl Carlton also covered the song in 1982 (The Bad C.C.), reaching No. 17 on the U.S. R&B charts,[citation needed] No. 12 in Australia in February 1983,[15] and No. 27 in Canada.[16]
Lisa Stansfield on the soundtrack album of the 1999 movie Swing, which was also sung in the movie.