"Gi' Me Wings" is a song by British singer Rod Stewart, which was released in 1981 as the fifth and final single from his tenth studio album Foolish Behaviour (1980). The song was written by Stewart and Steve Harley (lyrics), and Phil Chen, Kevin Savigar, Jim Cregan and Gary Grainger (music). It was produced by Stewart (credited as Harry the Hook), with co-production by the Rod Stewart Group and Jeremy Andrew Johns. "Gi' Me Wings" was released as a single in Japan only, but also reached number 45 on the US Billboard Top Rock Tracks chart.[1]

"Gi' Me Wings"
Single by Rod Stewart
from the album Foolish Behaviour
ReleasedMay 1981 (Japan)
Length3:43
LabelWarner Bros.
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)
Rod Stewart singles chronology
"Oh God, I Wish I Was Home Tonight"
(1981)
"Gi' Me Wings"
(1981)
"Tonight I'm Yours (Don't Hurt Me)"
(1981)

Background

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Stewart co-wrote the lyrics to "Gi' Me Wings" with Steve Harley, although Harley did not receive a writing credit when it appeared on Foolish Behaviour. The pair also collaborated on the lyrics for another track that appeared on the album, "Somebody Special", as well as a third song that was not released. Harley recalled to Smiler in 1997,

"I still get paid for it – he's a naughty boy sometimes! Whether my name's there or not, there are people who were there when I wrote those words. Rod, he may just genuinely have forgotten. I was sitting around at the Sunset Marquis for three weeks writing the lyrics. I wrote nearly all of 'Somebody Special', I wrote lots of that with Rod, lots of it on my own, but 'Gi' Me Wings', that chorus is me, as are quite a lot of the lines in the verses. I was in the studio showing Rod how I wanted it to sit, I was conducting him in the singing. I was telling him where to put some of the accents."[2]

Critical reception

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In a review of Foolish Behaviour, Debra Rae Cohen of Rolling Stone described "Gi' Me Wings" as "pounding" and added that "Valerie Carter's soaring backup vocals add more urgency than either the flamboyant brass arrangements or the self-pitying lyrics".[3] Laura Fissinger of Trouser Press stated, "Stewart can still sing, of course, and delivers 'Gi' Me Wings' with the ease of a child skipping stones across a pond."[4]

Randall Edwards of The Daily Utah Chronicle commented that "rock numbers" such as "Gi' Me Wings" "are tributes to a band that sounds like it's been playing together well for quite some time, anticipating every note, emphasizing every nuance."[5] In a 2019 retrospective, Rhino Insider noted the song "has a burbling undercurrent that gives the track a pulse to go along with the studio sheen of the rest of the instrumentation".[6]

Track listing

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7-inch single (Japan)[7]

  1. "Gi' Me Wings" - 3:43
  2. "Somebody Special" - 4:27

Personnel

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Credits are adapted from the Foolish Behaviour LP sleeve notes.[8]

Gi' Me Wings

Production

  • Harry the Hook (Rod Stewart) – producer
  • The Rod Stewart Group – co-producers
  • Jeremy Andrew Johns – co-producer, mixing
  • Jim Cregan – mixing
  • Rick Charles Delana – second engineer

Charts

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Chart (1981) Peak
position
US Mainstream Rock (Billboard)[9] 45

References

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  1. ^ "Rod Stewart - Chart History - Mainstream Rock Airplay". Billboard. Retrieved 2 January 2022.
  2. ^ Gray, John (Summer 1997). "Poetic Brilliance!". Smiler. No. 52.
  3. ^ Cohen, Debra Rae. "Rod Stewart - Foolish Behaviour". Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on 21 May 2002. Retrieved 2 January 2022 – via Internet Archive.
  4. ^ Fissinger, Laura (February 1981). "Records". Trouser Press. No. 59. p. 43.
  5. ^ Edwards, Randall (30 January 1981). "Records: Singer's best back-up band yet". The Daily Utah Chronicle. p. 6.
  6. ^ "The One After the Big One: Rod Stewart, FOOLISH BEHAVIOUR". Rhino Insider. 28 March 2019. Retrieved 2 January 2022.
  7. ^ Gi' Me Wings (Japan 7-inch single sleeve notes). Rod Stewart. Warner Bros. 1981. P-1525W.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  8. ^ Foolish Behaviour (UK vinyl LP sleeve notes). Rod Stewart. Riva Records. 1980. RVLP 11.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  9. ^ "Rod Stewart Chart History (Mainstream Rock)". Billboard. Retrieved 2 January 2022.