Send Me a Lover

"Send Me a Lover"
Single by Taylor Dayne
from the album Soul Dancing
Released September 6, 1993 (1993-09-06)
Format CD single
Genre Pop
Length 4:28
Label Arista
Writer(s) Richard Hahn, George Thatcher
Producer(s) Humberto Gatica
Taylor Dayne singles chronology
"Can't Get Enough of Your Love"
(1993)
"Send Me a Lover"
(1993)
"I'll Wait"
(1994)
"Send Me a Lover"
Single by Celine Dion
from the album Women for Women, Vol. 2
Released December 30, 1996 (1996-12-30)
Format Promotional recording
Genre Pop
Length 4:31
Label Columbia, Epic
Writer(s) Richard Hahn, George Thatcher
Producer(s) Humberto Gatica
Celine Dion singles chronology
"Les derniers seront les premiers"
(1996)
"Send Me a Lover"
(1996)
"Call the Man"
(1997)

"Send Me a Lover" is a single performed by Taylor Dayne, written by Rick Hahn and George Thatcher, and released on September 6, 1993 from her Soul Dancing album (July 12, 1993). It peaked at number 50 on the Billboard Hot 100 and number 19 on the Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks.

Formats and track listings

U.S. CD maxi single

  1. "Send Me a Lover" – 4:28
  2. "With Every Beat of My Heart" – 4:22
  3. "Love Will Lead You Back" – 4:37
  4. "If You Were Mine" – 5:01
  5. "Someone Like You" – 3:50

Charts

Chart (1993) Peak
position
Australian Singles Chart[1] 42
U.S. Billboard Hot 100[2] 50
U.S. Billboard Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks[3] 19

Celine Dion version

Dion's version (with heavily revised verses and slightly altered chorus lyrics) was a "leftover" from the recording sessions of the Celine Dion album in 1992, which remained unreleased until 1994. It was offered for various benefit collections, mostly for women’s causes. First it was released on the Kumbaya Album 1994. All proceeds from this CD went to support AIDS awareness and services. It also appeared on the In Between Dances (1995) (of which profits were given to research on breast cancer), The Power of Peace (1996) (to celebrate the 50 years of CARA), and Women for Women, Vol. 2 (1996) (another album to get funds for the research on breast cancer). It was also included as the B-side of the UK single "Pour que tu m'aimes encore" in 1995.

Dion's version was issued in the U.S. in December 1996, as a radio single from the Women for Women, Vol. 2 album, released on September 17, 1996. It peaked at number 23 on the Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks.

Charts

Chart (1997) Peak
position
US Adult Contemporary (Billboard)[4] 23

References

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