If I Have to Stand Alone | |
Cover: | Lonnie_Gordon-If_I_Have_to_Stand_Alone.jpg |
Type: | single |
Artist: | Lonnie Gordon |
Album: | If I Have to Stand Alone |
Released: | 5 November 1990 |
Genre: | |
Length: | 3:25 |
Label: | Supreme Records |
Producer: | Stock Aitken Waterman |
Prev Title: | Beyond Your Wildest Dreams |
Prev Year: | 1990 |
Next Title: | Gonna Catch You |
Next Year: | 1991 |
"If I Have to Stand Alone" is a song by American Hi-NRG and house singer Lonnie Gordon, released in November 1990 as the fourth and last single from her debut album by the same name (1990). Like the other tracks, it was written and produced by English songwriting and record producing trio Stock Aitken & Waterman, and a black-and-white music video was produced to promote the single. In spite of good critical reception, "If I Have to Stand Alone" did not manage to become a hit, remaining at the bottom of the charts in the countries where it was released.
A reviewer from Music & Media commented, "Clearly inspired by 70s disco and bearing the trademark SAW production imprint. A nice little tune with loads of violins and a stampeding drum computer."[1] Nick Robinson from Music Week wrote, "Written, arranged and produced by SAW, this sticks to a winning formula. The Supremes-meets-Gloria Gaynor vocals are coaxed along by that familiar chugging rhythm and vibrant backing".[2] In 2017, Christian Guiltenane of British magazine Attitude praised the song as being a "fantastically noisy pop juggernaut" and an "anthem" he considered in some ways "better" than "Happenin' All Over Again", "sounding like the musical equivalent of a runaway train, and deserved huge success".[3] A review published in 2021 on the Pop Rescue site said that "If I Have to Stand Alone" "bursts this 11 track album right open with some wonderful bleeping synths, before instantly screaming Stock/Aitken/Waterman's late 80's synth-pop style", and expressed sadeness about the single failure on the UK single chart.[4]
"If I Have to Stand Alone" debuted at a peak of number 68 on the UK Singles Chart on the chart edition of 17 November 1990, then dropped to number 85 and fell off the chart the next week. On the UK indie chart, it started at number 12 and stayed on the chart for three weeks. In February 1991, it also reached number 147 on the Australian Singles chart where it charted for four weeks.
Australia (ARIA)[5] | 147 |
---|---|
UK Indie (OCC)[6] | 12 |