Operator (That's Not the Way It Feels) | |
Cover: | Operator Jim Croce.jpg |
Type: | single |
Artist: | Jim Croce |
Album: | You Don't Mess Around with Jim |
B-Side: | Rapid Roy (The Stock Car Boy) |
Released: | August 23, 1972[1] |
Recorded: | 1972 |
Genre: | Folk-pop[2] |
Length: | 3:50 |
Label: | ABC (USA) Vertigo (UK, Mexico) |
Producer: | Terry Cashman, Tommy West |
Prev Title: | You Don't Mess Around with Jim |
Prev Year: | 1972 |
Next Title: | One Less Set of Footsteps |
Next Year: | 1973 |
"Operator (That's Not the Way It Feels)" is a 1972 song written by Jim Croce. Croce's record was released on August 23, 1972. It was the second single released from Croce's album You Don't Mess Around with Jim. It reached a peak of number 17 on the Billboard Hot 100 in December 1972, spending twelve weeks on the chart.
Cash Box described the lyrics saying that "in James Taylor fashion, Jim Croce tries to track down his long lost lover with the help of the operator."[3]
The song relates one side of a conversation with a telephone operator. The speaker is trying to find the phone number of his former lover, who has moved to Los Angeles with his former best friend. He wants to demonstrate to both of them that he is well and over their betrayal, but admits to the operator that he is not. After the operator has given him the number, he is unable to read it, apparently due to the tears in his eyes. He then changes his mind and tells the operator not to place the call, appreciatively adding "you can keep the dime" (the then standard toll he had deposited in a payphone).
The story was inspired during Croce's military service, during which time he saw lines of soldiers waiting to use the outdoor phone on base, many of them calling their wives or girlfriends to see if their Dear John letter was true.[4]
Record World called the song a "strong story-telling tune in the Chuck Berry 'Memphis' vein" and said that "the single is a near-perfect matching of this singer to the song."[5]
In 1973 Croce performed "Operator (That's Not the Way It Feels)" on the series The Midnight Special. Live versions of the song have also been released on the albums and .
7" Single (ABC-11335)[6]
Chart (1972-73) | Peak position | |
---|---|---|
Canadian RPM Top Singles[7] | 11 | |
U.S. Billboard Hot 100 | 17 | |
U.S. Cash Box Top 100[8] | 14 | |
U.S. Billboard Easy Listening[9] | 11 |