Power of Love/Love Power | |
Cover: | Power of Love-Love Power(1991).jpg |
Type: | single |
Artist: | Luther Vandross |
Album: | Power of Love |
Released: | [1] |
Recorded: | 1991 A&M Studios (Hollywood, CA) Right Track Recording (New York, NY) |
Genre: | R&B, soul, gospel |
Length: | 6:42 |
Label: | Epic |
Producer: | Luther Vandross, Marcus Miller |
Prev Title: | Treat You Right |
Prev Year: | 1990 |
Next Title: | Don't Want to Be a Fool |
Next Year: | 1991 |
"Power of Love/Love Power" is a single by American singer-songwriter Luther Vandross. It was released on April 9, 1991 as the lead single from his 1991 album of the same name. The song spent two weeks at number one on the US R&B chart, and peaked at number four on the US pop chart, becoming his biggest pop solo hit.[2]
The song is a medley of the songs "Power of Love," written by Vandross and Marcus Miller, and "Love Power," a minor hit in 1968 for the one-hit wonder R&B group The Sandpebbles. The Sandpebbles version of "Love Power" had made it number 22 on the Billboard Hot 100, and number 14 on the R&B singles chart.[3]
In 1995, the song was re-recorded for the compilation Greatest Hits 1981–1995. It was released as a single with remixes by Frankie Knuckles and Uno Clio.
American singer Donna Summer recorded a version of the song for the 2005 album .
Stephen Thomas Erlewine from AllMusic picked the song as one of the "high points" of the album.[4] Larry Flick from Billboard deemed it "a tasty blend of influences: pleasing pop melodies, funky guitars, gospel-tinged backing vocals, and (naturally) effective R&B vocals. Thoroughly satisfying."[5] Ken Tucker from Entertainment Weekly said it is "as paradoxically playful and ambitious as its title." He added, "Here is a perfect example of the way pop improvisation can combine with technical precision to revitalize verbal clichés. In this case, Vandross has joined two different songs, both featuring gliding, colliding melodies that offer the singer an opportunity to apply his delicate tenor to witty, chanted variations on the songs' titles."[6]
After the song was remixed in 1995, British magazine Music Week rated it four out of five, adding, "Not typical Luther, but sumptuous all the same. This upbeat groover, taken from the soul meister's new greatest hits album, has all the ingredients of a chart hit."[7] Alan Jones commented, "The underlying melodic strength is surrendered to the rhythm, which takes the form of a brisk house beat. Vandross is a singer of great finesse and exercises like this do him no favours."[8]
Chart (1991) | Position | |
---|---|---|
Canada Top Singles (RPM)[10] | 73 | |
US Billboard Hot 100[11] | 47 | |
US Adult Contemporary (Billboard)[12] | 20 | |
US Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs (Billboard)[13] | 34 |