Will You? (Hazel O'Connor song)

"Will You?" is a song by British singer-songwriter Hazel O'Connor, released as the fourth single from her debut album, the soundtrack to the film Breaking Glass. It was a top ten hit in both the UK and Ireland, and was certified silver in the UK for shipments of 250,000 copies.[1]

"Will You?"
Single by Hazel O'Connor
from the album Breaking Glass
B-side
  • "Sons and Lovers" (UK and Ireland only)
  • "Big Brother"
ReleasedMay 1981
Recorded1980
StudioGood Earth Studios, London
Length4:49
LabelA&M
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)Tony Visconti
Hazel O'Connor singles chronology
"D-Days"
(1981)
"Will You?"
(1981)
"(Cover Plus) We're All Grown Up"
(1981)

Background

"Will You?" was the only track in Breaking Glass that was not written specifically for the film: in her 1981 autobiography Uncovered Plus, O'Connor stated that the song had been written some time before that.[2] In 2014, she told The Guardian that she had been upset after reading a story about a man who had died when the shop he had entered to buy a sandwich had been blown up by an IRA bomb.[3]

The song is noted for its lengthy improvised saxophone solo, played by Wesley Magoogan. While touring the UK in November and December 1980 in support of her album, O'Connor was supported by the then-unknown Duran Duran, and in his autobiography the band's John Taylor stated that "Will You?" was "the highlight" of O'Connor's set, and called Magoogan's solo "the emotional peak of the show".[4] Although the original release of "Will You?" was credited solely to O'Connor, Magoogan later won a court case to have his contribution to the song recognised, and is now credited as co-writer.[5]

Track listings

7" AMS 8131 (UK & Ireland)

  1. "Will You?" – 4:49
  2. "Sons and Lovers" – 4:37

7" AMS 9011 (France & Netherlands)

  1. "Will You?" – 4:49
  2. "Big Brother" – 3:04

7" 2267-S (US)

  1. "Will You" – 2:57
  2. "Big Brother" – 3:04

7" AMS 7698 (Italy)

  1. "Eighth Day" – 3:11
  2. "Will You?" – 4:49

12" Promo 12 PRM 018 (Italy)

  1. "Will You" – 4:49
  2. "Monsters in Disguise" – 3:22
  3. "Writing on the Wall" – 3:20

Charts

Chart (1981) Peak
position
Ireland (IRMA)[6] 7
UK Singles (Official Charts Company)[7] 8
gollark: By multiplying two smallish prime numbers (inaccessible to the user except via the debug API, if it was available in potatOS (it's not, fully)) to make a bigger *semi*prime it's possible to make a problem easy to generate but relatively hard to solve.
gollark: It's actually very fast.
gollark: ```lualocal function isprime(n) for i = 2, math.sqrt(n) do if n % i == 0 then return false end end return trueend local function findprime(from) local i = from while true do if isprime(i) then return i end i = i + 1 endend```
gollark: ```lua if settings.get "potatOS.removable" then potatOS.actually_really_uninstall = function(hedgehog) if hedgehog == "76fde5717a89e332513d4f1e5b36f6cb" then print "Hedgehog valid. Deleting potatOS main code." fs.delete "/autorun" else error "Invalid hedgehog! Expected 76fde5717a89e332513d4f1e5b36f6cb." end end end```Also this bit, optionally.
gollark: ```lua begin_uninstall_process = function() print "Please wait. Generating semiprime number..." local p1 = findprime(math.random(2, 100000)) local p2 = findprime(math.random(2, 100000)) local num = p1 * p2 print("Please find the prime factors of the following number:", num) write "Factor 1: " local f1 = tonumber(read()) write "Factor 2: " local f2 = tonumber(read()) if (f1 == p1 and f2 == p2) or (f2 == p1 and f1 == p2) then term.clear() term.setCursorPos(1, 1) print "Accepted. Moving startup." fs.delete "old-potatOS-startup" fs.move("startup", "old-potatOS-startup") print "Press any key to continue." os.pullEvent "key" os.reboot() else print("Factors", f1, f2, "invalid.", p1, p2, "expected.") end end```This bit is the uninstaller.

References

  1. "BRIT Certified Award – Hazel O'Connor – Will You". British Phonographic Industry. Retrieved 14 April 2020.
  2. O'Connor, Hazel (1981). Uncovered Plus. Proteus Books. ISBN 978-0-90607-181-6.
  3. Simpson, Dave (10 March 2014). "How we made Breaking Glass". The Guardian. Retrieved 14 April 2020.
  4. Taylor, John (2012). "Bidding Wars". In the Pleasure Groove: Love, Death and Duran Duran. Hachette. ISBN 978-1-40551-266-4.
  5. Osuh, Chris (7 February 2006). "Battle of the bands". Manchester Evening News. Retrieved 14 April 2020.
  6. "The Irish Charts – Search Results – Hazel O'Connor". Irish Singles Chart.
  7. "Hazel O'Connor: Artist Chart History". Official Charts Company.
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