Time After Time (Cyndi Lauper song)

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"Time after Time"
"Time after Time" cover
Single by Cyndi Lauper
from the album She's So Unusual
Released 1983
Format 12" vinyl, 7" vinyl
Genre Pop
Length 4:01
Label Epic Records
Writer Cyndi Lauper, Rob Hyman
Producer Rick Chertoff
Certification Platinum (US)

"Time After Time" was a single by singer Cyndi Lauper, the second from her She's So Unusual album, and it reached #1 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 charts on June 9, 1984. The song was at #1 for two weeks and to date is her second highest charting and most commercially successful single worldwide after "Girls Just Want to Have Fun".

"Time After Time" was nominated for "Song of the Year" at the 1985 Grammy Awards. The ballad is considered a classic of the 1980s and is still played frequently on adult contemporary radio.

Contents

Lauper co-wrote "Time After Time" with Philadelphia rocker, Rob Hyman of The Hooters. In a 2006 interview with Sound Off with Matt Pinfield (episode 212) on HDNet, Lauper related how the song was written. She indicated much of the lyrics were written about occurrences in the studio and her life at the time. The line "the second hand unwinds" referred to producer Rick Chertoff's watch which was winding backwards.

Hyman explained in an interview with Songfacts that he and Lauper stayed in the studio after the sessions composing the song.

Lauper in the "Time After Time" music video, directed by Edd Griles.
Lauper in the "Time After Time" music video, directed by Edd Griles.

The video for "Time After Time" was about a runaway leaving her lover behind. Lauper signs the title of the song to the deaf as she is leaving the train station. The video was played in heavy rotation on MTV. Lauper's mother and brother appear in the video, as well as Lauper's then-boyfriend David Wolff. The video was directed by Edd Griles. The Video took place in Brewster, New York.

"Time After Time" has been covered, either in live performance or on a recording, by at least 120 different artists across a broad spectrum of genres, including Blaque (on Blaque, 1999), Eva Cassidy, Allison Crowe, Miles Davis (on You're under Arrest, 1985), Dilana, Distant Soundz, DJ Sammy, Dover, Everything But the Girl, Eddie Money and Juice Newton (as a duet), The Gandharvas, The Hooters, INOJ (reaching #6 on the Billboard Top 40 in 1998), Phil Keaggy, Novaspace, Lil' Mo, Patti LuPone, Matchbox Twenty, Joey McIntyre, Me First and the Gimme Gimmes, Willie Nelson, Nichole Nordeman, Saosin, Spoken, Sugar Ray, Maria Taylor, TRUSTcompany, Tuck and Patti, Uncle Kracker (on the Clockstoppers soundtrack, 2002), Frank White, Cassandra Wilson (on Traveling Miles, 1999), and most recently a rock version by Quietdrive (which was released as the second single from their 2006 debut album, When All That's Left is You.) This song was sampled for Paris Hilton's song "Heartbeat," on her album Paris.

It was played in the "dance scene" of Romy and Michele's High School Reunion (1997) and Napoleon Dynamite (2004), and as a main theme sung by Katie Cook in View from the Top (2003). Mark Williams and Tara Morice performed the song in the Strictly Ballroom soundtrack (in the scene where Scott and Fran dance on the rooftop). Eva Cassidy's version was featured in the TV series, Smallville, and it was added to the first Smallville soundtrack, The Talon Mix. It was also covered in 2006 by Quietdrive, with their version appearing during the dance scene of the film John Tucker Must Die. It also contributed to a running gag in the second season of the TV series My Name Is Earl.

The song has been performed on American Idol twice; once in 2005, and again in 2007. Nadia Turner performed the song on Billboard #1 Hits week in the fourth season. Brandon Rogers performed the song on the 2nd week of the semi-finals in honor of his grandmother in the sixth season.

In dedication to the victims and families of the Virginia Tech massacre, rapper Lil Flip made a song that heavily samples Time After Time, but the tempo is changed in order to provide a heart-warming and sad type of mood. The chorus of the tribute song is actually Cyndi Lauper's original song's chorus line. The title of the tribute is under the name of Lauper's original.

The song is also used in the TV and radio commercial of the Toyota Vios, a small compact sedan available only in southeast Asia.

Chart (1984) Peak
position
U.S. Billboard Hot 100 1
U.S. Adult Contemporary 1
U.S. Adult Contemporary Recurrents 25
U.S. ARC Weekly Top 40 1
Australia ARIA Singles Chart 6
Canadian Singles Chart 1
Chilean Singles Chart 1
Colombian Singles Chart 1
French Singles Chart 9
German Singles Chart 6
Holland Singles Chart 5
Israeli Singles Chart 2
Italian Singles Chart 5
Japanese Singles Chart 60
New Zealand Singles Charts 3
Switzerland 7
UK Singles Chart 3


The song was re-released in a new acoustic version on Lauper's 2005 release The Body Acoustic, which features acoustic versions of some of her songs. "Time After Time" is performed as a duet with Sarah McLachlan.

In 2006 with the release of their debut album When All That's Left Is You Quietdrive released two singles, one being "Time After Time". It is more upbeat than the original, and some of the lyrics are edited out.

Preceded by
"Let's Hear It for the Boy" by Deniece Williams
Billboard Hot 100 number-one single
June 9, 1984 - June 16, 1984
Succeeded by
"The Reflex" by Duran Duran
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