"Give Him a Great Big Kiss" (sometimes entitled "Great Big Kiss") is a song written by Shadow Morton and performed by the Shangri-Las. It debuted at number 83 on the Billboard Hot 100 in late December 1964,[2] and peaked at #18 for two weeks in late January/early February 1965.[3][4] It was featured on their 1965 album Leader of the Pack.[5] The single was produced by Shadow Morton.[6]
The song was ranked number 200 among the greatest singles ever made in Dave Marsh's book The Heart of Rock & Soul (1989).[7] Marsh describes the song as "one of the greatest pieces of teen dialogue ever recorded, not to mention posessed of a great beat." He highlights the bit "when the music virtually ceases except for the drumbeats" and the ensuing girls' dialogue ("I hear he's bad." "He's good bad, but he's not evil"). Pitchfork magazine named the song number 96 on their 2006 list of the best songs of the 1960s.[8] In 2017, Billboard magazine's editorial staff ranked it number 51 on their list of the 100 greatest girl group songs of all time.[9] In 2023, they listed the song number 481 on their 500 best pop songs of all time list.[1]
A version by the New York Dolls appears on their 1985 compilation album Night of the Living Dolls.[12] Also, on the band's 1973 self-titled album, lead singer David Johansen quotes the "Give Him a Great Big Kiss" line, "you'd best believe I'm in love L-U-V", in the opening of "Looking for a Kiss".[13] "Looking for a Kiss" tells the story of adolescent romantic desire hampered by peers who use drugs.[14]
In 1980, the Spanish rock band Burning released a version titled "Es especial" with lyrics in Spanish.[15][16]
It's My Party! released a version of the song on their 2000 album Can I Get to Know You Better?[18]
Kate Nash and Billy Bragg released a cover as a duet on the B-side of Nash's 2010 single "Kiss That Grrrl".[19] They had performed the song together at several gigs before this release.[20][21]
Bette Midler covered the song in 2014 for her fourteenth studio album, It's the Girls! Her version recasts the original's love interest as a 98 year old man who needs to be taken back to the hospital after he got out to spend time with the singer.[22]
References
^ abBillboard Staff (October 19, 2023). "The 500 Best Pop Songs: Staff List". Billboard. Retrieved February 10, 2024. The most frenzied pop single ever released by the traditionally doomy-and-gloomy girl group...