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Talking in Your Sleep (Crystal Gayle song)

"Talking in Your Sleep" is a song written by Roger Cook and Bobby Wood. The first recorded version of the song[2] is by the band Marmalade, produced by Cook's longtime collaborator Roger Greenaway; Marmalade's version was also released as single in 1978 but failed to chart.

"Talking in Your Sleep"

"Painting This Old Town Blue"
"Hello I Love You" (West Germany)

January 6, 1978

1977

3:04

"Make It Really Easy"

January 1978

1977

Pop

Target

Roger Cook, Bobby Wood

Crystal Gayle recording[edit]

"Talking in Your Sleep" was most successful when recorded by American country music artist Crystal Gayle. It was released in January 1978 as the first single from the album When I Dream. The song became a hit on both the country and pop charts in 1978. It peaked at number one on the US Country chart for two weeks,[3] number eighteen on the US Pop chart and number three at the US Adult Contemporary chart.


In 1977, Gayle achieved international crossover Pop success for the first time with her No. 1 hit "Don't It Make My Brown Eyes Blue". Following the song's success, Gayle was recording more Pop and Adult Contemporary-styled Country tunes. This song is one of the first examples of this. "Talking in Your Sleep" was released in early 1978, and was a hit mid-year. The song proved an instant follow-up for Gayle on the Pop charts, being she hadn't had another Top 40 Pop hit since "Don't It Make My Brown Eyes Blue" the previous year.


"Talking in Your Sleep" was released on Gayle's major-selling album from that year called When I Dream. Following "Talking in Your Sleep"'s success as a crossover smash, Gayle only achieved one more Top 40 Pop hit as a solo artist, which came the next year with the song, "Half the Way". She also reached the Top Ten in 1982 with the hit single "You and I" a duet with Eddie Rabbitt.

"Talking in Your Sleep" was by Kikki Danielsson in 1979 on her debut album Rock'n Yodel [9]

covered

in 1995 on her album Starting Over.[10]

Reba McEntire

released a version on her 1980 album Especially for You.

Cilla Black

It was also covered by on her album You Me & Us in 1999.

Martine McCutcheon