Call Me (Petula Clark song)

"Call Me" is a song composed by Tony Hatch for an original recording for Petula Clark. It was later an easy listening standard via a hit version by Chris Montez.

"Call Me" first appeared as the title cut on a Petula Clark EP released in 1965 by Pye in the UK. "Call Me" and the three other tracks on the EP: "Heart", "Everything in the Garden" and "Strangers and Lovers" were also released on Clark's album I Know a Place (a.k.a. The New Petula Clark Album).

Track listing
Side One
 * 1) "Call Me" (Tony Hatch) - 2:43
 * 2) "Heart" (Tony Hatch-Petula Clark-George Aber) - 2:37

Side Two
 * 1) "Everything in the Garden" (Roger Greenaway) - 2:55
 * 2) "Strangers and Lovers (Tony Hatch) - 2:51

Chris Montez version
Also in 1965 Chris Montez, who had scored the hit "Let's Dance" in 1962 and subsequently dropped out of the music business, was invited to resume recording by A&M Records' founder Herb Alpert. Alpert was unhappy when Montez began recording for A&M in his previous Chicano rock style and personally suggested Montez shift to easy listening choosing "Call Me" as the song to be Montez's debut single on A&M. Released in November 1965, "Call Me" entered the Easy Listening Top 40 in Billboard that December entering the Billboard Hot 100 in January 1966; that March "Call Me" peaked on the Easy Listening chart at #2 and on the Hot 100 at #22.

Montez's version of "Call Me" was released as a single in the UK on the Pye label in January 1966 but failed to chart.

Other versions
A version of "Call Me" was recorded by soul band, The Foundations. It appeared on their 1967 album From the Foundations.

A version of the song by the easy listening group The Mike Flowers Pops is on the soundtrack of the 1997 film Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery.

Another version of the song was recorded and released by Frankie Valli on his 2007 studio album, Romancing the 60's.