Self Control (Raf song)


"Self Control" is a song by Italian singer Raf, released in 1984. It was written by Giancarlo Bigazzi, Steve Piccolo and Raf. The song was covered the same year by American singer Laura Branigan. Her version first hit no. 1 in Germany on June 15, 1984. Raf's version first hit no. 1 in Italy on June 23, 1984. Both versions of the song were popular across Europe during much of the summer of 1984 and were the most successful single of the year in Germany and Switzerland. Branigan's version peaked at no. 4 on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart and also went to no. 2 on the dance chart.
The song has become one of the defining songs of the 1980s, with a number of remakes recorded each year. Notable covers include Puerto Rican singer Ricky Martin in 1993, a hit dance remake by Branigan in 2004 and two 2006 versions that hit the Top 5 in various European enclaves, by Danish dance group Infernal and Spanish singer Soraya Arnelas.

Raf version

, born as Raffaele Riefoli, co-wrote the song "Self Control" with Giancarlo Bigazzi and Steve Piccolo. His version of "Self Control" peaked at no. 1 in Italy. It also notably edged into no. 1 in Switzerland between runs at the top spot by Laura Branigan's version of "Self Control", and peaked at no. 2 in Germany, no. 7 in Austria and at no. 40 in France. Raf released an extended dance mix of the song, like Branigan, but Raf's version featured a rap, relatively rare for a white artist at the time.
He would release several more tracks in English and re-release his debut 1984 album Raf in 1987 under the title Self Control, featuring two of these tracks. Although his English-language album and especially the singles proved to be quite successful in Italy and elsewhere, he began releasing his later albums in his native language, almost all of which were received better in Italy than the English-language albums; many of them entered Italy's Top 10 album chart.

Charts

Weekly charts

Year-end charts

Laura Branigan version

American singer Laura Branigan covered "Self Control" in 1984. It was released as the lead single from her third studio album of the same name, released the same year.

History

Branigan's first major hit had also been co-written by Bigazzi: "Gloria" was an English cover of the 1979 original Italian song recorded by Umberto Tozzi. The following year Branigan recorded another English song written over a Tozzi and Bigazzi song, "Mama", which was part of the 1983 album Branigan 2. Branigan chose two more Italian songs for her third album: the first one, "Ti Amo" with lyrics by Diane Warren once again based on the original by Tozzi and Bigazzi that had been a 1977 single for Tozzi. The second one, "Self Control" became the title track to the album and her biggest international hit. "Self Control" was the only one of the four Italian songs recorded by Branigan that was originally composed in English, and Branigan chose to record the song as written. Also unlike the other songs, Branigan's version was contemporaneous with that of its co-writer.
The Branigan recording was arranged by Giorgio Moroder's protégé Harold Faltermeyer with Robbie Buchanan and produced by Buchanan with Jack White in Germany and Los Angeles. A keyboard hook in Raf's version was changed to a guitar riff for Branigan's version and a vocal break was paired with a sharper and repeated percussive element.

Song information

The song narrates the singer's slip into the world of nightlife, the allure of which has her "livin' only for the night" and deeming herself to "live among the creatures of the night". Rather than actually invoking more self-control, the singer addresses someone: "you take my self, you take my self-control".

Music video

Branigan was one of the first artists of the video era to work with an Academy Award-winning film director on a music video when William Friedkin directed the clip. Filmed in New Jersey and New York City, the video was produced by Fred Caruso and first aired in April 1984.
The video depicts Branigan, sitting in her bedroom while her lover sleeps. She gets dressed up and goes out, lured by the nightlife in the city. Brief encounters with a mysterious man in a full-face white mask lead Branigan from a night club to an underground room where the masked man beckons her to join an orgiastic gathering. Willing at first, she eventually flees. Returning home, Branigan finds that the masked man and some of his throng are, somehow, now in her bedroom. She surrenders herself to the masked man's advances. Afterwards, the masked man leaves, fading away in the morning light. Branigan, consumed by guilt, gets up from the floor and turns out the light. The final scene shows Branigan lying awake in bed, when her lover turns to face her, his face hidden behind a familiar white mask.
The video drew controversy, and MTV required some edits before it could air. Entertainment Tonight aired a segment on the network's reaction to the clip, which was being played in late-night slots on other networks. Though Branigan resisted at first, her record company convinced her to allow a minor alteration and the video was aired on MTV, though by this time the single had peaked on the charts. Branigan would go on to be nominated for a 1985 American Music Award for Favorite Pop/Rock Female Video Artist. Branigan's fellow nominees were Tina Turner and Cyndi Lauper, who won the award.

Chart performance

Branigan's recording was a worldwide multi-format hit. In the US, the song became Branigan's fourth consecutive top 10 hit on a Billboard chart in a year and a half, following "Gloria", "Solitaire" and "How Am I Supposed to Live Without You". "Self Control" peaked at no. 2 on the Billboard Hot Dance Club Play chart, no. 4 on the Hot 100 and no. 5 on the Adult Contemporary chart. In Canada, the track hit no. 1 on both the pop and AC charts. Both the Raf original and the Branigan version of "Self Control" entered the German Top 20 in May 1984: on June 25, the Branigan single assumed the no. 1 position, where it remained for six weeks, while the Raf version occupied the no. 2 spot. Branigan's "Self Control" also entered the Italian charts although the dominance of the Raf version in his native Italy predicated a comparatively low peak Italian chart peak of no. 29 for Branigan's version.
"Self Control" afforded Laura Branigan a no. 1 hit in Austria, Canada, Sweden and South Africa and was also a smash hit for Branigan in Norway, Ireland, Australia and the UK. Branigan's album Self Control went Silver, Gold or Platinum in several countries and yielded subsequent charting singles, though not of the title track's magnitude, in "The Lucky One", "Ti Amo" and "Satisfaction".

Germany's and Switzerland's most successful single of 1984

Raf's version exceeded the success of Branigan's only in his native Italy. The only other territory where Raf topped the charts was in Switzerland. His single debuted in the Swiss Top 30 at no. 7 on June 17, the same week Branigan's version debuted at no. 24. The following week, Raf's single had climbed to no. 2. Branigan's single, however, had leapt to no. 1. In their third week, Raf's version supplanted Branigan's at number 1, but she regained the top spot in the fourth week and the two versions would remain there, Branigan at no. 1 and Raf at no. 2, for three more weeks.
In their 7th week on the charts, Raf fell to no. 3, below "Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go" by Wham!, while Branigan held at no. 1. Their eighth week on the charts saw Raf regain the no. 2 spot behind Branigan. The following week the Wham! single moved back to no. 2 and Raf fell three spaces, but Branigan held firm. In their tenth week on the charts, Wham! fell to no. 5, Raf fell two more spots, and Branigan maintained pole position.
Finally on the week of August 26, "Such a Shame" by Talk Talk moved Branigan out of the number one spot, though she would remain in the top 5 for another three weeks. Branigan's record was in the Swiss top 30 for a total of sixteen weeks, including twelve weeks in the top 5 and eight weeks at no. 1. It was joined by her follow-up single, "The Lucky One ", as it was erroneously subtitled in Europe, which charted in the top 30 for seven weeks. Raf's version spent fourteen weeks in the top 30, including eight in the top five and one at number one.
Branigan's version was the most successful single of 1984 in Switzerland, earning Branigan the number one spot on the year-end charts. It was also the most successful single of 1984 in Germany, where Branigan's version was produced.

Live performances

Branigan performed the song live in her debut on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson on April 27, 1984. She also promoted the song during appearances on The Merv Griffin Show, Solid Gold, Dick Clark's American Bandstand and the syndicated Dick Clark television special Rock Rolls On, which she also co-hosted.

Track listings

; 7" single
  1. "Self Control" – 4:06
  2. "Silent Partners" – 3:55
; 12" maxi
  1. "Self Control" – 5:04
  2. "Silent Partners" – 4:10

    Charts and certifications

Weekly charts

Year-end charts

Sales and certifications

Re-releases

Branigan's "Self Control" was paired with follow-up single "The Lucky One" for an "oldies series" release in the US. In the UK, a similar release paired the song with her earlier hit, "Gloria". In 1992, the original single mix of "Self Control" was re-released on CD single and 12" vinyl by Atlantic/WEA in Germany featuring two new remixes. One of those, the 'Classic Summer Mix', appeared on the European greatest hits album The Very Best of Laura Branigan. In 1999, four new remixes of "Self Control" were commissioned for a South African collection called Back in Control, on Atlantic/Gallo. "Self Control '99" was released as a CD single there. In the mid 2000s, several trance music remixes featuring samples of various lengths from the 1984 Branigan original surfaced from various entities including Crooklyn Clan, Imperial Machine, and SK featuring Laura Branigan. None of these mixes were done with Branigan's participation.
As of 2010, the Self Control album remains in print and the original version can also be heard on The Best of Branigan, and in remastered versions on The Essentials: Laura Branigan and The Platinum Collection.

2004 version

Branigan sought to reclaim her career after years away from the music industry first to take care of her ailing husband and then to mourn his loss. She re-recorded her two biggest club hits for the 20th anniversary of "Self Control" and they were released in a slew of remixes as "Gloria 2004" and "Self Control 2004". The latter track hit the Top 10 on the Billboard Hot Dance Singles Sales chart following Branigan's sudden death from an aneurysm in August of that year.
Track listings
; CD maxi single
  1. "Self Control 2004" – 3:21
  2. "Self Control 2004" – 6:45
  3. "Self Control 2004" – 7:07
  4. "Self Control 2004" – 7:45
  5. "Self Control 2004" – 6:07
  6. "Self Control 2004" – 7:05

    Charts

Ricky Martin version

In 1993, Ricky Martin recorded a Spanish-language cover of "Self Control", titled "Que Dia Es Hoy". With lyrics by producer Juan Carlos Calderón and Mikel Herzog, the song was released as single from Martin's second studio solo album, Me Amaras, in 1993. The single featured a remixed version of the track. A music video was also released. In 2008, the remixed version was included on CD and DVD, called 17.

Formats and track listings

Latin America promotional 12" single
  1. "Que Dia Es Hoy " – 8:01
  2. "Que Dia Es Hoy " – 4:52
  3. "Que Dia Es Hoy " – 6:03
  4. "Que Dia Es Hoy " – 4:22
Brazilian promotional CD single
  1. "Que Dia Es Hoy " – 8:01
  2. "Que Dia Es Hoy " – 4:52
  3. "Que Dia Es Hoy " – 6:03
  4. "Te Quero Amor " – 4:22

    Charts

Royal Gigolos version

In 2005, the German dance band Royal Gigolos recorded a cover of the song. It appeared on a maxi CD, along with their cover of the 1984 Rockwell hit "Somebody's Watching Me". The song's most notable success were Top 20 chartings in Denmark and Finland.

Track listings

; CD maxi
  1. "Self Control" – 3:42
  2. "Self Control" – 3:46
  3. "Self Control" – 5:05
  4. "Self Control" – 6:18
  5. "Self Control" – 6:32
  6. "Somebody's Watching Me" – 3:17
  7. "Somebody's Watching Me" – 4:27
  8. "Somebody's Watching Me" – 6:36
  9. "Self Control"

    Charts

Infernal version

In 2006, Danish dance band Infernal, best known for the club hit "From Paris to Berlin", released a cover of the song on November 6 in the UK. The song debuted in the chart at no. 61 based on downloads only. The track was also released in Australia, as a Double A-side with "I Won't Be Crying", though it did not chart there. Their recording was notably Top 10 in Finland and their native Denmark.

Formats and track listings

; 2-track CD single
  1. "Self Control" – 3:40
  2. "From Paris to Berlin" – 6:37
; 7-track enhanced promo single
  1. "Self Control" – 3:40
  2. "Self Control" – 6:00
  3. "Self Control" – 7:40
  4. "Self Control" – 6:14
  5. "Self Control" – 7:09
  6. "Self Control" – 6:13
  7. "Self Control" – 3:48
; 12" single
  1. "Self Control" – 7:41
  2. "Self Control" – 6:00
  3. "Self Control" – 6:14

    Charts

Kendra Erika version

In 2018, US singer, Kendra Erika recorded her version, where it went to number one on the Billboard, US Dance Club Songs chart.
Chart Peak
position
US Billboard Dance Club Songs1
Track listings
;The Remixes
  1. Self Control
  2. Self Control
  3. Self Control

    Use in media

Branigan's version of "Self Control" was featured on the Miami Vice episode "The Great McCarthy" and was featured in the fact-based 1989 TV movie The Preppie Murder and a 2007 episode of the series Cold Case. In 2002, the Branigan recording was used as a track on the fictional radio station Flash FM in the video game, and it appears on the CD collection ', as well as numerous other hits collections. It was often used as bumper music by late night radio talk show host Art Bell when he hosted Coast to Coast AM in the 1990s. It was also featured in the opening scenes of the Knight Rider episodes "Halloween Knight" and "K.I.T.T vs K.A.R.R." In 2018, Branigan's version was heard in FX's ' episode, "Descent".