"Tip of My Tongue" is a song written by Lynsey de Paul and Barry Blue. It was first released as the fifth single by Brotherly Love with the song "I Love Everything About You" as the flip side on CBS Records in 1973 and was produced by Phil Wainman. The group performed the song on the Granada TV programmeLift Off With Ayshea on 22 June 1973. The song received positive reviews from the British music press, and the brothers were interviewed about the single but it did not reach the UK Singles Chart. Barry Blue was credited as "Barry Green" on this release. The female soul trio Ellie released their version of "Tip of My Tongue" produced by Barry Blue as a single on the Fresh Airrecord label in the UK, on London Records in North America and on the Phillips label in Germany, France and Australia in 1974. They performed the song on the German TV music program, Hits a Go Go, on 22 October 1974. The song was also included on the German 1975 compilation album Various – 26 Original Top Hits. It was also chosen as record of the week by Dutch DJ Frans van der Drift at Radio Mi Amigo on 29 December 1974. Ellie Hope went on to form Liquid Gold where she was the lead singer. Ellie's version of the song is still played on radio, for example on 1 November 2014 by the German independent radio station, Radio X, Frankfurter Stadtradio. The song's co-writer, Barry Blue, released his own recording of the song arranged by Gerry Shury and produced by Blue as an album track in 1974, and this version was later on the compilation albums Dancin'... Best Of as well as The Very Best of Barry Blue released in 2012. In 1977, the Canadian band, Great Rufus Road Machine, a pop band from Kitchener, Ontario, recorded the song and released it as a single, with "Can't You Do It Now" as the B-side of the single. It was also included as the lead track on their self-named album. The British band The Dooleys also recorded their version of the song as a track on their 1981 album, Secrets, which was suggested by the album's producer Barry Blue. The album was renamed The Dancer for its release in Japan and made number 41 on the Japanese Albums Chart. The Dooleys version of the song was finally released on CD in 2013 on the Full House / Secrets double album.