If I could fly 80s song

  • With the opening line, "She's just 16 years old, leave her alone, they said," we understand if you think this song sounds a little statutory. Benny Mardones told Songfacts that the 16-year-old girl he's singing about was named Heidi, and she lived in his apartment in Spanish Harlem. Their relationship was purely platonic, however, as Benny looked after Heidi and her family after her father left. Benny would pay her $50 a week to walk his basset hound, Zanky.

  • Mardones wrote this song with Robert Tepper, who would later write the song "No Easy Way Out" for the movie Rocky IV. Benny told Songfacts: "One night Robert Tepper and I were up writing songs. It was about a week before we were leaving for Miami to cut the first big album, which was Never Run, Never Hide. We thought that we already had the hit song, so did Polydor Records. It was a song called 'Might Have Been Love.' But at the last minute we're sitting there one night at my apartment trying to write. Bobby kept playing the chord changes and we tried 18 melodies and 30 kinds of lyrics and all of a sudden the key in the door turned and I said, 'Oh my God, it's daylight.' Because we liked to keep the blinds down.

    And in she walks, 16 years old, dressed for school in a miniskirt, little stacked heels, adorable, 16-going-on-21. She said, 'You've been up all night?' and of course it was obvious. I said, 'Yeah, we have.' She says, 'Okay, come on, Zanky,' and she walks the dog out. When she leaves and goes out the door, my partner goes, 'Oh, my God.' I said, 'Hey, Bob. She's just 16 years old, leave her alone.' And literally five minutes later I said, 'Play that lick again, Bobby.' So he played the lick and I went (singing), 'she's just 16 years old, leave her alone, they say.' Then I thought about her dad and what he had done, and that's where I got (singing), 'Separated by fools who don't know what love is yet.' The chorus was, 'you're too young for me, but if I could fly, I'd pick you up and take you into the night and show you love like you've never seen.' Then the verse 'It's like having it all and letting it show. It's like having a dream where nobody has a heart. It's like having it all and watching it fall apart.' Because his success was not the family's success; it was just his. 'I can't measure my love there's nothing compared to it' - it was all about the abandonment of this family and this 16-year-old girl."

  • While the song has stuck like glue to radio playlists, when it first came out, radio stations had some concerns. Benny explains: "When it first was released, R&B stations all over America thought I was black. Then they found out I was white and they dropped the record. White radio was afraid to touch it because they thought it was about me dating a 16-year-old girl at my age. So Polydor Records sent out like 3,000 letters to radio stations across the country explaining what the song was really about. And the song got added and almost instantly started playing all over America."

  • When this song became a hit, Benny Mardones suddenly found himself with a great deal of money and fame, which he didn't handle very well. He developed a cocaine addiction and got in the habit of drinking a bottle of whiskey every night. He recorded the album Too Much To Lose the next year, but when it came time to tour and promote it, he was in Miami, wasted out of his mind. His momentum was stopped cold and his record company, Polydor, lost interest. He continued his descent until 1985, when his son Michael was born and he stopped using drugs. His best friend pulled him together and flew him to Syracuse, where Benny started a new life away from the temptations of Miami. The only white stuff he saw was snow - and plenty of it. Benny became a local celebrity, met various women who helped raise his son (Michael's mom was in worse shape than Benny), and was a big concert draw in the area for the next 10 years.

  • In 1989, "Into The Night" was re-released after a "Where Are They Now?" feature on the Arizona radio station KZZP, which led to renewed interest in the song. The influential program director Scott Shannon added it to his playlist in Los Angeles, and radio stations across the country followed suit. A new version of the song was released, and this time it hit #20 in the US. The song was the only one to chart twice in the '80s by the same artist with the same version of the song.

  • Usher interpolated this song on the track "Making Love (Into the Night)" from his 2010 album Raymond v. Raymond.

  • This plays in the 2009 Breaking Bad episode "Down" in a scene where the main characters meet in a convenience store. The song also shows up in the movies Satin (2011), Life After Beth (2014), Get Hard (2015) and Nerve (2016).

  • unread,

    Jul 19, 2000, 3:00:00 AM7/19/00

    to

    I have tried searching for lyrics for this song on google and
    varoius other search engines. NADA. I heard a 'live' perforrmance
    of it the other day and now I'm going crazy trying to remember who
    sang it. It goes something like this:

    She's just sixteen years old
    Leave her alone, they say.
    Seperated by fools, who don't know what love is yet.

    But I would wait till the end
    of time for you
    and do it again, it's true
    I can't measure my love, there's nothing to compare it to.

    (But I want you to know)

    If I could fly
    I'd pick you up
    I'd take you into the night
    and show you (alone?)
    like you've never seen
    ever seen

    That's about all the lyrics I can remember. I'd be very grateful
    if someone can tell me song title/singer.

    Thanks-

    R.

    Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
    Before you buy.

    adc

    unread,

    Jul 19, 2000, 3:00:00 AM7/19/00

    to


    The song is "Into the Night" by "Benny Mardones."
    It was a Top 40 hit in the 1970s, then again, when
    it was re-released as a single in 1989.
    - adc

    John Sanders

    unread,

    Jul 19, 2000, 3:00:00 AM7/19/00

    to

    adc wrote in message <>...

    >
    >The song is "Into the Night" by "Benny Mardones."
    >It was a Top 40 hit in the 1970s, then again, when
    >it was re-released as a single in 1989.
    >- adc

    Can you tell us about the history of this tune? I never ever knew that it
    was previously released in the 70s. Same artist, or was the '89 version a
    cover? Was it in a movie, or was Benny just looking for a comeback?

    Thanks,
    John

    adc

    unread,

    Jul 20, 2000, 3:00:00 AM7/20/00

    to

    John,

    I was INCORRECT. It was first released in 1980. To double-check, I
    found a Benny M. biography page at cdnow and copied this exerpt...
    -------
    Singer/songwriter and Maryland native Benny Mardones made a huge
    splash with his '80s hit "Into the Night." The song made the Top 10
    twice, a first for a solo artist. Originally from the 1980 album Never
    Run, Never Hide, the song was also included on his self-titled 1989
    release.
    -------
    So, I guess he was looking for a comeback. "Into the Night" was still
    contemporary enough for CHR/Top40 radio in 1989. Plus, it had the
    support of the record label, and radio. There were other re-releases
    near the end of the '80s. Real Life's 1982 single, "Send Me an Angel,"
    which was then titled, "Send Me an Angel '89." M's 1979 hit, "Pop
    Muzik" was re-released, with a dance beat. I'm certain that there was
    a Pointer Sisters song that was re-released around 1989.....probably,
    "I'm So Excited." And maybe even the tune, "When I'm With You,"
    from Sheriff. If I remember correctly, the band "Sheriff" later became
    "Alias," and recorded the 1990 ballad, "More Than Words Can Say."
    In any case, it seems as if the Benny Mardones tune was swept up in
    the re-release madness of the late 1980s.
    - adc

    John

    unread,

    Jul 20, 2000, 3:00:00 AM7/20/00

    to

    adc wrote:
    >
    >
    >
    > John,
    >
    > I was INCORRECT. It was first released in 1980. To double-check, I
    > found a Benny M. biography page at cdnow and copied this exerpt...
    > -------
    >

    > So, I guess he was looking for a comeback. "Into the Night" was still
    > contemporary enough for CHR/Top40 radio in 1989. Plus, it had the
    > support of the record label, and radio. There were other re-releases
    > near the end of the '80s. Real Life's 1982 single, "Send Me an Angel,"
    > which was then titled, "Send Me an Angel '89." M's 1979 hit, "Pop
    > Muzik" was re-released, with a dance beat. I'm certain that there was
    > a Pointer Sisters song that was re-released around 1989.....probably,
    > "I'm So Excited." And maybe even the tune, "When I'm With You,"
    > from Sheriff. If I remember correctly, the band "Sheriff" later became
    > "Alias," and recorded the 1990 ballad, "More Than Words Can Say."
    > In any case, it seems as if the Benny Mardones tune was swept up in
    > the re-release madness of the late 1980s.
    > - adc
    >

    So we had nostalgia for the 80's, IN the 80's. Wow, it
    really WAS a "me" decade! ;-) Thanks for the great
    info.

    John

    How do I find an old song I can't remember?

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    Was Benny Mardones a one hit wonder?

    Diamond concluded, “Benny is a three-in-one-hit wonder, now memorialized in pop music history for having the same song, with different recordings, different labels, different decades and different centuries chart three different times.” Benny co-wrote “Into the Night” with another one-hit wonder Robert Tepper, who is ...

    Who did Benny Mardones marry?

    Jane BraemerBenny Mardones / Spousenull