‘Baby (You’ve Got What It Takes)’: Brook Benton & Dinah Washington’s Dream Duet

In 1960, ‘Baby (You’ve Got What It Takes)’ combined one of the hot new male singers and a female vocalist who had been popular since World War II.

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Dinah Washington & Brook Benton artwork - Courtesy: UMG
Dinah Washington & Brook Benton artwork - Courtesy: UMG

It was on January 25, 1960 that a dream duet made its first mark. “Baby (You’ve Got What It Takes)” entered the Billboard R&B chart on that date for one of the hot new male singers of the era and a female vocalist who had been popular since World War II. Brook Benton and Dinah Washington’s collaboration topped the chart on February 8 and would remain at the summit for eight weeks. It also reached No.5 on the pop countdown.

The song was first recorded, as a B-side, by Benton’s sister Dorothy Pay. Since Brook and Dinah, there’ve been countless covers of the song, including one by Jerry Lee Lewis with his sister Linda Gail Lewis, and another more recently by Michael Bublé, who did it on his multi-million-selling Crazy Love album of 2009. But in early 1960 the song, written by Benton with Clyde Otis and Murray Stein, was a new sensation, showing off the sparking interplay between the 35-year-old Washington and Benton, six years her junior.

Baby, You’ve Got What It Takes

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“Baby (You’ve Got What It Takes)” came from the duo’s album The Two Of Us, which featured them both together and solo. In no time at all, Benton and Washington were back in the singles chart with another Top 10 hit from it, “A Rockin’ Good Way (To Mess Around And Fall In Love),” Sadly, within three years, Dinah died after an overdose of alcohol and pills.

Listen to uDiscover Music’s Dinah Washington Best Of playlist.

Smooth-voiced soul charmer Benton had made his first, modest impression on the national charts in 1958 with “A Million Miles From Nowhere.” But he hit the big time the following year with one of his career landmarks, “It’s Just A Matter Of Time.” Washington came to prominence singing with Lionel Hampton’s band from 1943-45, then had hits in the first half of the 1950s, when she was known as the Queen of the Juke Boxes, such as “I Wanna Be Loved” and “Teach Me Tonight.” In 1959, she hit the US Top 10 with her version of “What A Diff’rence A Day Makes.”

Buy or stream “Baby (You’ve Got What It Takes)” on the original Brook Benton/Dinah Washington album The Two Of Us.

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