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‘All Night Long (All Night)’: Lionel Richie Couldn’t Slow Down

On November 12, 1983, one of the many hits from the mega-platinum ‘Can’t Slow Down’ album completed its climb to the top of the Billboard Hot 100.

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Lionel Richie ‘All Night Long (All Night)’ artwork - Courtesy: UMG
Lionel Richie ‘All Night Long (All Night)’ artwork - Courtesy: UMG

“Well my friends, the time has come…” to commemorate a very recognizable lyric and a chart anniversary for Lionel Richie. On November 12, 1983, “All Night Long (All Night)” completed its climb to the top of the Billboard Hot 100, on its way to becoming one of the anthems of his career.

Keyshia Cole - The Way It Is
Keyshia Cole - The Way It Is
Keyshia Cole - The Way It Is

Lionel Richie - All Night Long (All Night)

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Written by Richie and co-produced by the artist with James Carmichael, “All Night Long” had been moving up the US pop chart since mid-September. Furthermore, it was already in the midst of a seven-week run at No. 1 on the R&B survey. Then it started a four-week pop reign, seizing the crown from Kenny Rogers and Dolly Parton’s “Islands In The Stream.” On the R&B chart, Motown’s strong end to the year would continue when Richie was followed to the summit by DeBarge’s “Time Will Reveal.”

“All Night Long” was one of the many hits from Can’t Slow Down, Lionel’s second solo album, which itself was an absolute sales juggernaut, certified ten-times platinum in America in just over two years, by the end of 1985. By some distance the bestselling album of Richie’s stellar career, its estimated worldwide sales are now some 20 million.

Making magic on Sunset

Recorded at Ocean Way Studios on Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles in the spring of 1983, the track featured such celebrated players as Greg Phillinganes on synthesisers, Paulinho da Costa on percussion, and a team of backing vocalists that included a then-unknown Richard Marx.

Listen to the best of Lionel Richie on Apple Music and Spotify.

As for the Jamaican-style chant that had Richie and the chorus singing “Tom bo li de say di moi ya, yeah, jambo, jumbo,” what did it mean? This writer asked Lionel that very question in an interview for British pop weekly Record Mirror at the time of the single’s success. “If you go back and try to find out what it means,” he said, “it’s like most of Bob Marley’s chants. They don’t really mean anything, but you know what they mean – you know what I’m saying? It’s an old Jamaican chant.”

Buy or stream “All Night Long (All Night)” on Lionel Richie’s Can’t Slow Down album.

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