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Talk to Ya Later

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"Talk to Ya Later"
Single by The Tubes
from the album The Completion Backward Principle
B-side"Tube Talk" (UK)
"What's Wrong With Me" (all releases)[1]
Released1981
Recorded1980
Length3:44 (single version)
4:41 (album version)
LabelCapitol
Songwriter(s)David Foster, Steve Lukather, Fee Waybill[a 1]
Producer(s)David Foster
The Tubes singles chronology
"Don't Want to Wait Anymore"
(1981)
"Talk to Ya Later"
(1981)
"Sports Fans"
(1982)

"Talk to Ya Later" is the second single released from the 1981 album The Completion Backward Principle by American rock band The Tubes. It has remained one of the band's most popular songs despite its rather modest chart performance.

Background

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"Talk to Ya Later" was the last song recorded for the album and was composed without input from most of the band's members, though they did participate in the recording process.[3] The main guitar riff was created by Toto guitarist Steve Lukather, while the title and chorus were thought up by lead singer Fee Waybill.[4]

The title is derived from an expression uttered by recording engineer Humberto Gatica. When members of the band would occasionally press him about work in the studio, his response oftentimes was to casually dismiss them with the phrase.[3]

The way the song was created, with its title originating before the music and lyrics, coincidentally matches the concept of the album. It is based on a tactic invented by a motivational speaker from the 1950s named Stanley Paterson, which involved visualizing the final product before even beginning the process of creating it. The technique was called "The Completion Backward Principle."[4]

Music video impact

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The song was an early example of MTV's efficiency in selling records. The network launched shortly after the release of "Talk To Ya Later" on August 1, 1981, when very few American radio stations were playing songs by the Tubes. In the months following the channel's debut, the band aired a music video on it[5], causing a surge in sales in the midwest, where MTV was first popular.

This is further supported by the fact that the song was not popular in major markets like New York or Los Angeles, where MTV had not yet been available. The network used this information to convince record companies to make music videos to promote their artists, which many subsequently did.[4]

Chart history

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Chart (1981) Peak
position
US Bubbling Under Hot 100 (Billboard) 101
US Top Rock Tracks (Billboard)[6] 7

References

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  1. ^ Talk To Ya Later (single). The Tubes. Hollywood, California: Capitol Records. 1981. CL-201
  2. ^ The Completion Backward Principle (album). The Tubes. Hollywood, California: Capitol Records, Inc. 1981. SOO-12151
  3. ^ a b https://vinyldialogues.com/VinylDialoguesBlog/the-tubes-enthusiastically-moving-forward-with-the-completion-backward-principle-tour/
  4. ^ a b c https://www.songfacts.com/facts/the-tubes/talk-to-ya-later
  5. ^ The Tubes (March 13, 2009). "The Tubes - Talk To Ya Later". YouTube.com. Archived from the original on 2021-12-12. Retrieved June 18, 2025.
  6. ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20190702160954/https://www.billboard.com/music/the-tubes/chart-history/hot-mainstream-rock-tracks

Notes

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  1. ^ Album and single releases credit the song to the whole Tubes band, in addition to Foster and Lukather.[2]