"Waiting for a Star to Fall" is a song by American pop music duo Boy Meets Girl, written by the duo's members, Shannon Rubicam and George Merrill. They wrote the song after witnessing a falling star at a Whitney Houston concert and originally offered the song to Houston, but Arista Records CEO Clive Davis rejected it. American singer Belinda Carlisle then recorded a demo of the song but refused its inclusion on her 1987 album Heaven on Earth, so Rubicam and Merrill decided to record and release the song themselves.

"Waiting for a Star to Fall" was released in June 1988 as the lead single from Boy Meets Girl's second studio album, Reel Life (1988). The song became a chart hit in several countries, reaching number five on the US Billboard Hot 100, number one in Canada, number five in Ireland, and number nine in the United Kingdom. Since its release, it has been remixed and covered by many artists, including Cabin Crew and Sunset Strippers, who experienced concurrent success with their reworkings in 2005.

Background

"Waiting for a Star to Fall" was written by Shannon Rubicam and George Merrill, and was inspired by an actual falling star that Rubicam had seen during a Whitney Houston concert at the Greek Theatre in Los Angeles. The duo did not initially consider recording the song themselves, instead submitting it to Arista's CEO Clive Davis, in the hope that he would decide to use it on Houston's second studio album, Whitney. Even though Rubicam and Merrill had written Houston's previous hit "How Will I Know", Davis rejected "Waiting for a Star to Fall", suggesting that it did not suit her. This then inspired Merrill and Rubicam to create Houston's 1987 hit "I Wanna Dance with Somebody (Who Loves Me)". Meanwhile, "Waiting for a Star to Fall" was then offered to and recorded by Belinda Carlisle for her 1987 release Heaven on Earth, at the insistence of her label, but Carlisle disliked it and refused to include it on the album. This demo version has, however, circulated on an unofficial compilation of that album's outtakes.

The tenor saxophone solo on the Boy Meets Girl version was provided in a session recording early in the career of Andy Snitzer, who later found success as a solo artist.

Release and reception

Merrill and Rubicam decided to record the song themselves for their second album Reel Life. Released as a single on June 10, 1988, it became a hit in the United States, reaching number one on the Billboard Adult Contemporary chart and number five on the Billboard Hot 100. The song also reached number 35 on Australia's ARIA Singles Chart in April 1989.

Music video

The video for the song, directed by Australian director Claudia Castle, features scenes of Merrill and Rubicam singing it on a beach and inside a house. Also featured are scenes of a group of children playing with bubbles, including the couple's young daughter Hilary.

  1. "Waiting for a Star to Fall" – 4:34
  2. "No Apologies" – 4:21

12-inch and CD single

  1. "Waiting for a Star to Fall" – 4:34
  2. "No Apologies" – 4:21
  3. "Restless Dreamer" – 4:33

1991 7-inch single

:A. "Waiting for a Star to Fall"

:B. "The Three Men Rap" (by Tom Selleck, Steve Guttenberg, and Ted Danson)

1991 12-inch and CD single

  1. "Waiting for a Star to Fall"
  2. "The Three Men Rap" (by Selleck, Guttenberg, and Danson)
  3. "Goodnight Sweetheart Goodnight aka Goodnight It's Time to Go" (by Selleck, Guttenberg, and Danson)

Personnel

Personnel are lifted from the Reel Life liner notes.

  • George Merrill – writing, piano, synthesizers, bass, drum programming
  • Shannon Rubicam – writing
  • Susan Boyd – additional vocals
  • John Goux – guitar
  • Joe Mardin – "crowning touch"
  • Denny Fongheiser – drums
  • Michael Jochum – drums
  • Andy Snitzer – alto saxophone

Charts

Weekly charts

{|class="wikitable sortable"

|+Weekly chart performance for "Waiting for a Star to Fall"

!Chart (1988–1989)

!Peak<br/>position

|-

|-

|-

|Canada Retail Singles (The Record)

|align="center"|1

|-

|Canada Top Singles (RPM)

|align="center"|2

|-

|Europe (Eurochart Hot 100)

|align=center|37

|-

|Iceland (Dagblaðið Vísir)

|align="center"|2

|-

|-

|Italy Airplay (Music & Media)

|align="center"|4

|-

|-

|-

|-

|-

|-

|US CHR/Pop Airplay (Radio & Records)

|align="center"|7

|-

|}

{|class="wikitable"

|+1991 chart performance for "Waiting for a Star to Fall"

!Chart (1991)

!Peak<br/>position

|-

|}

Year-end charts

{|class="wikitable"

|+1988 year-end chart performance for "Waiting for a Star to Fall"

!Chart (1988)

!Position

|-

|Canada Top Singles (RPM)

|align="center"|87

|}

{|class="wikitable sortable"

|+1989 year-end chart performance for "Waiting for a Star to Fall"

!Chart (1989)

!Position

|-

|Canada Top Singles (RPM)

|align="center"|93

|-

|US Billboard Hot 100

|align="center"|12

|-

|US Adult Contemporary (Billboard)

|align="center"|13

|}

Certifications

Release history

{|class="wikitable plainrowheaders"

|+Release dates and formats for "Waiting for a Star to Fall"

!scope="col"|Region

!scope="col"|Date

!scope="col"|Format(s)

!scope="col"|Label(s)

!scope="col"|

|-

!scope="row"|United States

|June 10, 1988

|

|rowspan="4"|RCA

|

|-

!scope="row" rowspan="2"|United Kingdom

|November 14, 1988

|

|

|-

!scope="row"|Japan

|January 21, 1989

|Mini-CD

|

|}

Covers and remixes

The song has been covered and remixed several times. The most commercially successful versions came in 2005, when Australian musical group Cabin Crew remixed the song as "Star to Fall" (or "Star2Fall") but were refused the sampling of the original lyrics by Sony BMG. Liking what Cabin Crew had done, however, George Merrill agreed to re-record the vocals. Meanwhile, Sony BMG had British musical group Sunset Strippers remix the original track under the title "Falling Stars". Both versions peaked within the top five of the UK Singles Chart in March 2005.

Charts

{|class="wikitable sortable"

|+Weekly chart performance for "Star to Fall"

!Chart (2005)

!Peak<br/>position

|-

|-

|Australian Club Chart (ARIA)

|align="center"|4

|-

|-

|-

|-

|Europe (Eurochart Hot 100)

|align="center"|16

|-

|-

|-

|-

|-

| Hungary (Editors' Choice Top 40)

|align="center"| 28

|-

|-

|Ireland Dance (IRMA)

|align="center"|1

|-

|-

|-

|-

|-

|-

|-

|-

|}

{|class="wikitable"

|+Year-end chart performance for "Star to Fall"

!Chart (2005)

!Position

|-

|Australian Club Chart (ARIA)

|align="center"|38

|-

|UK Singles (OCC)

|align="center"|80

|}

{|class="wikitable sortable"

|+Weekly chart performance for "Falling Stars"

!Chart (2005)

!Peak<br/>position

|-

|-

|Australian Club Chart (ARIA)

|align="center"|34

|-

|-

|-

|-

|Europe (Eurochart Hot 100)

|align="center"|10

|-

|-

|-

|Ireland Dance (IRMA)

|align="center"|1

|-

|-

|-

|-

|}

{|class="wikitable"

|+Year-end chart performance for "Falling Stars"

!Chart (2005)

!Position

|-

|UK Singles (OCC)

  • In December 2012, a rock version of the song was released by the band Lionville on their album Lionville II.
  • In December 2013, a stripped back indie version of the song was released by the English band Young Kato. It was featured on the Made in Chelsea soundtrack.
  • Also in December 2013, a folk cover of the song by Icelandic singer Yohanna surfaced on the Internet.
  • In March 2014, a folk cover of the song by English singer Diana Vickers surfaced on the Internet.
  • In September 2017, Australian singer George Maple interpolated the song as part of her single "Hero".
  • On December 31, 2020, the international rock/metal musical project "At The Movies" released a cover version of the song on YouTube.

References

  • Full lyrics at Boy Meets Girl Music Boy Meets Girl Music <!-- Licensed lyrics provider -->