Following the release of
Thriller and most of its singles, "Say Say Say" was released on 3 October 1983 by
Parlophone in the UK and
Columbia Records in the US. It remained atop
Billboards Hot 100 for six weeks and became Jackson's seventh top ten hit of 1983, breaking a record that until then was held jointly by the Beatles and
Elvis Presley. As of 2023, it remains McCartney's final number one single on the Hot 100, either in a group or solo. Also in the US, "Say Say Say" reached number two on the
R&B chart (behind "
Time Will Reveal" by
DeBarge) and number three on the
Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks chart.
Billboard also stated that the recording earned "top spot as Jackson's best-performing Hot 100 chart single" after leading the US charts for six weeks. Although the song had peaked at number ten in the UK, it began to fall steadily; McCartney subsequently held an early weekday live television interview, where he discussed the song's music video. This, along with screenings of the video on
Top of the Pops (which normally played only singles that were rising in the charts),
The Tube and
Noel Edmonds'
The Late, Late Breakfast Show, helped propel the song to number two on the
UK Singles Chart. "Say Say Say" reached number one in Norway and Sweden, and the single also reached the top ten in Austria, Australia, New Zealand, the Netherlands, and Switzerland. "Say Say Say" received mixed reviews from
music critics. The lyrics were named the worst of 1983 by
The Buffalo News's Anthony , while the
Lexington Herald-Leader stated in a review of
Pipes of Peace that, aside from "Say Say Say" and "The Man", "McCartney waste[d] the rest of the album on
bathos and whimsy". The
Los Angeles Times Paul Grein also reviewed the McCartney album and opined that the singer had redeemed himself with the success of the "spunky" song "but plunged back into wimpdom with '
No More Lonely Nights'". Journalist Whitney Pastorek compared the song to McCartney's 1982 duet with
Stevie Wonder, "
Ebony and Ivory". She asserted that "Say Say Say" was a better song, and had a better "though slightly more nonsensical" music video, adding that the song had no "heavy-handed social content".
Penn State's
The Daily Collegian described the track as a good song, despite its
ad nauseam broadcasts. In a
Rolling Stone review, the track was described as an "amiable though vapid dance groove". The reviewer, Parke Puterbaugh, added that it was an "instantly hit-bound froth-funk that tends, after all, toward banality". Music critic
Nelson George stated that "Say Say Say" would not have "deserved the airplay it received without McCartney and Jackson".
Salon.com later described the song as a "sappy duet" and said that McCartney had become a "wimpy old fart" to the music public.
Billboard listed "Say Say Say" as Michael Jackson's all-time biggest
Hot 100 single. In a 2007 article, a writer for the magazine
Vibe listed "Say Say Say" as the 22nd greatest duet of all time. The writer commented that the song was "a true falsetto fantasy" and that it was "still thrilling to hear the sweet-voiced duo trade harmonies on the chorus". In 2005, Dutch musicians
Hi Tack sampled "Say Say Say" on their debut single, "
Say Say Say (Waiting 4 U)". The song featured Jackson's vocals from the original recording, plus McCartney's "Baby".
2015 version On 6 October 2015, McCartney released a new version of the song in which the vocal roles of him and Jackson are reversed. It was remixed by Steve Orchard and
Mark "Spike" Stent. On the new version, which is over three minutes longer than the original, the opening of the first verse is sung by Jackson instead of McCartney. Orchard said of the remix: "Paul remembered that there were two unused lead vocal performances by Michael and himself. We rearranged the vocal sequence and inverted the original performance so that Michael opened the first verse instead of Paul, to give the song a different take to the original version." More specifically, Jackson sings the parts that McCartney had in the original, and vice versa, for much of the song. The track appears on the 2015 re-issue of
Pipes of Peace. A radio edit of the new remix was released for streaming on 30 October 2015, while an instrumental version of it is available for download at . The radio edit was also later included on the compilation
Pure McCartney. To coincide with the release of the recording, McCartney released a new music video on his
Facebook page on 6 October 2015. Directed and choreographed by
Ryan Heffington, it featured a group of young dancers, filmed in black and white in Los Angeles neighbourhoods, with moves that are reminiscent of Michael Jackson's. == Personnel ==