"'''Don't Leave Me This Way'''" was
covered by American singer
Thelma Houston in 1976. Originally assigned to
Diana Ross, it was intended to be the follow-up to her 1976
single "
Love Hangover", but was given to Houston instead. Following the release of Houston's fourth album,
Any Way You Like It (1976), a
Boston DJ record pool unanimously reported positive audience response to "Don't Leave Me This Way" in
discothèques, and the song was selected for release as a single. Houston's version topped the US soul singles chart and, nine weeks later, the
Billboard Hot 100 for one week in April 1977. The song peaked at number 13 in the UK. Later in the year, it was featured on the soundtrack to the film
Looking for Mr. Goodbar. In 1978, Houston won the award for
Best R&B Vocal Performance, Female at the
20th Annual Grammy Awards for her rendition of the song.
Recording Thelma Houston recorded her vocals at Motown's
West Hollywood studio under producer
Hal Davis; he aggressively
compressed her voice and allowed a slight amount of distortion at the loudest peaks. The instrumental
hook in the chorus and outro was supplied by bass guitarist Henry E. Davis, who performed with many passing notes and occasional disco-style octave jumps. Motown house drummer
James Gadson provided a four-on-the-floor disco beat locking his kick with Davis's bass.
Congas are present in the mix, and a booming
floor tom is overdubbed into the chorus. A disco
string section included violins, violas, cellos and harp.
Arthur G. Wright arranged the strings, and played an out-of-tune electric guitar, while John Barnes played electric
Rhodes piano—the Suitcase model with its stereo
panning effect. Layered backing vocals were sung by the Waters Sisters,
Maxine and
Julia. A lengthy outro section introduced an active
Clavinet funk line and
tambourine.
Legacy Houston's version was revived in 1995 in several remixes, which reached No. 19 on the US
Billboard dance chart and No. 35 in the UK. In 2020,
Slant Magazine ranked it No. 8 in their "The 100 Best Dance Songs of All Time". In 2021,
Rolling Stone included "Don't Leave Me This Way" in their list of "500 Best Songs of All Time" at No. 355, while in 2022, the magazine ranked it No. 121 in their "200 Greatest Dance Songs of All Time". In 2025,
Billboard ranked it No. 55 and No. 19 in their lists of "The 100 Best Dance Songs of All Time" and "The 100 Greatest
LGBTQ+ Anthems of All Time".
Charts Weekly charts Year-end charts ==The Communards version==