Alan O'Day composed scores for some B movies in the 1960s. In 1971 he became a songwriter for Warner Brothers Music. He wrote hit songs for other artists such as Helen Reddy, Bobby Sherman, Cher, and the Righteous Brothers. In 1977, Warner Brothers Music decided to form a special label for their composers who also performed. O'Day was the first artist signed, and his first release was "Undercover Angel."

The song, which O'Day described as a "nocturnal novelette," was released without fanfare in February 1977. Within a few months, it had become #1 in the US, even without an album to support it. O'Day said about the experience, "It's wonderful when you find out what feels right, and then it also feels right to other people. That's a songwriter's dream."

The song begins with a man commiserating his loneliness, when a woman suddenly appears in his bed, and encourages him to make love to her. The rest of the song describes his feelings about her, then he discovers she must leave him, and he is saddened. She tells him to "go find the right one, love her and then, when you look into her eyes you'll see me again."

He then explains that was his story, as apparently he has been singing this song to a woman whom he is trying to seduce, and how he wants to look in her eyes to see if she is the reincarnation of the angel he found.

#1 Back in 1977 - How about today?

More From 98.7 WFGR