Originally recorded by Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes, with Teddy Pendergrass singing lead vocals, the song had a somewhat unconventional structure, starting subdued and building slowly to a climax.[2] The title track from their 1975 album, the song spent two weeks at number one on the Hot Soul Singles chart in early 1976. It also enjoyed success on the pop charts, peaking at number 12 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart,[3] number 34 Easy Listening, number 33 in Canada, and number 23 in the UK Singles Chart.[4] They performed the song on Soul Train on November 22, 1975.[5]
"Wake Up Everybody" was covered in 1995 by British singer Sonia. It was produced by Steve Levine for her fourth studio album Love Train - The Philly Album (1998). The song was released as the album's first and final single. This single has two B-sides - "Show You the Way to Go" and "Nowhere Left to Hide". The first B-side appears on Sonia's fourth studio album. This was Sonia's last single until "Fool for Love" in 2009.
In 2004, a cover version was released to coincide with the 2004 presidential election. It features a collection of music stars who urge young people to go out and vote. The song was produced by Babyface, and features various prominent R&B singers and rappers. It was an airplay-only single. Missy Elliott's song "Wake Up" from her album This Is Not a Test! was sampled on this recording. It reached number 19 on the BillboardBubbling Under R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart.[7]
The song was covered by American singer and actor Nick Scotti. Released as the first single from his self-titled 1993 album, Scotti's version of the song reached #9 on the BillboardHot Dance Club Play chart in May of that year.[8]
A version of the song appears during the opening credits of the 1999 film Life.
A version of the song appears during the closing credits of the 5th episode of the 2023 TV series 'Hijack'.
The song was covered by the cast of the musical drama series Star. Their version sampled vocals by Harold Melvin & The Blue Notes & Teddy Pendergrass from the original version.
Keb' Mo' covered this song on his album "Peace - Back By Popular Demand"
A version of the song was used in the Wu-Tang Clan song "A Better Tomorrow."
French hip hop group Alliance Ethnik used the song as a sample for the song "Wake Up" on their 1999 album "Fat Comeback".[10]
Version by John Legend and The Roots featuring Common and Melanie Fiona