The second of two great 45s (about 15 years apart) involving Sylvia Vanderpool Robinson, credited as "Sylvia", after her semi-legendhood as half of "Mickey and Sylvia" in the early days of rock and roll; the song was a 70s classic, a lazy, soft-soul soliloquy that was great pillow-talk mood music. She would gain even more fame at the end of the decade, as a co-owner of Sugar Hill Records, even, for a time, owning a piece of Chess Records, thanks to the burgeoning popularity of rap, and Sugar Hill's burgeoning cashflow.