What'cha Gonna Do

"What'cha Gonna Do" is a song by British R&B girl group Eternal. It was the lead (and only) single from their final studio album Eternal, and subsequently their last single before they split. It was the only single released from the group as a duo (consisting of Easther & Vernie).

"What'cha Gonna Do"
Single by Eternal
from the album Eternal
Released18 October 1999
FormatCD single
Recorded1999
GenreR&B
Length4:09
LabelEMI
Songwriter(s)Easther Bennett, Vernie Bennett
Producer(s)Troy Taylor, Charles Farrar
Eternal singles chronology
"Angel of Mine"
(1997)
"What'cha Gonna Do"
(1999)
Alternative Cover
UK CD2

Release

"What'cha Gonna Do" was released as a CD single on 18 October 1999. The single managed to chart at Number 16 on the UK Singles Chart making it their only single not to reach the Top 15. It also managed to peak at No.29 in Japan, No.30 on the Dutch Top 40 & No.34 in Sweden. "What'cha Gonna Do" also peaked at No.84 in Germany.

Music video

The music video is very different from Eternal's previous videos. The video is set out in a desert at night, the desert appears to be on a different planet as the girls float around through parts of the video. Easther and Vernie are seen in numerous outfits throughout the song and they also take part in a dance routine. At the end of the video the girls fly up to camera and sing the last line of the song, "Aint nowhere to run, when He's looking for you...", the video ends abruptly and the screen turns black.

Track listings

UK CD single
  1. "What'cha Gonna Do"
  2. "We're Not Making Love Anymore"
  3. "Got to Be the One"
UK mixes single
  1. "What'cha Gonna Do" (The Beatmasters Remix)
  2. "What'cha Gonna Do" (Masters At Work Remix)
  3. "What'cha Gonna Do" (Lisa Marie Experience Remix)
  4. "What'cha Gonna Do" (Characters Remix)

Charts

Chart (1999) Peak
position
scope="row"Belgium (Ultratip Flanders)[1] 10
scope="row"Belgium (Ultratip Wallonia)[2] 8
scope="row"Germany (Official German Charts)[3] 84
scope="row"Netherlands (Dutch Top 40)[4] 30
scope="row"Netherlands (Single Top 100)[5] 50
scope="row"Scotland (Official Charts Company)[6] 29
scope="row"Sweden (Sverigetopplistan)[7] 34
scope="row"UK Singles (Official Charts Company)[8] 16
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