"I Don't Believe You Want to Get Up and Dance (Oops!)" | ||||||||||
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The cover of the U.S. 12" single[1] |
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Single by The Gap Band | ||||||||||
from the album The Gap Band II | ||||||||||
B-side | "Party Lights" "The Boys Are Back in Town" (Holland) None (France) |
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Released | 1979 | |||||||||
Format | 7" single 12" single |
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Recorded | 1979 | |||||||||
Genre | Funk P-Funk |
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Length | 3:29 (7") 8:39 (12") |
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Label | Total Experience/Mercury | |||||||||
Writer(s) | Ronnie Wilson, Rudy Taylor, Robert Wilson, Lonnie Simmons & Charlie Wilson. | |||||||||
Producer | Lonnie Simmons | |||||||||
Certification | Gold | |||||||||
The Gap Band singles chronology | ||||||||||
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"I Don't Believe You Want to Get Up and Dance (Oops!)", (titled "Oops Upside Your Head" on the single), is a 1979 funk anthem recorded by the R&B group The Gap Band and released off their fourth album, The Gap Band II.
The single was released in several countries in different formats. In America, it was a 12" with the B-side being "Party Lights". In Holland, the 12 B-side was "The Boys Are Back in Town". In France, the single was a 7" with no B-side.
The single became an international hit for the group upon its late 1979 release, though it failed to reach the Billboard Hot 100 (peaking at number-one on its Bubbling Under Hot 100 chart), the song hit the top ten on the US R&B and disco charts and became a big-seller overseas where it peaked at number six in the UK and number six in the Netherlands.
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The song is said to be one of the first songs to use hip-hop-styled monologues in a song. The song's success broke ground for the group, who would go on to become a successful R&B outfit throughout the 1980s. Today, it remains a popular song in the Gap Band's stable to this day.
In the UK, this song is typically "danced" to by sitting on the floor in rows and performing a rhythmic "rowing" action. The origin of this unusual dance, unique to this track, is unknown, but is very widely seen. It was especially popular during the 1980s.[5][6]
The song was sampled several times,[7]: especially during in 1990s G-Funk era:
In the 2000s, the song was adopted towards the end of the domestic football season by supporters of various British football clubs in danger of relegation: on winning a crucial match or securing themselves from relegation to a lower league, fans would sing 'We are staying up/Say we are staying up' to the song's tune. A previous chant in the 1980s had been "You'll get a boot wrapped 'round your head" to opposing fans.