Oops Upside Your Head

"I Don't Believe You Want to Get Up and Dance (Oops!)"

The cover of the U.S. 12" single[1]
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)
Released 1979
Format 7" single
12" single
Recorded 1979
Genre Funk
P-Funk
Length 3:29 (7")
8:39 (12")
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
"Steppin' (Out)"
(1979)
"I Don't Believe You Want to Get Up and Dance (Oops!)"
(1979)
"Party Lights"
(1979)
Alternate 12" single artwork, as released in Holland. The cover is a derivative of The Gap Band II's artwork. The B-side was "The Boys Are Back in Town".[2]
Alternate 7" single artwork, as released in France.[3]

"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.

Contents

Structure

P-Funk Influence

Nursery Rhyme Allusions

Legacy

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]

Sampling

The song was sampled several times,[7]: especially during in 1990s G-Funk era:

Football chants

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.

References