Days Go By (Dirty Vegas song)

Coordinates: 34°01′06″N 118°08′43″W / 34.018291°N 118.145361°W / 34.018291; -118.145361

"Days Go By"
Single by Dirty Vegas
from the album Dirty Vegas
Released April 30, 2001
Recorded 2001
Genre House
Length 7:07 (album version)
3:33 (single edit)
Label Capitol
Writer(s) Victoria Horn, Steve Smith
Dirty Vegas singles chronology
"Days Go By"
(2001)
"Ghosts"
(2002)

"Days Go By" is a 2001 song by the British electronic band Dirty Vegas from their eponymous album. The song became a radio hit in 2002, peaking at #14 in the United States, and received the Grammy Award for Best Dance Recording. It also peaked at #16 in Dirty Vegas' home country of the United Kingdom [1] "Days Go By" received significant public exposure in a commercial for the 2003 Mitsubishi Eclipse. The album artwork is done by American artist Richard Phillips.[2]

Music video

The music video for the song is unusual in that it largely consists of two dancers representing one character performing a routine of popping, locking, the robot and breakdancing. The performance occurs in front of Chroni's Famous Sandwich Shop in East Los Angeles, California, and tells the story of a dancer who shows up once a year and dances all day from sunrise to sunset. He dances in hopes of bringing back a lost love, who left him because he couldn't stop dancing. (The video even halts abruptly while some of the bystanders interject what they think happened to the aforementioned love.) The young dancer in the video is Garland Spencer. The older dancer is Byron McIntyre. The clue that both men represent the same character at different ages is provided by the dancer's shoes. The older dancer wears high-top Converse sneakers ("Chuck Taylor All-Stars" or "Chucks") that are faded, scuffed, and one shoe is actually taped to hold it together; whereas the young dancer wears a clean, bright-orange version of the same sneakers. According to the video's story, the man's lost love purchased the original sneakers for him as a gift, and now he wears them as part of his annual dance ritual. The sneakers match the style and attire of the young dancer in his sweatsuit (presumably in the 1980s), but pose a striking contrast for the older dancer who is otherwised attired in a suit, tie, and suspenders.

There are two versions of the music video; one has three of the onlookers observing from the restaurant while the other replaces those shots with shots of the same onlookers in a silver Mitsubishi Eclipse sitting at a stoplight. In addition to the replaced shots, the Eclipse version of the video includes footage of the approach to and departure from the stoplight. The implication in the Eclipse version is that the onlookers within the automobile arrived at the stoplight in the morning and remained in that same spot watching the dance ritual all day, before leaving the stoplight at sunset.

Official versions

Appearances in popular culture

Chart positions

Chart (2002) Peak
position
Belgium (Ultratip Flanders)[3] 14
Canada (Nielsen SoundScan)[4] 6
Ireland (IRMA)[5] 28
New Zealand (Recorded Music NZ)[6] 27
Switzerland (Schweizer Hitparade)[7] 97
United Kingdom (The Official Charts Company) 16
U.S. Billboard Hot Dance Play[4] 1
U.S. Billboard Hot 100[4] 14
Preceded by
Janet Jackson
for All For You
Grammy Award for Best Dance Recording
2003
Succeeded by
Kylie Minogue
for Come Into My World
Preceded by
"Soak Up the Sun" by Sheryl Crow
Billboard Hot Dance Club Play number-one single
June 8, 2002
Succeeded by
"Hella Good" by No Doubt

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, October 25, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.