Shake It (Iain Matthews song)

"Shake It"
Single by Ian Matthews
from the album Stealin' Home
B-side "Stealin' Home"
Released December 1978
Format 45 RPM
Recorded 1978
Genre Soft rock [1]
Length 3:10
Label Mushroom Records
Songwriter(s) Terence Boylan
Producer(s) S. Robertson & I. Matthews
Ian Matthews singles chronology
"Tigers Will Survive"
(1977)
"Shake It"
(1978)
"Give Me An Inch"
(1978)

"Tigers Will Survive"
(1977)
"Shake It"
(1978)
"Give Me An Inch"
(1978)

"Shake It" is the title of a hit single by Ian Matthews: released in November 1978 the track would reach the Top 20 of the Billboard Hot 100 in February of 1979.

Background

The song's composer Terence Boylan had introduced "Shake It" on his 1977 self-titled album on which Timothy B Schmit sang background on eight of the nine tracks including "Shake It" which track also featured guitarist Al Kooper. [2] Not chosen for US single release, Boylan's "Shake It" was given a 4 November 1977 single release in Ian Matthews' native UK: however Matthews had been living in the US since 1973, and it was on an FM radio station in Seattle that he first heard Boylan's "Shake It". After Matthews phoned the radio station for info on the track the disc jockey sent him a copy of the Terence Boylan album from which Matthews would "cover" two songs: "Shake It" and "Don't Hang Up Your Dancing Shoes", for his album Stealin' Home, [3] recorded in the summer of 1978. [4] Concurrent with his Top 40 success with "Shake It", Matthews would tell Rolling Stone: "I don’t think I did anything different [to record a hit single]. I guess it's my reward. After all, I've been doing exactly what I want for 14 or 15 years." [5] However Matthews would later acknowledge that on Stealin' Home "I tried to add just a couple of songs that had Top 40 potential, without compromising the rest of the material [and the album] did precisely what it was supposed to do: it raised my profile, without lowering my credibility." [6]

Recorded at Chipping Norton Recording Studios in the West Oxfordshire town of Chipping Norton, Stealin' Home was the result of Matthews' first UK recording sessions since 1973 [4] but in the opinion of Mark Deming of AMG, Matthews on Stealin' Home "dove headfirst into a polished pop sound that made the one-time British folkie sound like a member of the LA Mellow Mafia. [Though] recorded in Oxfordshire, 'Stealin' Home' re-created the meticulously crafted sound of West Coast pop with impressive accuracy." [7] Alan Mckay of MusicRiot.co.uk concurs that "with great session players, tasteful (bordering on minimal) FM radio-friendly arrangements and lyrics dealing with American themes [plus] a singer with a plaintive high tenor voice" it's obvious that "the album was aimed squarely at the American market". [8] McKay further opines: "The theme running through the album was the failure of the American dream...Matthews picked out songs about the party set, car fanatics and sports groupies to form the backbone of this album. It's a melancholy album because it looks back at the unfulfilled promise of American lives in the same way that Bob Seger did with songs like 'Hollywood Nights" and 'Night Moves' and Jackson Browne did with 'The Pretender'." [8]

One of two tracks on Stealin' Home to feature Mel Collins on sax, "Shake It" was issued as the album's lead single to become Matthews' first Top 40 hit reaching a Hot 100 peak of #13 within a 19-week Hot 100 tenure. [9] "Shake It" was especially popular in New England, reaching #2 in Springfield, Massachusetts (WAQY) and #3 in Bangor, Maine (WLBZ). [10] The year-end tally for Hot 100 hits of 1979 would rank "Shake It" at #73. Matthews' only previous Hot 100 ranking had been a 1972 remake of "Da Doo Ron Ron" (#96) but he had become well-known as the frontman for the band Matthews Southern Comfort who in 1971 had reached #23 on the Hot 100 with their version of "Woodstock": "Shake It" would remain Matthews' only Top 40 hit as a solo act, the second single from the Stealin' Home album: the Robert Palmer composition "Give Me an Inch", peaking at #67 and proving Matthews final Hot 100 entry. (The Boylan composition "Don't Hang Up Your Dancing Shoes", the third single release off Stealin' Home afforded Matthews' his final appearance on a Billboard chart, peaking at #42 on the magazine's Easy Listening hit ranking, where "Shake It" had reached #21 and "Give Me an Inch #43). [11]

Although "Woodstock" had afforded Matthews Southern Comfort a three-week tenure at #1 in the UK in 1970 Matthews would never appear on the UK chart as a solo act despite a string of UK single releases, including "Shake It" in February 1979. "Shake It" would afford Matthews a Top Ten hit in Canada, peaking at #6: [12] the track had been especially popular in New Brunswick, reaching #1 on CIHI in Fredericton. [10] "Shake It" would also a Top 20 hit in New Zealand, [13] and would chart in Australia with a #65 peak.

Use in media

"Shake It" is heard at the beginning of the 1980 movie Little Darlings: (Ian Matthews quote:) "The first I knew about the song being in the movie was when it came out and a friend called to ask if I’d heard it." [3] The song can also be heard on the radio in the game The Warriors from Rockstar Games.

Chart performance

References

  1. Eric Shea (1993-12-01). "Orphans & Outcasts: A Collection Of Demos by Iain Matthews". Rhapsody. Retrieved 2014-05-05.
  2. http://www.sessiondays.com/2014/01/terence-boylan-terence-boylan/
  3. 1 2 http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mike-ragogna/solo-concerts-stealin-hom_b_5734150.html
  4. 1 2 Billboard vol 90 #31 (5 August 1978) p. 78
  5. Jancik, Wayne (1990). The Billboard Book of One-Hit Wonders. NYC: Watson-Guptill/Billboard Books. p. 355. ISBN 9780823075300.
  6. http://omnivorerecordings.com/press-release-iain-matthews-stealin-home/
  7. http://www.allmusic.com/album/stealin-home-mw0000651429
  8. 1 2 http://musicriot.co.uk/index.php?s=%22ian+matthews%22
  9. "Artist-Title Main Search Page". Music.ttoilleb.com. Retrieved 2014-05-05.
  10. 1 2 http://las-solanas.com/arsa/charts_item.php?srt0=t40_tw&lttl=181&hsid=9198&srt1=chartweek
  11. http://www.musicvf.com/Ian+Matthews.art
  12. "Item Display - RPM - Library and Archives Canada". Collectionscanada.gc.ca. Retrieved 2014-05-05.
  13. http://nztop40.co.nz/chart/singles?chart=2832
  14. http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/rpm/028020-119.01-e.php?&file_num=nlc008388.0125a&type=1&interval=50&PHPSESSID=ghhtnqvr0or90ijg711aqt4rk1
  15. http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/rpm/028020-119.01-e.php?&file_num=nlc008388.0112&type=1&interval=50&PHPSESSID=ghhtnqvr0or90ijg711aqt4rk1
  16. http://nztop40.co.nz/chart/singles?chart=2832
  17. Joel Whitburn's Top Pop Singles 1955-1990 - ISBN 0-89820-089-X
  18. Cash Box Top 100 Singles, February 24, 1979
  19. http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/rpm/028020-119.01-e.php?file_num=nlc008388.6855a&brws_s=&type=1&interval=50&PHPSESSID=5cuikrl3481gl63p9fpqqgnfa3
  20. "Top 100 Songs of 1979 - Billboard Year End Charts". Bobborst.com. Retrieved 2014-05-05.
  21. Cash Box Year-End Charts: Top 100 Pop Singles, December 29, 1979
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