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(David Courtney/Leo Sayer)

Leo Sayer
recordings
Warner Bros. WBS 8043 (SAA6689)S
You've heard of singing for your supper: How about dancing for your
dinner? This novelty song was
the first U.S. chart success for Leo Sayer. It chronicles the unusual experience of a weary traveler
who stops in for a bite to eat at a roadside diner and is told he can't eat
until he dances. So much for
small-town hospitality. It
originally appeared on the 1974 release Just
A Boy and was released as a single on 22nd March 1975. It had cracked the U.K. top five
the previous year and managed to crack the Billboard top ten in the
States. Adding to the queer
surrealism of this song is the banjo of Keith Nelson and the slide guitar
of Paul Keogh. Sayer really
hits the rafters when singing the subtitle, in particular, revealing an
impressive vocal range without going falsetto. It is little wonder only a couple of bands have tried to
cover this one. The Greaseball
Boogie Band had a hit with it in the '70s, in spite of the fact that they
changed their name twice between its recording and release. Southern Culture On The Skids
performed it on an episode of The
Drew Carey Show, "Drew Gets Out Of The Nuthouse", which originally
aired on 3rd October 2001.
There is a big dance number in the mental institution, which is not
an ill-fitted setting for this song.
Sources:
1. http://www.answers.com/topic/leo-sayer?cat=entertainment
2. http://www.mp3.com/albums/40399/downloads.html
3. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leo_Sayer
4. http://www.tv.com/the-drew-carey-show/drew-gets-out-of-the-nuthouse/episode/77511/summary.html
5. http://jam.canoe.ca/Music/Pop_Encyclopedia/G/Greaseball_Boogie_Band.html
6. http://nfo.net/calendar/mar22.htm
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