All evening I have had this song in my head. I was sure I hadn’t played it here, and made a note of it so that I wouldn’t forget this brilliant idea (me? forget? surely I jest!) Only to discover that yes, I played this one in July 2019. Well, guess what? You’re getting a redux, for I am exhausted and when I asked my brain to choose another song, it gave me the finger, grumbled, and went back to sleep. So, Martha and the Vandellas it is, even if I did already play it!
I hope you’re in the mood for a bit of something upbeat tonight, for I am greatly in need of what I think of as ‘happy music’, which often leads me to Motown, and tonight is no exception.
This song was written by Motown songwriters Marvin Gaye, Ivy Jo Hunter, and William “Mickey” Stevenson. It became the biggest hit and trademark song for Martha & the Vandellas. According to the song’s co-writer Mickey Stevenson, the idea for dancing came to him while riding with Marvin Gaye through Detroit. During the summer, the city would open up fire hydrants and let the water out in the streets so they could play in the water to cool off. They appeared to be dancing in the water. I actually remember one city I lived in as a child doing that … opening the fire hydrants on hot summer days!
Martha Reeves was the leader of the group. Back in the early days, she was trying to get her foot in the door at Motown, but they wouldn’t even give her an audition, so she applied for and got a job as secretary. Part of her secretarial duties was singing lyrics to new songs onto tapes so backup singers could learn the words. This led to fill-in work as a backup singer, where she impressed Motown executives with her voice. She convinced them to hire her friends, Annette Sterling and Rosalind Ashford, and thus was born Martha and the Vandellas! After backing up Marvin Gaye on some of his songs, Motown gave them songs to sing on their own, including the hit Heat Wave.
Martha Reeves told the story behind this song …
“Marvin Gaye had recorded ‘Dancing in the Street” when I first heard it, and he had put a real smooth vocal on there, sort of like (jazzy singing) ‘Calling all around the world, are you ready for a brand new beat baby?’ and for some reason, Marvin said, “let’s try this song on Martha.” I was in the office and they let me hear the song, but I couldn’t quite feel it that way. I had been to Rio De Janeiro, I had travelled to New Orleans during Carnival time, so I just knew it had to be somewhere about dancing in the street. I said, ‘Can I sing it the way that I feel it?’ And they said, ‘Go ahead.’
So, I sang it (singing on the beat) ‘calling all around the world are you ready for a brand-new beat,’ and, they loved it. There was all kinds of congratulatory hand slaps and ‘hey man, we got a hit in that window up there,’ and the engineer, Lawrence Horn, looked and said, ‘I didn’t turn the machine on.’
I had to sing it again. So, the second time I sang it, there’s a little bit of anger there because I had to repeat it. It was a straight performance and that’s why it sounds live. I think that’s the secret of the success of the hit – the fact that I had to do it again, and I did it without a mistake or without any interruption, and the feeling was just right on that song.”
The song took on a different meaning when riots in inner-city America led to many young black demonstrators citing the song as a civil rights anthem to social change which also led to some radio stations taking the song off its play list because certain black advocates such as H. Rap Brown began playing the song while organizing demonstrations.
The British press aggravated Reeves one time when someone put a microphone in her face and asked her if she was a militant leader. The British journalist wanted to know if Reeves agreed, as many people had claimed, that Dancing in the Street was a call to riot. To Reeves, the query was patently absurd. ‘My Lord, it was a party song,’ she remarked.
Like many a Motown hit, this song has been covered by many, including The Mamas and The Papas, Val Halen, Grateful Dead, David Bowie & Mick Jagger as a duet, and many more. But to me, Martha and the Vandellas own this one.
Dancing in the Street
Martha and the Vandellas
Calling out around the world,
Are you ready for a brand new beat?
Summer’s here and the time is right
For dancing in the street.
They’re dancing in Chicago,
Down in New Orleans,
In New York City.
All we need is music, sweet music.
There’ll be music everywhere.
There’ll be swinging and swaying and records playing,
Dancing in the street.
Oh, it doesn’t matter what you wear,
Just as long as you are there.
So come on, every guy, grab a girl.
Everywhere around the world
They’ll be dancing.
They’re dancing in the street.
It’s an invitation across the nation,
A chance for folks to meet.
There’ll be laughing, singing, and music swinging,
Dancing in the street.
Philadelphia, P.A.
Baltimore and D.C. now.
Can’t forget the Motor City.
All we need is music, sweet music.
There’ll be music everywhere.
There’ll be swinging and swaying and records playing,
Dancing in the street.
Oh, it doesn’t matter what you wear,
Just as long as you are there.
So come on, every guy, grab a girl.
Everywhere around the world
They’re dancing.
They’re dancing in the street.
Way down in L.A. ev’ry day,
They’re dancing in the street.
(Dancing in the street.)
Let’s form a big, strong line, get in time,
We’re dancing in the street.
(Dancing in the street.)
Across the ocean blue, me and you,
We’re dancing in the street.
Songwriters: Marvin Gaye / William Stevenson / Ivy Hunter
Dancing in the Street lyrics © Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC, Carlin America Inc
Yes!!
LikeLiked by 2 people
😊
LikeLiked by 2 people
This song i a statement, and i love em so much.Thank you for sharing, Jill! Without your song gifts i would be forced to hear only this very new music, sounds like working in a car factory.Lol
LikeLiked by 2 people
I’m glad you liked it! Ha ha … that’s about the best description I’ve heard of today’s music! I cannot even listen to it! But then, I remember my parents saying the same about my music back in the 60s! 😉
LikeLiked by 2 people
Lol – Thats true, i remember having heard the same from our elder ones.
LikeLiked by 3 people
You know I love the Mamas and the Papas, well even they could not lift the crown from Martha Reeve’s head on this one.
Ctch
LikeLiked by 1 person
Wow! I’m glad you liked it so much! Your favourite Mamas & Papas tune is _____________?
Cwtch
LikeLiked by 1 person
Probably Monday Monday
Cwtch
LikeLiked by 2 people
I was going to play that for you this morning, but I just played it in July, so I chose another that I hope you’ll like.
LikeLiked by 3 people
Jill, this is a terrific and fun song. Keith
LikeLiked by 3 people
I’m so glad you liked it!
LikeLike
Life was so hopeful back then. We didn’t have block parties as such in Winnipeg, but then we did not have tenement buildings the way they had in American cities. Still, knowing people could go outside with a music source playing loud and attract teens to an impromptu party, that was real life. By the end of the 60s, everything had changed.
LikeLiked by 3 people
It was, or so we thought, simpler back then. In truth, it wasn’t, but we were young and ignorant and didn’t know any better.
LikeLike
A classic and I remember the Bowie/Jagger cover
LikeLiked by 2 people
Oooohhhh … I don’t think I was aware of that one, or if I was, I’ve since forgotten (my brain isn’t what it once was).
LikeLiked by 1 person
😎
LikeLiked by 1 person
Always worth playing again.
LikeLiked by 3 people
Agreed!
LikeLike
A pop classic from my youth! As a Brit, I have to say that my favourite version is….Martha Reeves 😊
LikeLiked by 4 people
Awesome! I’m so glad you liked this one! I am a huge fan of Motown and you’ll see songs like this quite often here.
LikeLiked by 2 people
I’ll keep coming back for more, then. I was born in 1953 so the Sixties, and its string of great Motown hits, were my formative years.
LikeLiked by 2 people
I was born two years before you, and like you, grew up on Motown! Your favourite artists?
LikeLiked by 3 people
In those days, I’d say Stevie Wonder, Marvin Gaye, Isley Brothers, Smokey Robinson, Temptations. But as I got older my taste turned away from pop, and I’ve been into rock, folk and singer-songwriter since then. Motown Chartbusters 3 still gets an occasional virtual dusting and playing though – what an album!
LikeLiked by 2 people
You’ll find that Stevie Wonder and Lionel Richie are my ‘go-to’ guys when I need a pick-me-up! As well as all the others you mentioned and more, like the Four Tops. I try to play a mix, and I don’t mind requests — rule of thumb, if somebody requests a song and I like it, I’ll play it, otherwise I’ll conveniently ‘forget’. 😉
LikeLiked by 2 people
You sound just like a dancehall DJ! I’ve known a few who operated along those lines 😂
LikeLiked by 2 people
Ha ha … yep, that’s me! 😊
LikeLiked by 2 people