"Get Down" | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Single by Gilbert O'Sullivan | ||||
from the album I'm a Writer, Not a Fighter | ||||
B-side | "A Very Extraordinary Sort of Girl" | |||
Released | 9 March 1973[1] | |||
Recorded | 1973 | |||
Length | 2:39 | |||
Label | MAM | |||
Songwriter(s) | Gilbert O'Sullivan | |||
Producer(s) | Gordon Mills | |||
Gilbert O'Sullivan singles chronology | ||||
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Audio | ||||
"Get Down" on YouTube |
"Get Down" is a song by Irish singer-songwriter Gilbert O'Sullivan, from his 1973 album I'm a Writer, Not a Fighter. Released as a single, it spent two weeks at the top of the UK Singles Chart in April 1973,[2] was also a number-one hit in Ireland for three weeks and was a top-ten hit in the United States and Canada. The song was originally used by O'Sullivan as a piano warm-up tune,[3] but was eventually extended into a full song and released as a single; O'Sullivan recorded and released the song as a change from his more melancholy pieces.
Believed to be an order from O'Sullivan to his dog ("Get Down!"), the singer is actually referring to a girl in the song behaving as a dog jumping on him, hence the request to "get down".[4]
The distinctive electric piano riff was performed by Laurie Holloway.
In 2006 British dance group Malibu Sneakers recorded a dance version of the song entitled "Get Down Again".[5] In 2008 it was released as a vinyl 12", including a vocal remix by Raul Rincon.[6]
The song was used in the 2013 film The Harry Hill Movie.[7]
According to Rick Finch of KC and the Sunshine Band, the song was the inspiration for the 1975 disco hit "Get Down Tonight".[8]