Boogie Shoes

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"Boogie Shoes"
Boogie Shoes - KC and the Sunshine Band.jpg
Artwork for 1978 Dutch single, also used for 1978 US vinyl single
Single by KC and the Sunshine Band
from the album KC and the Sunshine Band
A-side"I Get Lifted"
ReleasedMarch 1978
Recorded1975
Genre
Length2:17
LabelTK
Songwriter(s)
  • Harry Wayne Casey
  • Richard Finch
Producer(s)
  • Harry Wayne Casey
  • Richard Finch
KC and the Sunshine Band singles chronology
"Keep It Comin' Love"
(1977)
"Boogie Shoes"
(1978)
"Black Water Gold"
(1978)

"Boogie Shoes" is a song by the disco group KC and the Sunshine Band, which first appeared on their 1975 self-titled album. The song became a hit after it appeared on the Saturday Night Fever soundtrack in 1977. It was subsequently released as a single and peaked at number 35 on the Billboard Hot 100 and number 29 on the soul chart in 1978.[2] Before its 1978 release as an A-side, the song was the B-side to the 1976 single "Shake Your Booty".

Structurally, it uses the sixteen-bar blues chord progression. As with several of KC's disco songs, some of the lyrics are playfully suggestive: "I want to do it till the sun comes up / I want to do it till I can't get enough."

In addition to Saturday Night Fever, the song is featured in numerous other films, including No Escape (1994), Mallrats (1995), Boogie Nights (1997), Detroit Rock City (1999), The Wedding Date (2005) as well as the television series Sports Night, Desperate Housewives (both, coincidentally, with star Felicity Huffman dancing to it), Flash Forward, and Pose.

Covers and sampling[]

The song has been sampled by the Bloodhound Gang in the song "One Way" and by Trick Daddy in the song "Take It to da House". Alex Chilton covered "Boogie Shoes" on his 1979 album Like Flies on Sherbert. In 2012, the song was sung by Alex Newell (playing a transgender teen) in the Glee episode "Saturday Night Glee-ver".

Personnel[]

References[]

  1. ^ "KC & The Sunshine Band – Boogie Shoes". Discogs. Retrieved June 18, 2018.
  2. ^ Whitburn, Joel (2004). Top R&B/Hip-Hop Singles: 1942-2004. Record Research. p. 315.
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