I Can't Dance To That Music You're Playing
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"I Can't Dance To That Music You're Playing" is a 1969 funk-soul single by Motown girl group Martha and the Vandellas. The song nearly returned the group to the top 40 on the pop singles chart peaking at number forty-two on the pop singles chart and reaching number twenty-four on the R&B singles chart. It's notable for featuring additional background vocals by the likes of The Andantes (who had been in a succession of Vandellas singles since "My Baby Loves Me") and Syreeta Wright, who had recently signed to the Motown label and was dating Motown artist Stevie Wonder, at the time. The song talked about how one woman's musician boyfriend leaving her with questions about how he was running off without giving the woman a hint of what he was exactly doing. Rumor has it that Reeves had a disliking to the song because she felt the writer, Deke Richards, one-fourth of the 1970s Motown collaborative group, The Corporation, had spied on her diaries though Reeves would later say that the reason why the chorus was sung by Wright and not by Reeves was because she and the Vandellas had a conflicting touring schedule. She is heard singing in the end of the song with Wright and the Andantes however.
[edit] Credits
- Lead vocals by Martha Reeves
- Additional lead vocals by Syreeta Wright (on the chorus)
- Background vocals by Sandra Tilley, Sandra "Lois" Reeves and The Andantes: Marlene Barrow, Jackie Hicks and Louvain Demps
- Written by Deke Richards & Debbie Dean
- Produced by Deke Richards