Sally Can't Dance
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Sally Can't Dance | ||
Studio album by Lou Reed | ||
Released | 1974 | |
Recorded | March 18, 1974-April 26, 1974 | |
Genre | Rock | |
Length | 32:58 | |
Label | RCA | |
Professional reviews | ||
---|---|---|
Lou Reed chronology | ||
Rock n Roll Animal (1974) |
Sally Can't Dance (1974) |
Lou Reed Live (1975) |
- Sally Can't Dance is also the name of a character in the movie Con Air.
Sally Can't Dance is a Top 10 album by Lou Reed, released in 1974, Reed's highest-charting album.
Includes the title song, "NY Stars" (that poked fun at "fourth-rate imitators" who tried to impress him by copying his style), "Kill Your Sons" (a harrowing reflection of his stay in a psychiatric hospital at his parents' insistence, during his teen years), and "Billy," about the fate of a schoolmate with more 'normal' ambitions than he'd had. The latter track reunited Reed with erstwhile Velvet Underground bandmate Doug Yule, playing bass.
While the record was a hit and elevated Reed's status as a pop star, he reportedly was disappointed in the album's production (in which he took a largely passive role) and the treatment of the songs. "It seems like the less I'm involved with a record, the bigger a hit it becomes. If I weren't on the record at all next time around, it might go to Number One."
His record company, RCA Records, insisted on a rapid follow-up album, while his career appeared to be peaking. Tiring of the pressure put on him, and with his contract requiring RCA to release whatever record he gave them, Reed handed over the master tape of Metal Machine Music - an hour of feedback and noise, with no hope of becoming a hit.
[edit] Track listing
- "Ride Sally Ride"
- "Animal Language"
- "Baby Face"
- "N. Y. Stars"
- "Kill Your Sons"
- "Ennui"
- "Sally Can't Dance"
- "Billy"