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| Length = | Label = RCA | Writer = | Producer = Tim Pagnotta | Last single="Tightrope" (2012) | This single="Shut Up and Dance" (2014) | Next single="Different Colors" (2015) }} "Shut Up and Dance" (stylized as "SHUT UP + DANCE") is a song recorded by American alternative rock band Walk the Moon for their second studio album ''Talking Is Hard'' (2014). It was written by the band members and songwriters Ben Berger and Ryan McMahon. The song is based on an experience frontman Nicholas Petricca had at a Los Angeles nightclub. His girlfriend invited him to dance, inspiring the title, which he envisioned as an anthem for letting go of frustration and to having fun. The song was digitally released as the lead single from ''Talking Is Hard'' on September 10, 2014. The song became the band's biggest hit single to date, selling over 4 million copies worldwide. It peaked at number 4 on the ''Billboard'' Hot 100 and becoming a number-one hit on the magazine's Alternative Songs chart and the Hot Adult Contemporary chart. Internationally, the song peaked within the top ten of the charts in Australia, Canada, Israel, the Republic of Ireland, United Kingdom, and the United States the top twenty of the charts in New Zealand and Sweden and the top thirty of the charts in the Netherlands. The band has performed "Shut Up and Dance" on ''The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon'', ''Late Night with Seth Meyers'', ''Jimmy Kimmel Live!'' and ''The Ellen DeGeneres Show''. == Background == The song originated between vocalist Nicholas Petricca and guitarist Eli Maiman, who first developed the verse and found something infectious about it.〔 The following weekend, Petricca went to a party named Funky Soul Saturday at The Echo in Echo Park, Los Angeles while feeling frustrated with the writing process. The song is largely based on that night: "We were at the bar, and it was taking forever to get a drink. I was frustrated because there was great music playing and I wanted to be out there," he remembered. His girlfriend, in "a backless dress and some beat up sneaks", abruptly invited him to dance with her, inspiring the song's title.〔 Petricca later went home to work on the song, and incorporated his experiences into the song's lyrics. After creating the song's main refrain, he began picturing himself in high school: an "incredibly uncomfortable, awkward adolescent dude," he imagined the song as "an anthem for the dork who is 100 percent me."〔 In an interview with ''American Songwriter'', he summarized the song's theme as "Encouraging people to let go of whatever it is that’s bothering you and get into your body and out of your head." In terms of the song's music, Petricca highlighted three songs that were instrumental in its creation: "Just What I Needed" (1978) by The Cars, "Hit Me with Your Best Shot" (1980) by Pat Benatar, and "Jessie's Girl" (1981) by Rick Springfield, which he deemed "simple and beautiful and in-your-face rock songs" that captured the sound the band desired. The song is inspired by the music of the 1980s, which the group felt was a time in which "weird" was celebrated, in both music and fashion.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Walk The Moon Celebrate "Goofy" '80s on "Shut Up And Dance" )〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Shut Up and Dance (Walk the Moon song)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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