Shake Your Hips | |
Artist: | Slim Harpo |
Type: | single |
B-Side: | Midnight Blues |
Recorded: | February 1966 |
Studio: | J. D. Miller, Crowley, Louisiana |
Genre: | Blues |
Label: | Excello |
Producer: | J. D. Miller |
Prev Title: | Baby Scratch My Back |
Prev Year: | 1965 |
Next Title: | I'm Your Bread Maker, Baby |
Next Year: | 1966 |
"Shake Your Hips" (sometimes known as "Hip Shake") is a song written by Louisiana bluesman Slim Harpo. He recorded it in February 1966 for producer J. D. Miller for a follow-up single to his hugely successful "Baby Scratch My Back". Miller's Excello Records released it as a single in June 1966 and in October, the song became the lead track for Slim Harpo's 1966 album Baby Scratch My Back, which was a long-term release in Excello's catalogue.[1]
Slim Harpo biographer Martin Hawkins describes it as a "dance-instruction song [with a] fast-paced, hypnotic shoeshine beat".[1] He notes contributions by Lazy Lester on percussion and Katie Webster on organ.[1]
A June 18, 1966, "Spotlight Singles" review in Billboard magazine included "Harpo follows up his hit 'Baby Scratch My Back' with two blues-based sides. Dance-teaching tune is backed by a solid blues weeper with harmonica backing".[2] The review predicted that the single would reached the top 60 of the magazine's Hot 100 singles chart,[2] however, it stalled at number 116 on the Bubbling Under Hot 100 Singles chart for July 23, 1966. Hawkins notes "It seems that 'Shake Your Hips' was a more influential disc than its chart position indicated, and it sold widely over a long period".[1]
Shake Your Hips | |
Artist: | the Rolling Stones |
Album: | Exile on Main St. |
Genre: | Blues rock |
Label: | Rolling Stones Records |
Producer: | Jimmy Miller |
The Rolling Stones recorded the song for their album Exile on Main St.. It was Mick Jagger's idea to record it for the album. The Stones recorded this in London, but reworked it at Keith Richards' villa in the South of France, where the band was staying on their "exile." It was recorded to sound like a '50s record.
The song has been recorded by many artists,[3] including Love Sculpture for their 1968 album Blues Helping.[4] Other renditions include those by the Legendary Shack Shakers on Cockadoodledon't (2003)[5] and Joan Osborne on Bring It On Home (2012).[6]