Get Down On It

Album: Something Special (1981)
Charted: 3 10
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Songfacts®:

  • If you're looking for a song imploring all those wallflowers out there to get on the dance floor and join the fun, you've found it here. The title, "Get Down On It," is a variation on "get down," a popular saying in the '70s and '80s meaning to boogie. It was popularized in the 1975 KC & The Sunshine Band hit "Get Down Tonight." Kool & the Gang used it even before that, though. In their 1973 hit "Jungle Boogie," they repeat "Get down, get down" over and over.
  • Like many songs about expressing yourself on the dance floor, you can find a deeper meaning in "Get Down On It." Outside the confines of the club, it becomes an inspirational message urging us to actively participate in life - if you really want it, you have to get down on it. If you're looking to find your groove, you have to put yourself out there. How you gonna do it if you really won't take a chance?

    This deeper message in a dance song is something Earth, Wind & Fire is famous for. Check out "Let's Groove" for a good example.
  • Peaking at #10 in the US, "Get Down On It" was a substantial hit for Kool & the Gang, but far from their biggest (that, of course, is "Celebration"). The song, though, has multi-generational appeal and has endured as one of their most-streamed tracks.

    In 2024 it got a boost when it was used in episodes of The Bear ("Napkins") and The Simpsons ("Cremains Of The Day"). That year, Kool & the Gang were inducted into the Rock And Roll Hall of fame and played the song in a medley of their hits.
  • Movies to use "Get Down On It" include:

    80 For Brady (2023)
    The Nice Guys (2016)
    Tammy (2014)
    The Firm (2009)
    This Christmas (2007)
    Legally Blonde (2001)
    200 Cigarettes (1999)
    The Man (1998)
  • Kool & the Gang were led by the brothers Ronald Bell and Robert "Kool" Bell. The group wrote songs together, but Ronald was the musical director and often spearheaded the songwriting. That was the case here. After listening to a lot of reggae, he came up with the bass groove and put the track together. When he played it in rehearsal, lead singer J.T. Taylor perked up, so they developed the song. Ronald often used popular argot for titles and hooks, and he came up with "get down on it" while they were brainstorming.
  • In the early '80s, disco was dead but funk added keyboards and morphed into songs like "Get Down On It." Another group that embraced this sound was The Gap Band, who used it on hits like "Early In The Morning" and "You Dropped A Bomb On Me."
  • Kool & the Gang started out as a jazz group but were a funk outfit by the time they released their debut single (also called "Kool & the Gang") in 1969. They had some big hits in the early '70s when funk was all the rage, led by Sly & the Family Stone. During this time, they didn't have a true lead singer and didn't need one - the grooves could carry the songs. But after some down years, they realized they needed a guy to truly front the band, and they found one in J.T. Taylor. His debut was on the 1979 track "Ladies Night," which made them hit-makers again. After "Get Down On It," the group smoothed the edges even further and found mellow gold with songs like "Fresh" and "Cherish." Taylor left the group in 1988 to embark on a solo career.

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