Boogie Oogie Oogie

Album: A Taste of Honey (1978)
Charted: 3 1
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  • Lyrics currently unavailable Writer/s: Janice Marie Johnson, Perry Kibble
    Publisher: MUSIC SALES CORPORATION, Reservoir Media Management, Inc., Warner Chappell Music, Inc.

Comments: 13

  • The Lady That Sings For Blues from Heyheyhey, HeyvilleToby Van Buren from New York, Ny:

    That really WAS a nice story and memory, I (quite unintentionally) visualized parts of it as I read it!!!!! GOD bless you my friend, in The Lord God Jesus Christ 's love and in His name friend!! Ciao!

    Speaking of Big Band, I actually was just listening to ONE song from that era just now!!! Maybe right before this song!!!

    -The Lady that Sings for Blues
  • Melinda from AustraliaI so love this song. Glad to see here I’m not the only one who gets real nostalgic when they hear this song. Toby I get ya.
    1978 what a year.
    For me, it brings back memory’s of High School Discos. And sunbaking in my parents backyard with my transistor radio.
    No one cared about skin cancer then.
    U just sunbathed ..or ‘sun baked’ as we called it.
    The aim was to lie in the sun for ages.
    Life was way simpler then.
    One thing I do remember about this song. It was the 1st time I rang a radio station . It was a guessing competition. And the answer was this song, Boogie Oogie Oogie.
    I felt so stupid sayin that on radio.
    It was new. But I knew it was a really solid good track. And was obsessed in it. I was annoyed we didn’t own a copy of the single.
  • Letrice from New York, NyFrom reading a Pandora bio, I learned that this tune, which I've loved for years, is not only sung by ladies, but played by them too!! I do have one correction for the above information. It was Janice Marie Johnson(vocals, bassist), not Hazel Payne (vocals, guitarist) that created the catch line that has since become the beginning line of Boogie Oogie Oogie and Janice sang lead . I learned that from a YouTube interview with Janice Marie. Now that I know what I'm listening to, I can really tell. If you listen close, You hear Janice sing when it goes into the bass solo, "...listen to my bass play". I'm in love with this tune even the more....very inspiring. I just thought I'd make that point.
    Thanks.
  • Camille from Toronto, OhYes, the famous bass intro: muy fabuloso!!!!! Combine that with the perfect vocals and chorus line: We gonna boogie oogie oogie till you just can't boogie no mo'!!!!! And then the bass throughout. One of the best disco songs of the era, and still fun to listen to now.
  • Dodge from Casper, WyThe band is named after the Herb Alpert and Tijuana Brass song and album, "A Taste Of Honey". Ironically, the band was signed to Capitol and not Alpert's co-founded A & M label.
  • Mark from Monterey, CaBoogie Nights was by Heatwave
  • Reed from New Ulm, MnLet's not forget "Boogie Nights"...is that by the same artist Taste of Honey?
  • Jane from Austin, TxToby,
    That was a very touching comment/story about your dad. Thanks for sharing.
  • John from This City, AustraliaGet down boogie oogie oogie.I just love it and you too.
  • Donna from College Station, TxThis song was No. 2 Oct 1978 Pop Singles list, source Billboard list of hits from 10 years ago Oct 8, 1988
  • Toby Van Buren from New York, NyI always liked "Boogie Oogie Oogie" (even though I am really a BIG BAND fan), from the time it came out, but as of April 27, 1979, it had much more meaning to me, as even yet today. Let me explain:

    Well, first of all, I must tell you my dad died September 9, 1987, age 77 years and 77 days exactly - eight and a half years after April 27, 1979, and "Boogie Oogie Oogie" is one of two songs I will always remember him by - the other one - from "Over the Top", with Sylvester Stallone - "Meet Me Halfway"? I think that's the name of the song.

    Okay. My dad lived on Vieques Island, Puerto Rico (the island of the Navy controversey), from 1978 to his death in 1987. From 1976 to 1978, he lived on the island of Tortola, British Virgin Islands. I need to say this before I go on re "Boogie Oogie Oogie".

    April 27, 1979 was my second trip down to visit my dad in the Islands. We met in San Juan, PR at the main airport there, then flew in an old DC-3 prop to St. Thomas, Virgin Islands. (My dad wanted to take me to Tortola the next day for me to see where he lived, meet an old drinking pal friend - Harry, etc. We then went to the Pineapple Beach area at the northeast end of St. Thomas, where my cousin had a condo the two of us could stay at. We had a few Heinekens, tunafish sandwiches, got rather drunk!

    We took a walk down to the beach, sat out in beachchairs along the Caribbean, the waves lapping the shoreline, keels in evidence in the waters. I turned on my cassette tape recorder, recording our conversation. I was glad I did that, as I still play it today, over and over. It's really rather funny, both of us being drunk, carrying on conversation, laughing, etc., remembering old times, people.

    Suddenly in the background, coming from a restaurant with an outdoor section, dance floor (no one on the dance floor yet - perhaps two couples, later), etc., was the sound of music, played by a combo, an organist, etc. It was very 'island' like - of the Caribbean. Maybe we heard three or four numbers, but when they played, "Boogie Oogie Oogie" the way they did, one of the longest versions of it I'd ever heard, it just went so well with everything - the 'scene' - the coming night, temperatures just right, I dressed in shorts, a sleeveless shirt - my dad more or less the same, minus the sleeveless shirt. It was so good, it is still good today!

    This is why I love this song so much - "Boogie Oogie Oogie".

    As for "Meet Me Halfway"? In 1987, after I'd visited my dad for the last time in April (he died September 9th, as I told you), I went to see the movie "Over The Top" at a San Juan, PR movie theater. I was thinking about my dad, the lovely visit I had with him, our staring at one another for the longest time, as the boat pulled away from the Vieques dock (I decided to take the boat back to Fajardo, then from there a publico and bus to the airport). Did we somehow know it was the last visit? "Meet Me Halfway", above all the other numbers in "Over The Top", stayed with me, my associating it with that last visit with my dad. It was a kind of halfway visit, since I'd not returned to the Caribbean since.

    Sorry this was a LONG comment! Hope it's accepted!
  • Aj from Cleveland, GaI think this was their biggest hit
  • Joe from Oswego, NyA Taste of Honey won best new artist, in 1978, over Elvis Costello.
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