Move Your Body (Marshall Jefferson song)
"Move Your Body" is a 1986 house music song by Marshall Jefferson and released by Trax Records. The track was the first to be released under Jefferson's own name, following several earlier house music tracks he made under aliases such as Virgo. After making several popular tracks to tape and giving them to Chicago-based DJ Ron Trent, Jefferson released his first track "Go Wild Rhythm Tracks" on Trax Records and later became an A&R in 1986. Despite negative reception from his co-workers and Trax owner Larry Sherman, Jefferson's track "Move Your Body" became popular with patrons of Chicago dance music clubs in 1985 from cassette tapes, leading to the tracks eventual release in August 1986.
"Move Your Body" | |
---|---|
Single by Marshall Jefferson | |
Released | June 1986 |
Genre | Chicago house |
Length | 7:38 |
Label | Trax |
Songwriter(s) | Virgo |
Producer(s) | Virgo |
"Move Your Body" opens with a piano chord and is among the earliest house music tracks to feature piano. The music recorded for the song was originally played much slower during the recording process and sped up by Jefferson for its final release. Outside Jefferson's involvement, the song features an uncredited vocal performance from his friend Curtis McClain that feature lyrics revolving ones enthusiasm and losing themselves in house music.
Background
In 1985, Marshall Jefferson worked a post office and went to a music store with his friend who was a guitarist.[1] Jefferson was a fan of rock music, specifically noting bands such as Black Sabbath, Led Zeppelin and Deep Purple, stating he "bought the records with every penny [he had]." as well as attending the Music Box club in Chicago.[1][2] At the store, a salesperson came up to him and showed him the Yamaha 284 synthesizer telling him it could play it like a professional keyboard player even if you never had lessons.[1] Jefferson received a line of credit from his work and not only bought the sequencer along with a keyboard, drum machine and a mixer which totalled up to around $9,000.[1] Jefferson took the equipment home and wrote his first song two days later.[1] This equipment would also be used for making "Move Your Body".[2]
Jefferson described the music as he played as being dance music that he felt would "sound right at the Music Box" despite not being able to attend due to working late hours at the post office.[1] Derrick Harris, a friend of Jefferson's known as Sleezy visited him and asked for a cassette copy of the song Jefferson had created.[1][2] Sleezy took Jefferson's music to the Music Box club where the DJ Ron Hardy would play, which led to Sleezy returning to Jefferson stating how popular his music had gotten at the club.[1] This led to Jefferson completing more tracks leading to Jefferson proclaiming he had "like 15 songs playing in the Music Box".[1] Lawrence eventually connected with Ron Hardy and continued to give him cassettes of his work, including tracks stated in an interview in 2005 that "were never put out."[1]
Jefferson began developing records after looking at Jesse Saunders record and went to the address on the Trax Records and Precision Records labels.[1][3] On meeting with Larry Sherman of Trax, he helped release Jefferson's first record of "Go Wild Rhythm Tracks" as Virgo.[3] Jefferson spoke negatively about his work with Sherman, stating "it just fucked my head all the way up!" and later declared that Sherman "was like heading everybody off and stuff and trying to fuck them up, and make them quit the music business because he knew it was easy to make the music!"[3] Jefferson explained that Sherman was predominantly keeping a low profile and worked with smaller labels distributors as he did not want a lot of attention brought to him as he was running a "chop shop" above Trax Records, a place where stolen cars were torn apart and had spare parts sold from them which was where Sherman larger profits came from.[2] By 1986, Jefferson was the head of A&R for Trax Records.[2]
Production
For "Move Your Body", Jefferson stated he wanted to have something on the track that would "drive the rack forward" and felt that a piano would do this.[2] The song was developed with minor chords which Jefferson found easier to perform.[2] Jefferson called two of his friends who were co-workers at the post office, Thomas Carr and Rudy Forbes, who went into the studio with him to make the record which Jefferson estimated had travel time, recording and mixing took about five or six hours.[2] To play the piano intro, Jefferson recalled that he recorded the keyboards at about forty to forty-five beats per minute then sped it up.[4] Jefferson did this for other tracks as well, such as playing the bassline at 40 beats per minute and then speeding it up to 122 beats per minute.[5] To make it sound natural and not mechanically sped up, Jefferson linked the notes up and know how much I was going to lengthen each one by to be able to fit them together, which Jefferson commented that he "learned how to do that on the fly, too, because I had to."[5] The vocals on "Move Your Body" were performed by Jefferson's friend Curtis McClain.[2]
Jefferson was very enthusiastic about the track but his friends told him it was awful and it needed to be fixed, a reaction that surprised Jefferson.[2] Jefferson received similar reactions to the track from his friends Mike Dunn, Tyree Cooper and Hugo Hutchinson who merely said that the track was OK.[2] In August 1985, Jefferson took the track to Ron Hardy who was very enthusiastic about it and when Jefferson attended the Music Box it was played six times in a row to an enthusiastic crowd.[2]
Music
In his book Inner Sound: Altered States of Consciousness in Electronic Music and Audio-visual Media, Jonathan Weinel described the track as a Chicago house track began with piano chords over a 4
4 time signature.[6] The track contains vocals declaring "Gimmie that house music to set me free / Lost in house music is where I wanna be" with a refrain of "Move Your Body / Rock Your Body".[6] Weinel noted that the lyrics celebrate the "ecstatic revelry and physicality of losing oneself in dance" while critic Simon Reynolds reflected that "the social scene of Chicago house was one in which gay black men were able to find liberating communal experience of dance in response to their status as exiles from mainstream culture."[6] Weinel reflected on this noting that these themes extended to other Chicago house tracks such as Joe Smooth's "Promised Land" and Fingers Inc.'s "Can You Feel It".[6]
Release
Despite having pressed the track early, "Move Your Body" was not released initially by Trax as Larry Sherman did not like, with Jefferson recollecting that Sherman proclaimed it not to be house music.[2] This response led to Jefferson adding the phrase "The House Music Anthem" to the title of the track.[2] British journalists came to Chicago to report on the house music phenomenon which led to Sherman taking them to about five clubs with each DJ playing "Move Your Body" to a positive reaction which led to the track being released by Trax.[2] It was released by Trax in June 1986 with Jefferson commenting that "It probably never would have come out but it had gotten so big in all the clubs in Chicago."[2]
The label for the record listed Marshall Jefferson as the artist on the record opposed to his alias of Virgo as the creator which Jefferson reflecting that it "basically screwed up my Virgo nickname for the rest of my life because it was my biggest hit and I had to use Marshall Jefferson from then on. And it was a shame because I used to love that Virgo nickname. Everywhere I went people would be like “Virgo! Virgo! Virgo!” to me. But in one fell swoop, he wiped out my nickname. [laughs] Man! I really wish I’d had a nickname!"[2] The track would be released under various alterations of the title, such as its subsequent releases on DJ International Records such as "Move Your Body — House Music Anthem".[7] This version was a longer track, with Jefferson feeling that he “stupidly thought I could do a better version in a big studio".[7] In 2005, Jefferson stated he received no publishing cheques from any of his songs including "Move Your Body", despite having paid the money to have "Move Your Body" pressed to vinyl.[3] The rights to the track were eventually owned by Jefferson himself in 2012.[7]
Impact and legacy
The Guardian featured it on their A history of modern music: Dance in 2011.[8] LA Weekly ranked it at number 10 in their list of The 20 Best Dance Music Tracks in History in 2015.[9]
Track listing
12" single (TX117)[10]
- "Move Your Body" – 7:38
- "Dub Your Body" – 7:30
- "Drum Your Body" – 5:40
- "House Your Body" – 7:38
Credits
Credits adapted from the singles label sticker.[10]
- Marshall Jefferson (as Virgo) – producer, arrangements, composer
- Ron Hardy – mixing
References
Footnotes
- Lawrence 2005, p. 3.
- Doran 2013.
- Lawrence 2005, p. 4.
- Brewster & Broughton 2014, p. 330.
- Martin 2016.
- Weinel 2018, p. 82.
- Tantum 2017.
- "A history of modern music: Dance". The Guardian. Retrieved October 10, 2020.
- "The 20 Best Dance Music Tracks in History". LA Weekly. November 11, 2015. Retrieved October 10, 2020.
- The House Music Anthem (label). Marshall Jefferson. Trax Records. 1986. TX117.CS1 maint: others (link)
Sources
- Brewster, Bill; Broughton, Frank (2014). Last Night a DJ Saved My Life: The History of the Disc Jockey (Updated and Revised ed.). Grove Press. ISBN 0802146104.
- Doran, John (October 21, 2013). "Respect Due: Marshall Jefferson Interviewed". The Quietus. Archived from the original on August 17, 2020. Retrieved August 17, 2020.
- Lawrence, Tim (2005). Can You Jack? Volume 2: Chicago Acid & Experimental House 1985-1995 (liner notes). Soul Jazz Records. SJR LP111 VOL2.
- Martin, Lauren (August 4, 2016). "Marshall Jefferson Still Sounds Like the Future". Red Bull Music Academy. Retrieved August 17, 2020.
- Tantum, Bruce (November 9, 2017). "Marshall Jefferson "Move Your Body"". Insomiac. Archived from the original on August 17, 2017. Retrieved August 17, 2020.
- Weinel, Jonathan (2018). Inner Sound: Altered States of Consciousness in Electronic Music and Audio-visual Media. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0190671181.