Shakin' All Over

"Shakin' All Over" is a song originally performed by Johnny Kidd & the Pirates.[1] It was written by leader Johnny Kidd, and his original recording reached No. 1 on the UK Singles Chart in August 1960.[2] Kidd's recording was not a hit outside of Europe. In other parts of the world the song is better known by recordings of other artists.

"Shakin' All Over"
Single by Johnny Kidd & the Pirates
B-side"Yes Sir, That's My Baby" (Donaldson/Kahn)
ReleasedJune 1960 (UK)
Format7"
RecordedAbbey Road, 13 May 1960 (9 June 1959 "Yes, Sir")
GenreRhythm and blues, rock and roll
Length2:15
LabelHMV POP 753 (UK)[1]
Songwriter(s)Johnny Kidd, Guy Robinson[1]
Producer(s)Walter Ridley[1]
Johnny Kidd & the Pirates singles chronology
"You Got What It Takes"
(1960)
"Shakin' All Over"
(1960)
"Restless"
(1960)

In 1964, a band from Plattsburgh, New York called the Twiliters recorded a live version but it did not chart. A version by Chad Allan and the Expressions, later known as The Guess Who, was recorded in December 1964. It reached #1 in Canada in the spring of 1965,[3] #22 in the US and #27 in Australia.

Normie Rowe's 1965 version reached No. 1 in Australia as a double A-side with "Que Sera Sera".

History

Johnny Kidd version

The musicians who performed on the recording were Johnny Kidd (vocals), Alan Caddy (guitar), Brian Gregg (bass), Clem Cattini (drums) and Joe Moretti (lead guitar). Kidd was quoted as saying:

When I was going round with a bunch of lads and we happened to see a girl who was a real sizzler, we used to say that she gave us 'quivers down the membranes'. It was a standard saying with us referring to any attractive girl. I can honestly say that it was this more than anything that inspired me to write "Shakin' All Over".[4]

The Twiliters version

The Twiliters, a band from Plattsburgh, New York, recorded "Shakin' All Over" live, in early 1964, before a crowd at a local skating rink called "Rollerland".[5] Bill Kennedy, the leader of the group, had been stationed in Germany in the Air Force and had heard several songs from the UK that he wanted to record. It was released on Empire Records E-4 and gained some regional success. On the flip side was a song called "Rollerland" that was recorded by at least two other acts.

The Guess Who version

The song gained more fame after it was recorded in Winnipeg, Canada in December 1964 by a group called Chad Allan and the Expressions. The group's record label Quality Records credited the artist on the label as "Guess Who?" in an attempt to disguise the group's origin. The label thought the record would be better received if the group were thought to be a British Invasion act. The actual name of the group was revealed a few months later, but radio DJs continued to announce the artists as "Guess Who?". This prompted the group to change their name to The Guess Who. In the spring of 1965 the record became a #1 hit in Canada. This version was also a #22 hit in the United States.[6] The song would later rechart in the U.S., reaching #102 in 1975.[7]

Normie Rowe version

The Guess Who's version also became a #27 hit in Australia, but another version became a national #1 hit in late 1965 for Normie Rowe. Rowe's version (backed by "Que Sera Sera") was one of the biggest-selling singles of the decade in that country. Rowe had recorded his take on the song before The Guess Who, and based his release on a 1962 version by Johnny Chester.

The Who version

"Shakin' All Over"
Song by the Who
from the album Live at Leeds
Released16 May 1970
Recorded14 February 1970
GenreHard rock
Length4:20
Label
Songwriter(s)Johnny Kidd
Producer(s)

The song has been performed many times by The Who, starting in the 1960s, (sometimes in a medley with "Spoonful"). The best known performances were at Woodstock in 1969 and on Live at Leeds in 1970. In Randy Bachman's autobiography, he says that when he met Who bass player John Entwistle, he was told that people constantly got The Who and The Guess Who mixed up. Tired of being yelled at for not playing the song, the Who started playing it just to keep the crowd happy. Bachman responded that the Guess Who had the same reasons for playing "My Generation". Entwistle, a fan of 1950s and 1960s rock and roll and rockabilly music, also performed the song with his solo band and incorporated a bass solo into the middle of the song, accompanied only by his drummer Steve Luongo.

The Head Cat version

The Head Cat also recorded this song in their second studio album released in 2011 Walk the Walk...Talk the Talk.

  • The Guess Who version was included in the Battlefield Vietnam soundtrack. It can also be heard in the 2006 Edie Sedgwick biopic, Factory Girl. The Guess Who version was also featured in a Hugo Boss XY and XX Fragrance commercial, featuring Jonathan Rhys Meyers and Bette Franke.
  • The song was referenced in a 1975 song by The Guess Who titled "When The Band Was Singin' 'Shakin' All Over'".
  • "Shakin' All Over" was featured several times in the UK TV series Heartbeat (1992 - 2007) (usually the version by Johnny Kidd and the Pirates) and in the first ever episode of the UK TV series The Royal on 19 January 2003.
  • Shakin' All Over is the name of a CBC Television documentary on Canadian rock music in the 1950s and 1960s.
  • The song is featured in the Mr. Bean episode "Mind the Baby, Mr. Bean".
  • A version by Wanda Jackson appears during the end credits of Bridesmaids, as taken from her album The Party Ain't Over (2011).
  • The album Sea of Tears by Eilen Jewell includes the track.

References

  1. Rice, Jo (1982). The Guinness Book of 500 Number One Hits (1st ed.). Enfield, Middlesex: Guinness Superlatives Ltd. pp. 52–3. ISBN 0-85112-250-7.
  2. Johnny Kidd & the Pirates, "Shakin' All Over", Chart Position, Retrieved March 5, 2015
  3. The Guess Who, "Shakin' All Over" Canadian Chart Position, Retrieved March 5, 2015
  4. Einarson, John (January 22, 2017). "Record company's gimmick launched Guess Who's career". Winnipeg Free Press. Retrieved August 9, 2017.
  5. "Home". Twiliters.com. Retrieved 2015-09-06.
  6. The Guess Who, "Shakin' All Over", U.S. Chart Position, Retrieved March 5, 2015
  7. Joel Whitburn's Bubbling Under the Billboard Hot 100 1959-2004
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