Home | Songs By Year | Songs from 1968


Mony Mony

Buy Mony Mony now from Amazon

First, read the Wikipedia article. Then, scroll down to see what other TopShelfReviews readers thought about the song. And once you've experienced the song, tell everyone what you thought about it.

Wikipedia article




"'Mony Mony'" is a 1968 single by American pop rock band Tommy James and the Shondells, which reached No. 1 in the UK Singles Chart and No. 3 in the U.S. Written by Bobby Bloom, Ritchie Cordell, Bo Gentry and Tommy James, the song has appeared in various film and television works such as the Oliver Stone drama 'Heaven & Earth'.[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0107096/soundtrack?ref_=tt_ql_trv_7 'Heaven & Earth' Soundtrack] Retrieved February 7, 2015 It was also covered by English singer-songwriter Billy Idol in 1981. Idol's version, which took in more of a rock sound, became an international top 40 hit and additionally revived public interest in the original garage rock single. In 1986 it was covered by Amazulu, who gave it a ska rendition.

Tommy James and the Shondells version



Background and release

"Mony Mony" was credited to Tommy James, Bo Gentry, Ritchie Cordell and Bobby Bloom. The song's title was inspired by Tommy James' view of the "M.O.N.Y." sign atop the Mutual of New York Building on the New York City skyline from his Manhattan apartment. As James said in a 1995 interview in 'Hitch' magazine:

"Mony Mony" was the only song by the group to reach the top 20 in the United Kingdom; it reached No. 1 in the UK, No. 3 on the Hot 100 and No. 1 on WLS, two years to the day after the similarly sounding title "Monday, Monday" reached No. 1 there. A music video was made featuring the band performing the song amidst psychedelic backgrounds. A decade and a half later, it would receive some play on MTV.

Track listings and format

* 'Vinyl'

# "Mony Mony" 2:45

# "One Two Three and I Fell" 2:32

Chart performance



Billy Idol version



{{Infobox song

| name = Mony Mony (Live)

| cover = Mony Mony Live.jpg

| alt =

| caption =

| type = single

| artist = Billy Idol

| album = Vital Idol

| B-side = Shakin' All Over

| released = September 21, 1987 (UK)

| recorded = 1985

| venue =

| genre = Dance-rock

| length = 4:00

| label = Chrysalis

| writer =

* Tommy James

* Bo Gentry

* Ritchie Cordell

* Bobby Bloom

| producer = Keith Forsey

| prev_title = Soul Standing By

| prev_year = 1987

| next_title = Cradle of Love

| next_year = 1990

| misc =

}}

Background and release

British rock artist Billy Idol released a cover version in 1981 (on the 'Don't Stop' EP). Along with the track "Baby Talk", Idol's version of "Mony Mony" went to No. 7 on the Billboard dance chart. A live recording of the song became a hit for Idol in 1987 as well, while promoting his then-forthcoming compilation work 'Vital Idol'. The live version was released as a single and went to No. 1 on the 'Billboard' Hot 100, coincidentally displacing Tiffany's cover of another Tommy James song, "I Think We're Alone Now", from the top spot. It also finished directly behind the Tiffany song at No. 19 in the 1987 year-end 'Billboard' chart.

Idol's version gave rise to an interesting custom. When the song was performed live in concert or played at a club or dance, people would shout a certain formulaic (and usually obscene) variation of a particular phrase in the two measures following each line, for example, "Hey, say what get laid get fucked!" Or "Hey, motherfucker get laid get fucked!" This led to the song being banned at high-school dances across North America, although the custom continues at Idol concerts & sporting events today. It became so widespread that Idol would eventually commit the lyrics to record in the "Idol/Stevens Mix" of the song on the 2018 remix album 'Vital Idol: Revitalized.'

Idol revived interest in the original garage rock song. The full studio version can be found on Idol's 'Greatest Hits' compilation album, a 2001 Capitol Records release. That album has received positive critical reviews, with Idol's cover of the James tune specifically praised.

Uses in popular culture

The song was sampled by Australian Seven Network to promote its 1992 (jobs) "Yeah!" campaign. This sample was also used by the Seven-affiliated regional TV network Prime Television (now Prime7).

"Weird Al" Yankovic wrote a parody of this song from his album 'Even Worse', entitled "Alimony" (based on the live Idol version, complete with a live audience). It is about a recently divorced man complaining about his ex-wife taking everything he owns away from him in alimony payments.

A cover version of the song appeared in Malcolm in the Middle Season 7 Episode 2 'Health Insurance' (2005) when Craig (David Anthony Higgins) threw a breakroom party for Lois (Jane Kaczmarek) celebrating her 10th anniversary at Lucky Aide; the show's fictional grocery store. Despite obvious changes to the lyrics, the cover otherwise followed the same melody as Idol's version with "Mony Mony" most notably replaced with "Lois Lois".

The song is also a part of the 'NHL 12' video game soundtrack.

The song was also covered by the children's pop cover band Sugar Beats on the album "Back to the Beat" in 1997.

Track listings and formats

*'(1981) US 7" vinyl'

#"Mony Mony" (Single Edit) 3:23

#"Baby Talk" 3:10

*'(1981) UK 7" vinyl (33 rpm) & 12" vinyl (45rpm)'

#"Mony Mony"

#"Baby Talk"

#"Untouchables"

#"Dancing With Myself"

*'(1987) UK 7" vinyl'

#"Mony Mony (Live)"

#"Shakin' All Over (Live)"

*'(1987) US 12" vinyl'

#"Mony Mony (Hung Like a Pony Remix)" 6:59

#"Mony Mony (Steel-Toe Cat Dub)" 6:50

#"Mony Mony (Live) 4:00"

#"Mony Mony (Incorrectly listed as Single Edit)" 5:01

*'(1987) UK 12" vinyl'

#"Mony Mony (Hung Like a Pony Remix)"

#"Shakin' All Over (Live)"

#"Mony Mony (Live)"

Mixed by Tom Lord-Alge

Chart performance

'Original version'

'Live version'

Certifications



References



Category:1968 singles

Category:Tommy James and the Shondells songs

Category:The Beach Boys songs

Category:UK Singles Chart number-one singles

Category:1981 singles

Category:1987 singles

Category:Billy Idol songs

Category:Billboard Hot 100 number-one singles

Category:Cashbox number-one singles

Category:Songs written by Tommy James

Category:RPM Top Singles number-one singles

Category:Songs written by Ritchie Cordell

Category:Songs written by Bobby Bloom

Category:Roulette Records singles

Category:1968 songs

Category:Chrysalis Records singles

Category:Songs written by Bo Gentry

Buy Mony Mony now from Amazon

<-- Return to songs from 1968



This work is released under CC-BY-SA. Some or all of this content attributed to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=1105889381.