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Legs (song)

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Wikipedia article




"'Legs'" is a song by the band ZZ Top from their 1983 album 'Eliminator'. The song was released as the fourth single in May 1984 more than a year after the album came out. It reached number 8 on the 'Billboard' Hot 100 in the United States, and the dance mix version of the song peaked at number 13 on the dance charts.

A video was made for "Legs", depicting a timid young female store clerk who is given confidence by a trio of sexy women, with the band mysteriously appearing and disappearing. "Legs" was the third installment of a trilogy of similarly themed videos shot by Tim Newman for 'Eliminator', and it won the MTV Video Music Award for Best Group. The video was placed into heavy rotation on MTV, which helped to lift the single high on the charts.

Like other songs on 'Eliminator', the musical style of "Legs" shows the band's new interest in electronic music elements, driven by singer-guitarist Billy Gibbons who was pushing to incorporate new wave and synth-pop styles. Pre-production engineer Linden Hudson established the song's pulsing synthesizer line during rehearsals. "Legs" contains electric guitar and vocals from Gibbons, but the bass guitar of Dusty Hill and drums of Frank Beard were replaced in the final mix by engineer Terry Manning who played keyboard bass and drum machine to achieve the style sought by Gibbons.

Recording



The band ZZ Top developed the song "Legs" at the home of drummer Frank Beard on the outskirts of Houston, Texas, in the band's rehearsal studio. The studio held recording equipment installed and operated by live-in engineer Linden Hudson. To give the song a sense of propulsion, Hudson created an unusual synthesizer sound by routing the synth's audio signal through a noise gate that was triggered externally by continual sixteenth-note hi-hat samples from a drum machine. As a result, the synthesizer chords pulsed to a sixteenth-note beat at a tempo of 125 beats per minute. Gibbons played a Dean ML guitar for both rhythm and lead parts, and sang the lead vocal part. Beard played drums, and Dusty Hill played bass guitar. Gibbons, Beard and Hill were credited on the album as songwriters.

The band recorded the 'Eliminator' album professionally at Ardent Studios in Memphis, Tennessee, under the guidance of band manager Bill Ham and longtime band recording engineer Terry Manning. Manning phoned Hudson to ask how he had generated the pulsing synth effect. The whole band recorded their parts at Ardent, then Beard and Hill returned home to Texas.

Music video



The "Legs" music video follows a mousy young female shoe store clerk who is harassed by nearly everyone around her. The trio of women featured in previous music videos for 'Eliminator' singles, drives up in the vintage Eliminator car to give her confidence and take revenge on the bullies. The band shimmers in and out of visibility, spinning their sheepskin-covered guitars, finally giving the clerk the keys to the car.

Production

The "Legs" video was directed by Tim Newman, who had directed the successful videos for the 'Eliminator' singles for "Gimme All Your Lovin'" and "Sharp Dressed Man". He declined to return to shoot the video for "TV Dinners". For "Legs", record executive Jeff Ayeroff pleaded with him to return. Newman bargained hard and asked for "points"a percentage of the profitbut Warner feared this would set an expensive precedent. Instead, they offered Newman a fixed payment every time the album was certified for another 250,000 units sold in the US, earning Newman more money than he expected.

The "Legs" video concept started with Newman suggesting that the main character should be a young woman this time. He cast actress Wendy Frazier who had recently played the love interest in the little-seen Baxter Robertson video for the Robertson song "Silver Strand", also directed by Newman. As the crew set up to shoot the "Legs" video in February 1984, Frazier turned 21. Much of the video was shot in Valencia, California, the area now called Santa Clarita.

The three Eliminator actressesJeana Tomasino, Kymberly Herrin and Danile Arnaudwere paid more than $2,000 each (approximately $5,000 in 2020 dollars), a higher fee than usual, according to Herrin. Tomasino had been a 'Playboy' Playmate in 1980; so was Herrin in 1981. This was Herrin's first ZZ Top video, and established Eliminator models Tomasino and Arnaud tended to push her to the rear. Herrin and singer-guitarist Billy Gibbons became friends during the shoot. Gibbons said that he kept in touch with Herrin for years afterward, calling her a "groovy hippie chick from Santa Barbara". Newman dated Frazier for a while, but only after she was cast in the part. He said, "Look, you spend time with these people. What can I tell you?"

The single entered the Mainstream Rock Airplay charts in June 1984.

Spinning guitars

used in the "Legs" music video, displayed at the former Dallas Hard Rock Cafe

Dean Guitars created the pair of matching guitars shown in the music video, based on the Dean Z model, but painted white and covered in fluffy white sheepskin. Dean also painted the band's "'ZZ'" logo extending the length of each fretboard. Gibbons had picked up the sheepskin while touring in Scotland, and sent it to Dean for the custom project. Both the 4-string bass guitar and 6-string standard required the sheepskin to be trimmed away from the strings so that they could sustain. The glue was still drying on the sheepskin covering the tuning pegs when the guitars were couriered to the video shoot.

The custom style was duplicated in late 1985 by Gibson for the band's Afterburner Tour, based on a pair of Gibson Explorer models. Fabricated by Matthew Klein, the Gibsons were purposely made lighter in construction than the Deans, weighing about six pounds each (2.7 kg).

Awards



The video won the 1984 MTV Video Music Award for Best Group Video. Frazier and Newman attended the awards ceremony, and Newman accepted the award on behalf of the band. This was the first year the award was given. Sim Sadler and Bob Sarles edited "Legs," for which both received nominations for Best Editing in the first MTV Video Music Awards, in the Billboard Music Video Awards, and in the American Music Video Awards that year.

Chart performance



Weekly charts



Year-end charts



Personnel



*Billy Gibbons guitar, lead vocals

*Dusty Hill bass guitar, backing vocals (credit only)

*Frank Beard drums (credit only)

*Terry Manning recording and mix engineer, programming, drum machines, synthesizers, backing vocals

*Linden Hudson pre-production engineer

Cover versions



*Nickelback covered the song on the 2011 'ZZ Top: A Tribute from Friends'.

*Kid Rock covered the song on the 2002 album 'WWF Forceable Entry'.

Parodies



The video was parodied in a 1984 episode of 'St. Elsewhere' in which the Eliminator girls appeared, though the band was played by members of the show's cast.

References



Category:1983 songs

Category:1984 singles

Category:ZZ Top songs

Category:Songs written by Billy Gibbons

Category:Songs written by Dusty Hill

Category:Songs written by Frank Beard (musician)

Category:American synth-pop songs

Category:Warner Records singles

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