The Super Bowl Shuffle

Last updated

"The Super Bowl Shuffle"
Chicago shuffle.jpg
Single by the Chicago Bears Shufflin' Crew
ReleasedDecember 1985
RecordedDecember 3, 1985
Genre
Length6:58
Label Red Label [1]
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s) Richard E. Meyer

"The Super Bowl Shuffle" is a song performed by the Chicago Bears football team (credited as the Chicago Bears Shufflin' Crew) in 1985. It was released in December 1985 on Chicago-based Red Label Records and distributed through Capitol Records [2] seven weeks ahead of their win in Super Bowl XX. The song peaked at number 41 on the US Billboard Hot 100, [3] and earned a Grammy nomination for Best R&B Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals in 1987.

Contents

Song and video

"The Super Bowl Shuffle" instantly became a mainstream phenomenon, selling over 500,000 copies and reaching number 41 on the Billboard Hot 100 by February 1986. [4] Billboard reported that the single's chart performance was propelled primarily by sales rather than radio airplay, saying, "Although the record has a great deal of pop airplay across the country, especially as a novelty for morning drive programs, only a handful of radio stations are reporting it on their playlists." [5] "The Super Bowl Shuffle" fell in line with the Bears' high-media attention as they completed their one-loss regular season. The Bears dominated their postseason opponents, including the New England Patriots in Super Bowl XX 46–10.

The 1985 Chicago Bears were the first sports team to have their own music video. The song was nominated for a Grammy Award in 1987 for Best R&B Performance by a Duo or Group, losing to "Kiss" by Prince. [4] The 20th anniversary DVD was released in 2004, including the making of the video, outtakes and the music video itself. Julia Meyer has kept the copyright to the video.

Over $300,000 in profits from the song and music video were donated to the Chicago Community Trust to help Chicago families in need with clothing, shelter and food. [1] This was consistent with Walter Payton's lyric in the song: "Now we're not doing this because we're greedy / The Bears are doing it to feed the needy". In 2014, six of the performers (Richard Dent, Jim McMahon, Otis Wilson, Willie Gault, Mike Richardson and Steve Fuller) sued Julia Meyer and Renaissance Marketing Corporation, who licenses the song, stating the proceeds from the song should benefit charities; the six players' attorney stated, "Among other things, the plaintiffs seek that a constructive trust be established for charitable purposes that they select in order to continue the Super Bowl Shuffle's charitable objective." [6]

The video was taped at Park West, a Chicago night club, the morning after the Bears' only loss of the 1985 season, 38-24 to the Miami Dolphins on Monday Night Football on December 2, 1985. Jim McMahon and Walter Payton refused to participate in the video shoot, thinking it would be better to release the song and video after the season was complete. However, the team was insistent on releasing the song and video shortly after the shoot, so the video was filmed with the remaining players. Payton and McMahon both filmed their segments separately a week later at the Bears' practice facility after practice and these segments were interspersed in the video prior to release. [7]

Performers

Singers

PlayerPositionNo.
Walter Payton Running back34
Willie Gault Wide receiver83
Mike Singletary Linebacker50
Jim McMahon Quarterback9
Otis Wilson Linebacker55
Steve Fuller Quarterback4
Mike Richardson Cornerback27
Richard Dent Defensive lineman95
Gary Fencik Safety45
William Perry Defensive lineman72

"Shufflin' Crew" band

PlayerPositionNo.Instrument
Maury Buford Punter8 Cowbell
Mike Tomczak Quarterback18 Electric guitar
Dennis Gentry Running back29 Bass guitar
Calvin Thomas Running back33 Alto saxophone
Reggie Phillips Defensive back48 Congas
Ken Taylor Defensive back31 Tambourine
Stefan Humphries Offensive lineman75 Drums
Tyrone Keys Defensive lineman98 Keyboard

"Shufflin' Crew" chorus

PlayerPositionNo.
Thomas Sanders Running back20
Leslie Frazier Safety21
Shaun Gayle Cornerback23
Jim Morrissey Linebacker51
Dan Rains Linebacker53
Keith Ortego Wide receiver89

The lyrics were written by Richard E. Meyer and Melvin Owens. The music was composed by Bobby Daniels and Lloyd Barry.

The "referee" in the video was portrayed by Julia Kallish.

Bears defensive end Dan Hampton declined involvement with the Shuffle, thinking it may have been too arrogant. [8]

Other personnel

Precedents

The 1985 Bears were not the first pro sports team with a group song.

Imitators and influence

The success of "The Super Bowl Shuffle" initiated numerous imitations from numerous teams across the league, including the Bears.

NFL teams

Chicago Bears (2006)

  • Da Superfans, a Chicago Bears fangroup, performed a parody version in early 2007 to celebrate the Bears' return to the Super Bowl.

Cincinnati Bengals

Green Bay Packers

  • Spoofing the "Macarena", the Green Bay Packers created the "Packarena" in 1996, during their Super Bowl XXXI run. [14] The song was later recreated in 2008, replacing the players with the 2007 team. It was also played frequently during the team's back-to-back Super Bowl runs in 1996–97 on local radio station WMYX-FM "99.1 The Mix".

Jacksonville Jaguars

Los Angeles Raiders

Los Angeles Rams

Miami Dolphins

Minnesota Vikings

New England Patriots

  • In early 1986, before the Super Bowl as a response to the Bears, the New England Patriots recorded their own team song, "New England, The Patriots, And We", [14] whose lyrics recounted their success in the playoff brackets and predicted victory against the Bears in Super Bowl XX. Its music video featured appearances by several Patriots, Boston-area celebrities (including Robert Urich) and local media personalities, while the song itself received airplay on Boston radio stations. Despite the song's optimistic predictions, the Patriots lost to the Bears in Super Bowl XX, 46–10.

New York Giants

Philadelphia Eagles

  • Also in 1988, the Philadelphia Eagles released a rap song called "Buddy's Watching You", referring to Eagles head coach and former Bears defensive coordinator Buddy Ryan. Eagles Hall of Famer Reggie White, an ordained minister, made a reference in the song to his faith with the line "I hit quarterbacks like they committed sin." [14] The Eagles would make the playoffs that year, but would ultimately lose in the Fog Bowl – ironically to the Bears. [24]

Pittsburgh Steelers

  • During the 1994 season, the Pittsburgh Steelers reportedly were planning to create a similar song, likely with some help from backup quarterback Mike Tomczak, who was a member of the '85 Bears and participated in the original "Super Bowl Shuffle." Reportedly, coach Bill Cowher vetoed the idea. The Steelers lost the 1994 AFC Championship game 17–13 to San Diego. That same season, local Pittsburgh artist Roger Wood created the "Here We Go" song, which has since become the Steelers unofficial fight song and is updated almost annually to account for roster turnover. [25] [26]

San Francisco 49ers

  • The 49ers had been the first team during the 1980s to attempt a group song, predating that of the Bears. In 1984, safety Ronnie Lott and running back Roger Craig convinced numerous members of the team to write and record their own rap song, simply entitled "We're the 49ers". [27]

Seattle Seahawks

  • During the 1985 season, the Seattle Seahawks released "The Blue Wave Is on a Roll", a jazz-themed song with various vocal harmonies, a saxophone solo, as well as various blooper-style sound effects. However, the Seahawks would ultimately go 8–8 and miss the playoffs. [14]

NFL Pro Bowl

Other parodies

2010 reprise

Seven of the surviving 1985 Bears (Walter Payton had died in 1999 of liver cancer [37] ) were reunited to film an updated version as a 30-second commercial promoting Boost Mobile, which was aired during Super Bowl XLIV. [38] The seven players featured were quarterback Jim McMahon, backup quarterback Steve Fuller, receiver Willie Gault, linebackers Mike Singletary and Otis Wilson, defensive lineman Richard Dent, and punter Maury Buford. All of the featured players wore #50 jerseys as part of the company's $50 deal. [4]

2014 celebrity cover version

On January 21, 2014, Misfire Records released a cover version [39] of the song featuring acclaimed musicians (Jim James of My Morning Jacket, John Roderick of The Long Winters, and Tim Harrington of Les Savy Fav), comedians (Tom Scharpling of The Best Show on WFMU , Scott Aukerman of Comedy Bang! Bang! , David Wain of The State and Stella, Kyle Kinane, and Dave Hill), and other notables (wrestler Colt Cabana and internet cat celebrity Lil Bub). Organized by radio host Sean Cannon with production from musician Alexander Smith, all proceeds from sales were to be donated to Reading Is Fundamental. [40]

See also

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