We Dance to a Different Disco, Honey

"We Dance to a Different Disco, Honey"
Single by Short Stack
from the album This Is Bat Country
Released 24 October 2010 (YouTube)
Format CD single
Recorded 2010
Genre Pop punk
Short Stack singles chronology
"Planets"
(2010)
"We Dance to a Different Disco, Honey"
(2010)
"Heartbreak Made Me a Killer"
(2011)

"We Dance to a Different Disco, Honey" is a song by pop-punk band Short Stack from their second album, This Is Bat Country.

"We Dance to a Different Disco, Honey" was originally released on YouTube with little advertisement; therefore, the song did not achieve a high ranking on music charts.

There were two versions. Short Stack posted the original version on their YouTube page, which in one line says "so cry me another river". Later, the band reconsidered posting the song (with the video clip) so they took it down. However, someone else had also posted the song on their YouTube page, so Short Stack had no choice but to repost it. The second time they posted it, they used the second version. In the second version, instead of "so cry me another river", the line was changed to "so cry me a fucking river".

Chart performance

Charts (2010) Peak position
ARIA Singles Chart[1] 43

Music video

The music video for "We Dance to a Different Disco, Honey" carries on from the "Planets" music video and begins with Shaun Diviney in a jail cell at a large factory with the lady with no mouth. Andy Clemmensen and Bradie Webb are shown with various ninja-type people. Eventually the two and the ninjas attack the factory, with other ninjas fighting them. Clemmensen and Webb then rescue Diviney and the lady from the cell and are about to leave when more evil ninjas attack them and then the lady fights them and defeats them, and the video ends with the four leaving the factory. There are also scenes of the band playing in a large room and Diviney on a bridge.

References

  1. "ARIA Charts - Singles". 2010-11-28. Retrieved 2011-04-04.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 5/2/2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.