"Murder on the Dancefloor" is a song written by Gregg Alexander and Sophie Ellis-Bextor, produced by Alexander and Matt Rowe for Ellis-Bextor's first album, Read My Lips (2001). Released on 3 December 2001, the song peaked at number two on the UK Singles Chart and stayed on the chart for 23 weeks. The song became a top-10 hit worldwide, charting within the top three in Australia, New Zealand, and four European countries. In the United States, where the song was serviced to radio in September 2002, the single reached number nine on the Billboard Dance Singles Sales chart. "Murder on the Dancefloor" is reported to have been the most played song in Europe in 2002.[1]
"Murder on the Dancefloor" | ||||
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Single by Sophie Ellis-Bextor | ||||
from the album Read My Lips | ||||
B-side | "Never Let Me Down" | |||
Released | 3 December 2001 (2001-12-03) | |||
Studio | Mayfair (London, England) | |||
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Label | Polydor | |||
Songwriter(s) |
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Producer(s) |
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Sophie Ellis-Bextor singles chronology | ||||
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The follow-up single to "Take Me Home (A Girl Like Me)" was originally planned to be "Lover", an album track from Read My Lips, as read in first-edition album stickers and announced by the label, but for unknown reasons, the release was cancelled and replaced by "Murder on the Dancefloor".[citation needed]
In January 2019, a re-recorded orchestral version was released as the third single off Sophie Ellis-Bextor's greatest hits package The Song Diaries.
The song is Ellis-Bextor's greatest hit internationally. It was a hit in Australia, peaking at number three,[2] staying in the top 50 for 20 weeks,[2] being accredited Platinum by Australian Recording Industry Association,[3] and becoming the 12th-highest-selling single of 2002.[4]
The music video was directed by Sophie Muller and it centres around a dance competition. The winner's prize consists of a pair of golden high-heel shoes and a substantial amount of money. Desperate to win, Ellis-Bextor proceeds to sneakily injure and disqualify the majority of the other dancers. She causes one to slip on butter, before tripping up another, who sees her do it and angrily points at her to no avail. Next she slyly poisons a trio of potential rivals by spiking the punch during a refreshment period and then unstraps a contestant's clothes, causing her to run off. She finally frames a dancer for cheating on his partner, by planting a G-string on his person; this results in his partner slapping him and exiting the dance floor.
Ellis-Bextor then turns her attention to the trio of judges. By using what seems to be chloroform, she incapacitates the only female judge on the panel. Once the competition is down to the final four couples, Ellis-Bextor notices that the lead judge (played by Colin Stinton) has a weak spot for beautiful women. Using this to her advantage, Ellis-Bextor approaches him when he is alone at the judging table and seduces him. Lovestruck, the lead judge succeeds in persuading the remaining judge to have Ellis-Bextor declared the winner, much to her fellow dancers' disapproval.
The video concludes with the other dancers grudgingly applauding (before promptly deserting) Ellis-Bextor and her dance partner, as she happily clutches her cash prize and the golden shoes on the winner's podium.
UK and Australasian CD single[5]
UK 12-inch single[6]
UK cassette single and European CD single[7][8]
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German maxi-CD single[9]
US CD single[10]
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Credits are lifted from the Read My Lips album booklet.[11]
Studios
Personnel
Weekly charts
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Year-end charts
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Region | Certification | Certified units/sales |
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Australia (ARIA)[3] | Platinum | 70,000^ |
Belgium (BEA)[58] | Gold | 25,000* |
France (SNEP)[59] | Gold | 250,000* |
United Kingdom (BPI)[60] | Platinum | 600,000![]() |
* Sales figures based on certification alone. |
Region | Date | Format(s) | Label(s) | Ref(s). |
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United Kingdom | 3 December 2001 |
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Polydor | [61][62] |
Australia | 11 February 2002 | CD | [63] | |
United States | 9 September 2002 |
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Universal | [64] |
A Chinese version by Hong Kong singer Kelly Chen entitled "最愛你的是我" or "Zui Ai Ni De Shi Wo"[65] was produced in 2003[66] and was included in her album, "心口不一".[67]
A reggae version was released in 2005 by Swedish rapper Papa Dee with reworked lyrics under the title of "Murder In The Dancehall", it features Richie Stephens & General Degree. Grime artist Skepta sampled the track on "Love Me Not" on his 2019 album Ignorance Is Bliss.[68]
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