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Dance Tonight

"Dance Tonight" is a song by Paul McCartney, the opening track to his 2007 album Memory Almost Full. The song was released as a download single in the United Kingdom on 18 June 2007, McCartney's 65th birthday.[1] A week later, the song debuted at number 34 in the UK Singles Chart. The UK single was also issued as a picture disc that came in a plastic sleeve with a cardboard insert. On 1 July, the song peaked at number 26 on the UK Singles Chart. In the United States, it was released as the second single from the album, debuting and peaking at number 69 on the Billboard Hot 100. It marked McCartney's final appearance in the Hot 100 until 2015. The song was also nominated for Best Male Pop Vocal Performance at the 2008 Grammy Awards.

For the Lucy Pearl song, see Dance Tonight (Lucy Pearl song). For the Orchid album, see Dance Tonight! Revolution Tomorrow!

"Dance Tonight"

5 June 2007

January–February 2007

2:54

McCartney performed the song live as a duet with Australian singer Kylie Minogue on Jools Holland's 2007 New Year's Eve television special Hootenanny. In 2020, it was covered by American country music star Jeannie Seely as a duet with Ray Stevens for her album An American Classic.

Origin[edit]

The left-handed mandolin used for the song, shown delivered to him by mail in the music video, was purchased by McCartney from a guitar shop he frequents in London.[2] Whenever he would play the mandolin, his three-year-old daughter Beatrice would be moved to dance, after which McCartney states that the song "wrote itself". It was the last song recorded for the album, and it was included on the album at the last minute.[1]


The song is also included in an iPod + iTunes advertisement featuring a black and white McCartney walking down a colourful, animated street while performing the song. It saw frequent airplay in summer 2007.

Recording[edit]

"Dance Tonight" was recorded in January–February 2007 at RAK Studios in London, with McCartney playing mandolin, electric guitar, bass, drums, keyboards, percussion and güiro.[3]

Music video[edit]

A music video for the song was directed by Michel Gondry, features Natalie Portman and Mackenzie Crook, and is choreographed by Blanca Li using the technique Pepper's ghost to interject both Paul's home and the ghosts making them appear in the house. It begins with a Royal Mail postman (Crook) delivering a package to McCartney's Home. The postman invites himself in for a cup of tea; thinking it was a cricket bat that McCartney ordered however it turned out that inside the package was a left-handed mandolin. McCartney then decided to play a chord on the mandolin trying it out. As soon as McCartney starts playing the song, a mandolin themed ghost (Portman) emerges from the package and starts dancing. More extravagantly dressed ghosts emerge from other places (an open drawer, the fireplace, the washing machine etc.) and dance around McCartney while he plays and sings in various rooms. The ghosts also play tricks on the postman, floating around him and making him levitate, which scares him away from the house. During the song's second-to-last verse, Portman steals McCartney's mandolin, which reverses the situation, making her come alive while turning McCartney into a ghost. He chases her and the other ghosts until she slips back into the package, dragging McCartney in with her as well, with some of the ghosts mistakingly swapping places (Twigs in the cutlery drawer, the fireplace ghost in the washing machine, etc.) as they returned to their world. As the song ends, the ghosts' world (inside the package) is revealed to be a wild party, where all the ghosts, now fully alive, have fun (the postman is there as well), while McCartney plays bass, accompanied by a drummer (Gondry). The final shot of the video is of the postman's van, left empty on the side of the road road with the door left open as if spirited away.


The video was posted exclusively on YouTube on 22 May 2007. It is now available on the DVD compilation Michel Gondry 2: More Videos (Before and After DVD 1) and on the Deluxe CD/DVD Edition of McCartney's album Memory Almost Full.

In popular culture[edit]

The song was used in the advertising on PBS network Thirteen for its May 2013 lineup.